Monday, August 27, 2007
Who's Killed More Animals?
We live in a society that is saturated with media images. From when we wake up and brush our Colgate teeth, to the first cup of Folgers coffee, that McLunch, the Kraft dinner, and the list goes on and on. Just to reflect on the amount of consumer propaganda we receive everyday is enough to allow for a sensory overload (bear in mind I am aware of the culture we live in, and find these images to only be mild annoyances). So imagine my surprise when I was sitting reading my New York Times today and found that ad on page 6. Regardless of my affiliations with any organization, claims that any advocate group has participated in contrary activities leaves me more that just curious.
Questions that ran through my head?
1. Who has the money to pay for a full page ad in the NYTimes?
2. Who runs this website?
3. What could be possible motives/reasons for a group to attack PETA?
So I looked up the answer and found this group:
Consumer Freedom
A brief survey of their 'unbiased' website not only shows finger pointing on Peta but the National Health Institute for their views on Obesity being a large killer. It talks about the 'diabetes' myth. The fact that there is no mercury danger in fish. Physician's scams to get people to eat healthier. The 'green army' and how environmentalist are all nut jobs. The list goes on and on.
This website is a FAKE grassroots organization lying to the public. Question 2 and 3: Who has the money and will to attack organizations like PETA? Companies that have the most lose. Fast food companies, the beef industry, agro-business, and other large conglomerates that can AFFORD to place a full page add on page 6 of the NYTimes and lie to consumers. These wolves in sheep's clothing get your attention 16 hours a day (barring 8 hours of sleep). It's about time we start recognizing their tricks, and unsheathe them for the wolves they are!
Friday, August 17, 2007
Leaders are Made Not Born
My vision is that one day in America every child will have free health care. So that no child, based solely on social-economic class, should have to suffer. I have a plan to set out this vision. Through preventative medicine and community development, health care cam become a means to healthy living and a more harmonious society. Children don't need to attend schools without vaccinations, without proper dental and eye care, and having there parents free from the fear of illness.
I remember the Norman Rockwell paintings, the quartet, with the basic human rights. Freedom from Want, Freedom from Fear, Freedom to Worship, and the Freedom of Speech. Each picture showed different family scenes and I remember one most specifically. The Freedom from Fear, with a mother and a father looking at their sleeping children with a paper in the father's hands reading "Bombings" and "Horror." Pick up a paper today and see the headlines, "The Issue with the Health care System" and articles that begin "1 in 3 not insured." Put that article down, look at your children or your husband or your wife or you parents and reflect on what fear is. It doesn't have to be terrorist or war, but the fear ultimately of death. And what greater form of that fear of death than the slow pain of having to watch loved ones die, while the cure for the disease is ever readily at hand.
When my grandmother was a nurse for the Health Department in the 1960's, she often found herself in communities that were social-economically poor. The old grandmothers would sit on their porch and talk, and while they talked my grandmother took their blood pressure for free. She would find out about the pregnant women in the neighborhood and encourage the old women to send those girls to the health department. Soon, the girls would come and my grandmother begin to start community programs informing people of what the health department could give for free. She once went to a house of a woman with seven kids, and gave all of them the polio vaccine. The mother was hysterical with how her family was going to pay and my grandmother just politely smiled and replied, "Oh, but it's free." She would carry around cards for five ingredients meals, each one being something you could purchase on welfare. She improved and changed the lives of countless people, but she also taught an important lesson.
Skip ahead 45 years and I myself am learning about community development. What if we established programs that children could join a sports team for free? What if we could give talks in the homes of trusted citizens about prenatal care, nutrition, and personal care? What if kids wrote their own programs to talk about drugs and alcohol, and we didn't teach them they choose themselves? What if we had free diabetes testing, free STD testing, free clinics for acute diseases? I think these things are possible, and I think we can change the system. I'm just one person, but I have A Revolutionary Vision.
I remember the Norman Rockwell paintings, the quartet, with the basic human rights. Freedom from Want, Freedom from Fear, Freedom to Worship, and the Freedom of Speech. Each picture showed different family scenes and I remember one most specifically. The Freedom from Fear, with a mother and a father looking at their sleeping children with a paper in the father's hands reading "Bombings" and "Horror." Pick up a paper today and see the headlines, "The Issue with the Health care System" and articles that begin "1 in 3 not insured." Put that article down, look at your children or your husband or your wife or you parents and reflect on what fear is. It doesn't have to be terrorist or war, but the fear ultimately of death. And what greater form of that fear of death than the slow pain of having to watch loved ones die, while the cure for the disease is ever readily at hand.
When my grandmother was a nurse for the Health Department in the 1960's, she often found herself in communities that were social-economically poor. The old grandmothers would sit on their porch and talk, and while they talked my grandmother took their blood pressure for free. She would find out about the pregnant women in the neighborhood and encourage the old women to send those girls to the health department. Soon, the girls would come and my grandmother begin to start community programs informing people of what the health department could give for free. She once went to a house of a woman with seven kids, and gave all of them the polio vaccine. The mother was hysterical with how her family was going to pay and my grandmother just politely smiled and replied, "Oh, but it's free." She would carry around cards for five ingredients meals, each one being something you could purchase on welfare. She improved and changed the lives of countless people, but she also taught an important lesson.
Skip ahead 45 years and I myself am learning about community development. What if we established programs that children could join a sports team for free? What if we could give talks in the homes of trusted citizens about prenatal care, nutrition, and personal care? What if kids wrote their own programs to talk about drugs and alcohol, and we didn't teach them they choose themselves? What if we had free diabetes testing, free STD testing, free clinics for acute diseases? I think these things are possible, and I think we can change the system. I'm just one person, but I have A Revolutionary Vision.
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