Showing posts with label war. Show all posts
Showing posts with label war. Show all posts

Thursday, June 6, 2013

We Can All Help Fight Poverty

little girl of about 5 holds cardboard sign which says please help

To learn more about and find ways to become involved in this very worthwhile struggle, go to Mr. Kaufman's complete article HERE.


From: Greg Kaufman at The Nation.

This is a tough moment in the fight against poverty.

Sequester is the latest chapter in a time-honored tradition of kicking the poor when they are down. A do-nothing Congress certainly isn’t going to do something about poverty without pressure from the grassroots. And it seems that the only way most of the mainstream media will pay attention to the more than 1 out of 3 Americans living below twice the poverty line — on less than $36,000 for a family of three — is if their lives make good fodder for tabloid television or play out in a courtroom drama.

That said, there are still plenty of people and groups fighting for real change, and plenty of ways you can get involved or stay engaged. I reached out to a handful of folks who dedicate their lives to fighting poverty in different ways. Here is what they asked people to do:

1. “Support an increase in the minimum wage to more than $11 per hour.”
 Sisters of Social Service, Executive Director of NETWORK.

2. “Tell Publix: Help end sexual harassment, wage theft and forced labor in the fields — join the Fair Food Program today.”
- the Coalition of Immokalee Workers.

3. “Make a Personal Commitment to Helping Homeless Families”
- Ralph da Costa Nunez,
 President and CEO, Institute for Children, Poverty and Homelessness.

4. “Fund the federal Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) at the maximum authorized level”
- Dr. Deborah Frank,
 Founder and Principal Investigator, Children’s HealthWatch.

5. “Support of a living wage and basic labor protections for home care workers”
- Sarita Gupta,
 Executive Director, Jobs with Justice/American Rights at Work and Co-Director, Caring Across Generations.

6. Urge Congress to pass the Healthy Families Act (H.R. 1286/S.631) and a national paid leave program”
- Judith Lichtman,
 Senior Advisor, National Partnership for Women & Families.

7. “Increase regulation of private student loans and hold Sallie Mae accountable for its role in the student debt crisis.”
- Tiffany Loftin,
 President, United States Student Association (USSA).

8. “Support Pathways Back to Work”
- Elizabeth Lower-Basch, Policy Coordinator, the Center for Law and Social Policy (CLASP).

9. “Invest in the Older Americans Act”
- Marci Phillips,
 Director of Public Policy and Advocacy, National Council on Aging.

10. “Tell Congress NO CUTS to Social Security and SSI through the Chained CPI”
- Rebecca Vallas,
 Staff Attorney/Policy Advocate, Community Legal Services.

11. “Tell Congress: Increase, Don’t Cut SNAP (Food Stamp) Benefits”
- Jim Weill,
 President, Food Research and Action Center.

12. Tell Congress to stop harmful cuts to anti-poverty programs now”
- Debbie Weinstein,
 Executive Director, Coalition on Human Needs.


Saturday, December 24, 2011

Here's to the Possibilities this Christmas Eve!



During Christmas Eve and Christmas Day of 1914,
British and German troops stationed along the Western Front, held an unofficial "Christmas Truce". In "No Man's Land" they exchanged gifts and pleasantries, as they drank and sang carols together. A soccer match even broke out.

pencil drawing of armed British and German soldiers shaking hands in the snow

Although the Christmas of 1914,
  itself, is now a distant memory, and might seem an impossiblity in today's world where cultural differences seem insurmountable, it remains a symbol of hope to those who believe in our shared humanity, its resilience and ability for to unify and heal.


Read the whole story:
 here, here, here, or here.





Sunday, March 20, 2011

OH, BY THE WAY, WHICH ONE'S PINK?


Dogs of War

Dogs of war and men of hate
With no cause, we don't discriminate
Discovery is to be disowned
Our currency is flesh and bone
Hell opened up and put on sale
Gather 'round and haggle
For hard cash, we will lie and deceive
Even our masters don't know the webs we weave

One world, it's a battleground
One world, and we will smash it down
One world ... One world

Invisible transfers, long distance calls,
Hollow laughter in marble halls
Steps have been taken, a silent uproar
Has unleashed the dogs of war
You can't stop what has begun
Signed, sealed, they deliver oblivion
We all have a dark side, to say the least
And dealing in death is the nature of the beast

One world, it's a battleground
One world, and we will smash it down
One world ... One world

The dogs of war don't negotiate
The dogs of war won't capitulate,
They will take and you will give,
And you must die so that they may live
You can knock at any door,
But wherever you go, you know they've been there before
Well winners can lose and things can get strained
But whatever you change, you know the dogs remain.

One world, it's a battleground
One world, and we will smash it down
One world ... One world
One world ... One world




Monday, September 20, 2010

WAR AND ITS AFTERMATH. ART THAT DEMANDS WE THINK.


Francois Robert, Photography



When Francois Robert unexpectedly acquired a human skeleton in the 1990s, he knew he had to do something wonderful with it. Several years later when the economy collapsed and he found himself with time on his hands, Robert finally settled on a project: powerful anti-war images spelled out in human bones.

war spelled out in human bones on black background

The series of photographs is entitled “Stop the Violence,” and it uses human bones as a reminder of the consequences of violence. Each sculpture is five to six feet wide and took Robert a full day to assemble. The images are all grippingly powerful: weapons, religious symbols and words that bring to mind the destruction that is left behind after war. - Existing Visual.

jolly Rodger and dollar sign in human bones on black background