The CEOs wanted to use VR as a charity and the result was condemned

In other words, Australia has held its annual “CEO Sleep on the Street” charity project recently, bringing together the CEOs of major Australian companies and making donations together to help street wanderers. It would have been a good thing, and it sounded nothing bad. A group of local tyrants living in seaside luxury houses provided a dwelling place for the cold and hungry tramps on the street. It was nothing wrong. Until... The organizers gave the CEOs VR headsets and said they wanted them to experience homelessness... Then they also took a video and uploaded it to the Internet, saying: “Today, our Sydney CEOs have experienced in VR. The real situation that Fan Chao experienced every day." Thus, the picture we see is: A group of CEOs wearing designer clothes wear expensive VR heads and experience a sense of homelessness in the virtual world. As a result, netizens were bombed: wearing a VR headset? What is your experience? Be bold enough to run to the street to live with the tramp! "It's a good idea to want to know the reality, but don't want to stay with the dirty, poor people." "Well, buying money for VR headsets will give homeless people a real meal, take a shower or stay overnight." “Let them be close to real wanderers? Heaven and Earth are not tolerated!” "How good it is! Experience virtual cold, virtual violence, virtual hunger, virtual illness, virtual despair..." As a result, more and more people on the Internet are asking the CEOs to experience life on the street. In fact, this VR experience is only part of this charity event. According to the situation in previous years, many CEOs will bring hard paper and sleeping bags to the streets of Australia to truly experience the feeling of sleeping on the streets. (The Australian Prime Minister Mackenzie Tombo also participated in the charity event last year) It is reported that this year's "CEO sleep on the streets" event was held on June 22 in major cities in Australia, including Sydney, Melbourne, Canberra, Brisbane, Perth, etc. About 1,500 CEOs participated in the event. At present, the charity event has received a total of 5 million US dollars in donations. Fortunately, there was a pure misunderstanding. Hopefully, this year, CEOs will continue to spend millions of nights overnight, so that homeless people will no longer suffer cold winds and hunger. As for this pot ... VR does not back.