Comment Re:No good deed..... (Score 1) 108
I understand your point that fixing the problems of a developing community by just stepping in and doing it yourself doesn't affect lasting change. Feel-good projects like building schools in Africa often end up abandoned by the community once the builders leave because we try to implement solutions that are specific to our society without considering that other societies simply work differently. In the long term, projects that instead empower the community to solve their own problems (for instance, micro-lending organizations like Kiva) are much more effective.
However, unlike projects that try to make the world a better place for generations to come, providing network access in Haiti was never intended to be a long-term fix... Rather, it was more like an air drop of emergency rations to bombed-out areas. The network access that's being provided is free and is absolutely temporary, so I don't see how this could be construed as a ploy to create dependencies.
There are lots of instances where aid is provided in a non-beneficial way, but this isn't one of them. Stop trying so hard to be cynical.