Showing posts with label voice the change. Show all posts
Showing posts with label voice the change. Show all posts

Sunday, January 4, 2009

If you like the blog Obama IS America!...



...then you should care about what is happening to the people of Zimbabwe. Well I (the blog Editor) think that all humans should care about all other humans regardless of where they are from, but this blog entry is specifically about the people of Zimbabwe.


Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe

If you like this blog that you are reading right now, I think that you should care about the people of Zimbabwe. My grandma was born in Zimbabwe - my mom's mom. What does this have to do with anything? Well, say that this outbreak of cholera had happened 50 years ago and it affected my grandmother and she had died. I never would have been born. This blog would not exist.

So if you like this blog, to some degree the mission of this blog resonates with you. Even if another person would have created a project just like this, chances are that their experiences and pool of knowledge would be way different to mine, so while the concept at its core might have been the same, the actual thoughts and concepts explored in the blog would probably be WAY different.

I think that each person is an individual, because no two people can have the same sum total of things that make them who they are: set of experiences, personality/genetic code, the way they look, the family/country/city they were born into, etc. Considering that in the United States so much emphasis is placed on individual freedom, individual success, the protection of individual rights and the rights to be individuals, we as a society have decided to embrace the idea that that each individual (at least each American individual) should be considered valuable. Well, someone in my direct lineage - my grandmother - was born in Zimbabwe. If the spread of cholera had happened 50 years ago, chances are that she could have caught it and I would not exist. The possibility of me impacting the world would have been less than a dream

I think that every person in the world impacts the world because of who they can be, who they are, what they do, and what they choose not to do. If you look at anything that exists - it is the way it is because of every part it consists of - from its smallest subparticle, to its largest and most obvious characteristic, to the set of energies that binds it together. Everything is like this, from the tiniest atom to WHOLE UNIVERSE (see image at end of post). So why are we spending our time and energies killing each other, or getting distracted by other things while other people kill each other? While destruction may be a part of the natural order of things, we as human beings have these big beautiful brains with limitless expanses to where our minds can take us. Senseless human death seems like a tragic waste to me

I think that we take other human beings for granted, which allows us to placidly assume that people are expendable. Well I really don't think that they are, and the first part of this blog post will tell you why not. The second part of the blog post will then provide you with information on things you can do for the people of Zimbabwe through the international organization for change, *Avaaz.org*.


So here goes:




The thing about War and conflict happening all the time everywhere around the world is that it dehumanizes human beings and it makes those of us who are not living in conflict situations numb to the fact that people out there are dying - that many people are dying horrible deaths - that many children are growing up seeing people around them dying, and that this is their reality. (This sad reality is also the reality for the people being butchered in Iraq, dying for us along with our soldiers in this *never ending war*.)

The major thing that I want to say about all of this is that the Zimbabweans (people of Zimbabwe) dying of Cholera (an easily preventable disease), and all of the other people out there in the world and in our own cities and neighborhoods dying because of War, Famine, Disease, Genocide, Crime, Drug wars, Poverty and other types of violence and hate are not just bodies:

They are each soulful individuals -
Irreplaceably Unique and more precious than gold - every single one of them.

They are sculptors, musicians, dancers.
They are architects, doctors, professors.
They are students and teachers.
They are moms, dads, aunts, uncles, cousins.
They are kids with their whole lives ahead of them.

They are the potential future creators of the best invention known to humankind, who will never get to create this invention because their government is letting them die of a preventable disease.

They are your potential soul-mate.
They are poets, thinkers, lovers, dreamers, healers.

They are the potential future fathers and mothers of future American Presidents.

They are all the spectrum of humanity and human creation, love and existence that is imaginable - but their existence is not spent on the development of their mind or their soul.

Their existence is spent trying to not die. Trying to eat. Trying to keep their children alive. Trying to fight disease and raw poverty. Trying to maintain some dignity in the face of governments that judge their lives to be expendable.

So if you value your life and if you value life in general, the best way for you to express your understanding of the value of life is to care about the lives of others and try to make their lives better.

Click *here* to link to an article discussing the Cholera outbreak in Zimbabwe

Click *here* to learn about Cholera

Click *here* to connect to the University of Pennsylvania's Africa Studies page on Zimbabwe, which contains links to all sorts of information about Zimbabwe

Click *here* to link to a Zimbabwean's blog that talks about beautiful Zimbabwe

Click *here* to learn about Mugabe, the soul-less dictator of Zimbabwe


So, if you want to know what you can do for the people of Zimbabwe and for other people in the world who are suffering, I would say that the first thing to do is to start giving a damn about these people's welfare - as if they were members of your own family. You may not know them personally, but all of us humans come from the same place. We are family, and right now we are divided and killing each other.

The next step, I think, is to truly examine how you think about other people. Yes, you. Each person's lack of knowledge and lack of caring about the world and all the things that live on it contributes to the continued destruction of these things.

Try to analyze how you think about other people - different ethnic groups in your own country, people of different income levels, religions, physical appearances, sexual orientations, and people from different countries or neighborhoods.

Analyze what you think about people from the developing world. Do you think of them as real people? As people equal to you? As people who live, think, dream, and pray as you do? If not, why don't you think of people that way?

I would say that the next step is to then read everything you can get your hands on about the world, its people and its history. In speaking about Zimbabwe, try to get your hands on all available information about it's history to give you a deeper understanding of what colonization was like and the residual impact it still has on this beautiful nation.

Try to make sure that what you are reading is not written by the US state department, the CIA, or a website sponsored by the Zimbabwean government (or the government of whatever country you are looking into). Also, please make sure that you don't get all of your information from Wikipedia.

Each individual open-mindedly analyzing, questioning and challenging his/her own mind and accepted thought processes is key to any kind of human growth, progress or change.

I think it would be useful to throw away any preconceived notions you may have about the nations and people of Africa, and the rest of the world at large. Try to see people from developing countries not as expendable, unimportant, or irrelevant to what is important to your life. Train yourself to think of others as fellow World Citizens who deserve their rights and wellbeing to be respected, who deserve safe homes, clean water, no disease, and good educations where their minds and souls can develop, flourish and thrive.

This process may bring some passion and clarity into your own life.


Please read the article/letter below:


Dear friends,

As we approach the holiday season, the people of Zimbabwe need our solidarity and support. For many, this will be their tenth New Year's Eve living in fear, their third without clean water, and their first amidst the spiralling cholera epidemic. So many have died that it is no longer clear what is the population of the country.1

Ultimately, it is the people of Zimbabwe who will bring change. Right now, our friends on the ground say that crushing hardship and isolation are the greatest threat -- that the most powerful contribution we can make is to cry out our solidarity with their struggle, and let them know that they are not alone.

While Mugabe and his generals might control the borders and the newspapers, the airwaves are still free. Sign our global message of solidarity now -- it will be turned into a radio advertisement and broadcast across Zimbabwe in the new year--and then if you choose, write or record your own ad for broadcast using our online tools:

http://www.avaaz.org/en/global_citizens_for_zimbabwe/?cl=160591732&v=2590

Zimbabwe's people are wracked by a cholera crisis which has already killed over 1000 people.2Three months after Robert Mugabe and the opposition leader Morgan Tsvangarai signed a power-sharing agreement, Mugabe's still clings to power, even denying there is an epidemic.3 And as the regime cracks down, with increasing numbers of journalists, human rights defenders and ordinary people being abducted this week4, the prospect of a unity government seems more remote than ever. The Zimbabweans who risked their lives to vote against Mugabe in March this year are exhausted, hungry and terrorised by violence.

We have campaigned throughout the year on different levels with a range of targets, tactics and strategies, but Zimbabwe will only change if, amongst the dread and fear, Zimbabweans themselves believe they have the power to overcome hopelessness and lawlessness.

With our radio-broadcast messages of international solidarity, let's let them know our eyes are on Zimbabwe and send them hope and strength to carry on strong into 2009. Our voices aim to uplift Zimbabwean people who have lost their hope or loved ones, helping a people who are desperate for democracy and ravaged by hunger and disease. These messages will be heard by hundreds of thousands across Zimbabwe and the region: sign our collective message here, then leave your personal message:

http://www.avaaz.org/en/global_citizens_for_zimbabwe/?cl=160591732&v=2590

It is up to us to get our messages of support to the people of Zimbabwe. As citizens of the world, our only interest in ending the Mugabe era is that which led us to struggle in our own lands for political freedoms, and which brought many of us to stand with the South African people in the anti-apartheid struggle: a common humanity, a duty to fight repression and a commitment to the universality of rights. Let the Zimbabwean people know we stand with them:

http://www.avaaz.org/en/global_citizens_for_zimbabwe/?cl=160591732&v=2590

In hope and solidarity,

Ben, Ricken, Alice, Brett, Pascal, Paul, Graziela, Paula, Luis, Iain and the whole Avaaz team

SOURCES

1John Hughes, Christian Science Monitor: "To save Zimbabwe, South Africa must step up"
http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/1219/p09s01-coop.html

2 AFP -- Zimbabwe Cholera Death Toll Passes 1,000: UN
http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5gdniYYQ_ejuYgNUVGcw4e1QLzDwQ

AllAfrica.com: Cholera Outbreak Blamed On Mugabe Sanitation Policy
http://allafrica.com/stories/200812150182.html

3 Al-Jazeera: "Mugabe - Cholera Crisis is Over"
http://english.aljazeera.net/news/africa/2008/12/20081211121636410799.html

4Activists go missing in Zimbabwe crackdown
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-zimbabwe15-2008dec15,0,381855.story

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/africa/article5337674.ece

P.S. For a report on Avaaz's campaigning so far, see: https://secure.avaaz.org/en/report_back_2



ABOUT AVAAZ Avaaz.org is an independent, not-for-profit global campaigning organization that works to ensure that the views and values of the world's people inform global decision-making. (Avaaz means "voice" in many languages.) Avaaz receives no money from governments or corporations, and is staffed by a global team based in Ottawa, London, Rio de Janeiro, New York, Buenos Aires, and Geneva. Call us at: +1 888 922 8229 or +55 21 2509 0368 Click here to learn more about our largest campaigns. Don't forget to check out our Facebook and Myspace and Bebo pages!
You are getting this message because you signed "" on 2008-12-18 using the email addressobama.is.america@gmail.com. To ensure that Avaaz messages reach your inbox, please addavaaz@avaaz.org to your address book. To change your email address, language settings, or other personal information, https://secure.avaaz.org/act/index.php?r=profile&user=6ff00dbd327655c9d4f0c9009c332f2d&lang=en, or simply go here to unsubscribe.

To contact Avaaz, please do not reply to this email. Instead, write to info@avaaz.org. You can also call us at +1-888-922-8229 (US) or +55 21 2509 0368 (Brazil) If you have technical problems, please go to http://www.avaaz.org/


To help keep hope alive in Zimbabwe this holiday season, we're running radio ads across Zimbabwe with messages of solidarity from citizens around the world. Click below to put your name to the campaign--or even make an ad of your own!



REPORT BACK: Last week, 200,000 of us succeeded in shifting Germany's position in the climate negotiations! It's just a partial victory, but a crucial one;click here to learn what happened!






Wednesday, December 31, 2008

HAPPY NEW YEAR EVERYBODY!! I LOVE YOU!!!!!


This blog entry contains 3 things:


1. 5 things that have changed my (the Editor of this blog) life


2. 5 things I hope for and strive for in 2009


3. *An article* about Obama, economics and ethics.




Please submit something about what you hope for, dream for, strive for, and what 2008 meant for you!!!!



5 life changing things from 2008:

1. In March got in an accident and almost died. A car was driving the wrong way down the freeway and hit the car I was in almost head on. We hit another car as we spun around. I came out of the car with a bruise on my leg, some cuts on my hand, and very minor whiplash. Now, I feel like every single moment is precious, golden and beautiful.

2. I got a prestigious Fulbright award. I will be living in Brazil for a whole year working on a project I designed. The results will hopefully be outstanding.

3. The whole Presidential election. And the creation of this blog, Obama IS America!

4. I have discovered the significance of rights and Civil Rights, and find myself fighting for the protection of these rights every single day - living the fight, being affected by this whole disgusting Prop 8 mess, and being inspired by people around me (such as my ridiculously amazing and brilliant coworkers) working for the rights of everybody everyday.

5. Obama is going to become President. The world is turning. The tides are changing. The wind is blowing behind the sails of young empowered people. Even if Obama does not accomplish even a quarter of the things he rode his campaign on, his election has finally changed the face of this nation. I greatly look forward to my Future.


5 things I hope for and strive for in 2009:

1. To complain less. To learn how to breathe easier. To learn how to be more trusting.

2. To kick ass on my Fulbright. Help shift the tides a little more.

3. To get more people submitting ideas and thoughts on this blog.

4. To empower, empassion, and awaken many more people around me to the glory that is this world, this universe, this planet, all the creatures on it, and of course, human beings. What goes with this is:

To see people start caring more about other people and realizing that we are all human beings sharing this planet together, to see people realize more that this Planet is in SERIOUS peril, to see people realize that everything is connected and all the 'issues' and 'key words' are all related to each other, and of course, to see people actually go out and DO something about these issues to make the world a better place.

5. To see the leaders of this country and our economy functioning and managing things in a truly ethical way. (See article below)



Ellen Reiss: Getting beyond a culture of contempt

01:00 AM EST on Monday, December 29, 2008

ELLEN REISS

NEW YORK

THE ELECTION of Barack Obama is important not only because the American people have chosen a person of color to be our president. That fact, certainly, is a tremendous, historic victory for ethics. But the election is also an important ethical victory because the massive use of lies didn’t work. And the various scare words didn’t scare. And it’s important because of something to be seen in an American poem about another election.

Vachel Lindsay, in his poem "Bryan, Bryan, Bryan, Bryan," writes about the election of 1896, in which William Jennings Bryan ran against William McKinley. He describes the feeling millions of people had about Bryan, and very much young people. Bryan seemed to represent the rights of Americans who were not rich; he seemed to represent their hopes and an America that could belong to all the people, not just the moneyed.

That election was, of course, different from the current one; and besides, Bryan lost. But there is this likeness: the feeling that both Bryan and Obama stood for something kind, against, as Lindsay puts it, "the mean and the cold."

There are lines like these, about Bryan: "He brought in tides of wonder, of unprecedented splendor, / Wild roses from the plains, that made hearts tender." Lindsay describes the huge crowds at Bryan rallies, because people felt that this person stands for an America that is kinder, that is truer to herself. Lindsay writes of being at a Bryan rally at age 16, in Springfield, Ill.:

And Bryan took the platform.

And he was introduced.

And he lifted his hand

And cast a new spell.

Progressive silence fell

In Springfield, in Illinois, around the world.

A person can symbolize something to people that they don’t wholly understand and that he does not live up to. Had Bryan been elected, he might not have lived up to people’s hopes. Barack Obama was elected.

And it is necessary for America to see, and for him to see, what it would mean to meet America’s hopes, which are also desperate needs.

For our presiden! t-elect to be a good president, for him to succeed, he must want, passionately, to answer this question, articulated by Eli Siegel: What does a person deserve by being a person?" And he must make sure the economy of America is based on a true answer to that question.

In 1970 Mr. Siegel, founder of the philosophy Aesthetic Realism, began his series of Goodbye Profit System lectures. He explained that the world had reached the point when economics based on a selfish, ugly, unethical way of seeing one’s fellow humans no longer worked. While the profit system might drag on for quite a few years, and sometimes be given a flashy façade, it was a mortally ailing thing.

Week after week, using documents of the past and present -- of economics, history, literature and human feeling -- he explained why we had come to the time when "there will be no economic recovery in the world until economics itself -- the making of money, the having of jobs -- becomes ethical; is based on good will rather than on the ill will that has been predominant for centuries."

The profit motive -- the seeing of people in terms of "How much money can I get out of you? How cheaply can I employ you? How can I use you to feather my own nest?"-- was always ugly. It made for child labor; for miserable working conditions, with their ensuing occupational diseases and maimings; for poverty wages. But by 1970, the ill will of the profit motive was not only ugly: It was inefficient; it was less and less able to bring in the desired returns.

This year, we have some of the results of the effort to keep that mean way of using people going: We have an American financial collapse, millions of Americans unemployed, and many more about to be -- with all the terror and suffering that includes.

The incoming president, and Congress, and the American people need to see that tinkering around with an unethically based economy will not work.

We now have to have economics based, not on profit, but on ethics, justice and usefulness.

Let’s take the aut! omobile industry of America. As I comment on it, I’m not speaking in terms of particular legislative or executive decisions, but in terms of ethics. It is, as The Wall Street Journal reported (Nov. 8-9), in such a "deepening crisis" that "Washington may have to step in to finance a historic downsizing of the U.S. auto industry."

Letting this industry, which Mr. Obama called "the backbone of American manufacturing," die is unacceptable. But pouring vast quantities of taxpayer money into auto companies based on providing profit to stockholders, is now repugnant to the American people, and furthermore won’t work.

With competition from Japan, South Korea, Sweden, Germany and more, there is an expense that must be eliminated from this "backbone of American manufacturing" for it to succeed. That expense is profit for individuals who didn’t do the work. The U.S. auto industry cannot sustain itself and pay its workers’ benefits and pensions, while at the same time paying out those completely unnecessary extras --emoluments to non-working stockholders.

If the people of America are going to bail out auto companies, there is no reason why we ourselves, or the auto workers, cannot be the companies, own the companies. The people of America need autos. The people of America can produce autos. Autos simply can no longer be produced in America on the basis of private profit, with money from their sales going into the pockets of stockholders. Once they could -- when car manufacturing took place pretty much in the U.S. alone.

What this "backbone of American manufacturing" now needs to be based on is not the scare word used during the presidential campaign. What it needs to be based on is, as Mr. Siegel once put it, deep American decency.

The election of 2008 was a magnificent victory against racism. Yet as we know, racism still exists, in all its filth. The next president and the American people need to learn from Aesthetic Realism what racism comes from. And they need to see that profit economics arose from the very s! ame sour ce in the human self. Both racism and the profit motive come from contempt: "the lessening of what is different from oneself as a means of self-increase as one sees it," as Eli Siegel put it.

To illustrate this fact, I’m going to quote from a periodical of nearly 100 years ago, which Mr. Siegel used in several of his lectures.

In the Aug. 18, 1910 issue of the Independent magazine, there is an article by the important writer and sociologist W.E.B. Du Bois. He describes being looked down on, because he was black, by an impoverished little girl who was white:

. She was stealing a?.?"She was a poor little waif of six or seven years. . ride on an Eighth Avenue furniture van and spied me on a passing street car. She stuck out her tongue and jeered and made every contortion of countenance to show her personal disapproval of my kind and the superiority of hers.

"Poor little thralled thing! It was not enough that she should be prisoned by poverty and ignorance; this great nation must needs chain her with race prejudice."

Du Bois is eloquent and nobly sympathetic. But we need to learn the reason . with race prejudice" is?.?the little girl could welcome being "chain[ed] . that there is a desire in the self to be big by seeing someone else as less. And this ordinary yet foulest desire in the human self is the only reason a nation could feel it is somehow tolerable for some children to be born poor and others rich.

We have had a great, historic election. Now for America to fare well, justice to every man, woman, and child must be the very basis of our economy.

Ellen Reiss is class chairman of Aesthetic Realism.

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

WE ARE THE ONES WE HAVE BEEN WAITING FOR!



What makes this man beautiful is that he is the embodiment of the American Dream. Let us not forget what that means:






Please watch the music videos below. They are each so beautiful and so powerful.

They show Americans--ALL Americans--calling for a new era of America:

A new way of thinking about American culture
A new way of thinking about American politics
A new way of thinking about each other

But really, not so new, because America has always been diverse. It has always been a mix of cultures and peoples and ways of thinking--since before it was even a nation. What is different about this election, and what its seems that people really mean by CHANGE, is that we will finally come to accept ourselves as a nation for who we are:

an incredibly diverse, beautiful group of hard-working human beings sharing a space on this planet together.

Divisions between people only exist if we let them, and this election is calling for a NEW, TOLERANT, and PEACEFUL era of American and of World history.

These videos are all calling for:
  • Obama to be President of the United States of America
  • CHANGE/REBIRTH of how we think
  • For the War in Iraq (and war in general) to end.

Also, please click on the following link to see a BRILLIANT photography project done by photographer Maarten de Boer. The name of the project is: I am Obama, which is a series of photographs of Obama supporters in LA. De Boer did not hand choose these people--they are random people that heard about the project, came to his studio, and volunteered to have a photograph taken of them in support of Obama (including your very own Editor of Obama IS America!). The purpose of this project was to show the DIVERSITY OF PEOPLE WHO SUPPORT BARACK OBAMA FOR PRESIDENT. And it must be said that the people of Los Angeles and the supporters of Obama are ridiculously good-looking :)



Barack Obama Music Video:







Si Se Puede!!!!!! - Andres Useche







Change the World! Everyone for Obama!!!







Obama - Man in the Mirror (the sound is a little weird in this one, but its still a good video)


Friday, October 10, 2008

Time is Running Out...



...before the election!! 

To those of you who are in the process of writing, or have been thinking of different things to write about, just sit down and do it!  

Lets get our voices heard before the Nov. 4 election!




For those of you who are wondering what is going to happen to this blog after the election, we are going to keep it going as a discussion forum for people to voice their thoughts on current issues and events, what's important, American identity and culture, the environment, and the world as a whole.

LET'S GET TO WRITING!!!!!  

BE THE CHANGE YOU WANT TO BE, 
VOICE THE CHANGE YOU WANT TO SEE!!!!  

Because it DOES matter and it WILL be heard!!!