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Friday, April 25, 2008

Food and the poor | The new face of hunger | Economist.com

I picked this up from the EGR blog, stupid people suck!
No matter where I turn it seems our issues get bigger because we cannot seem to all get along and sit down and talk about stuff before we do something.

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

We can ease the burden of high food prices on the most vulnerable people

Leadership, at least at this time in discussion about the global food issue. Several points are made to link poverty in here.

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Clueless in America - New York Times

"An American kid drops out of high school every 26 seconds. That’s more than a million every year"

"Roughly a third of all American high school students drop out. Another third graduate but are not prepared for the next stage of life — either productive work or some form of post-secondary education."

"When two-thirds of all teenagers old enough to graduate from high school are incapable of mastering college-level work, the nation is doing something awfully wrong."


Bob Hebert of the NYT points to what must be a root cause for many of our societal issues. One would think I suspect that a better educated population would better be able to think thru and talk about and then ultimately address and solve the "other" issues we waste so much of our breath on.


Friday, April 18, 2008

Across Globe, Empty Bellies Bring Rising Anger - New York Times



Let me spoil this article for you with the ending.

"Meanwhile, most of the poorest of the poor suffer silently, too weak for activism or too busy raising the next generation of hungry. In the sprawling slum of Haiti’s Cité Soleil, Placide Simone, 29, offered one of her five offspring to a stranger. “Take one,” she said, cradling a listless baby and motioning toward four rail-thin toddlers, none of whom had eaten that day. “You pick. Just feed them.”"

May God Make Speed To Help Us
May God Make Haste to Save Us

Carl

Wednesday, April 09, 2008

Feature: Top 10 Ways to Trick Out Your Desktop

for reference

Toil and Trouble - New York Times

I should just have a permanent link to Maureen Dowd's articles. I heard some testimony and am starting to read the rest of the coverage, but my guess is she is spot on.

Tuesday, April 08, 2008

"What One Can Do" - The Episcopalians for Global Reconciliation blog: "Augustine said, 'Be what you see, and receive who you are.'" - by Stephanie Rho

"What One Can Do" - The Episcopalians for Global Reconciliation blog: "Augustine said, 'Be what you see, and receive who you are.'" - by Stephanie Rhodes

I loved this post today because it calls me to my own accountability for what I say and do as well as who I am. And just because I am something by birth or genetics does not remove me from being me, especially when 'we' manage to muck things up.

ONE » Blog Archive » New ONE Ice Cream Launching in Burbank in a Few Hours

ONE » Blog Archive » New ONE Ice Cream Launching in Burbank in a Few Hours

The boys back home in Vermont have come on board the ONE campaign with what sounds like a great new flavor. Cannot wait to see on the shelves here.

Thursday, April 03, 2008

Feature: Trim Down Windows to the Bare Essentials

Feature: Trim Down Windows to the Bare Essentials
Excellent find by my friend Ken, just what you need to minimize the damage of an XP install to your mac.

Rwanda Genocide Victims, Killers Meet

Rwanda Genocide Victims, Killers Meet

The possible success of the MDG's is detailed here by current situations in Rwanda. Horrific stories of genocide frame the article's beginning before the relationship between economy/poverty are tied to the wars and genocides of the continent.

A Not-So-Fine Romance - New York Times

A Not-So-Fine Romance - New York Times

An excellent dialog piece on the situation with Tibet and China. Also a very nice calling it what it is part on the US and China similarities.