I see what OP was trying to say and the debate he was trying to spark, though I think how it was worded and the general tone of it was not perfect.
I live in Britain, a country with many problems that have been well discussed on this forum, problems which I don't need to go into. However, I am well aware how lucky and blessed I am to live here. Everyday I wake up in good health, I eat four meals a day, I have a roof over my head, I can walk anywhere in the area I live at night and not have to worry about being stabbed, I have clean water to drink, no gang or militia is going to kick down my door and murder me. Financially, I have a lot of opportunities to better myself and to advance, I don't live under a corrupt government that is going to try and screw me over at any moment, I hold the passport of a nationality and speak the language of a country that still has clout in the world.
For a guy living in a developing country, a lot of the above does not apply. While he can better himself, it will be much, much more difficult for him to attain and the mental cycle of poverty, corruption, whatever will have a big baring on him, not to mention a layer of mass corruption within the state that will try and screw him over at every corner.
The thing is, being in the country I am. I am able to change the course of my life with ease, it's all down to me, no one else. The barriers in my way are tiny in comparison to that which most people around the world face.
Honestly, sometimes I'll look at the tap in the kitchen and shake my head and think of how lucky I am to have access to clean drinking water, not have to worry about some parasite or disease. What a time to be alive! The world is literally your oyster!