Category Archives: learning

50 worst charities

The Tampa Bay Tribune has a bone-chilling series of investigative reports on sketchy charities.   Salute to primary researchers Kris Hundley and Kendall Taggart for the year-long project.  A little stomach-churning taste:

Collectively the 50 worst charities raised more than $1.3 billion over the past decade and paid nearly $1 billion of that directly to the companies that raise their donations.

If that money had gone to charity, it would have been enough to build 20,000 Habitat for Humanity homes, buy 7 million wheelchairs or pay for mammograms for nearly 10 million uninsured women.

Instead it funded charities like Youth Development Fund.

The Tennessee charity, which came in at No. 12, has been around for 30 years. Over the past decade it has raised nearly $30 million from donors by promising to educate children about drug abuse, health and fitness.

About 80 percent of what’s donated each year goes directly to solicitation companies.

Most of what’s left pays for one thing: scuba-diving videos starring the charity’s founder and president, Rick Bowen.

Bowen’s charity pays his own for-profit production company about $200,000 a year to make the videos. Then the charity pays to air Rick Bowen Deep-Sea Diving on a local Knoxville station. The program makes no mention of Youth Development Fund.

via America’s 50 worst charities rake in nearly $1 billion for corporate fundraisers Dirty secrets of the worst charities | Tampa Bay Times.

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Filed under capitalism, health, learning, media, propaganda, representation

Military and toxic waste: ghost fleet

Don’t forget that the most significant polluter in United States history is the nation’s armed services.  Scott Haefner and some colleagues snuck aboard decommissioned boats in the Navy fleet near San Francisco.  Haefner notes:

The ships have shed more than 20 tons of toxic paint debris that have settled into bay sediments, where they will cause problems long after the ships are gone. Even though Congress and the State of California ordered MARAD to address the situation, nothing was done for most of the past decade. Lawsuits filed by environmental groups were also unsuccessful in forcing MARAD to remove the ships. However, after Barack Obama took the Oval Office in 2008, the tide shifted and MARAD began working diligently to clean up and remove the ships.

via Inside the Ghost Ships of the Mothball Fleet | Beyond the Photos.

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Filed under colonialism, disaster, health, learning

Ten Frisk Commandments: Jasiri X

Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes (of course sometimes you gotta run). Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes.

Stay free y’all.

Salute to Jasiri X!

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Filed under colonialism, communication, drugs, hip hop, human rights, juxtaposition, learning, media, music, police, prisons, race, representation, resistance, Surveillance

Not everyone has access to the same technology

Jen Schradie on the digital divide.  Thanks to Cyborgology via the Society Pages.

6. But aren’t people from marginalized communities “leapfrogging” over desktops, laptops and even tablets by using their mobile phones?

As Sociologist Sheila Cotton put it, “Could you type a 10 page paper on your phone?” However smart it might be, newer, smaller, sleeker gadgets, such as the iPad mini, are designed more for consumption, rather than producing and engaging with online content. Certainly, many people are tweeting and posting status updates with their smart phones, but class divisions are stark both domestically and worldwide for smart phone, rather than mobile phone access. And mobile devices are not always “smart.” As I have argued, having online access at a variety of locations (i.e. home and work) and owning a lot of gadgets allows people to control the means of digital production and have the autonomy for high levels of Internet use. One cell phone doesn’t cut it.

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Filed under academics, capitalism, communication, learning, media, propaganda, representation, technology

Flex! University articulation of labor as duty

The Feminist Wire comes through with a nice write up about academic labor.  Here Paul Seltzer, a GW Women’s Studies major, articulates the painful implications of the academic culture which insists on students and faculty suffering in order to retain connection to the school.

Flexible instructors and flexible students, dependent upon the corporate university for a wage and a future, are those whose labors and bodies stretch to satisfy the requirements that would make them valued members of the university’s community, less at-risk to a budget cut here or a rise in tuition there.  Flexibility means that when the corporate university applies such pressures, instructors and students will bend as much as they can so that they will not snap.  Sure, I can teach another class for minimal pay.  Sure, I will work freshman orientation in return for free housing.  Sure, I will go into debt.

I observe in my own academic life that the credibility of the institution is used to help justify these kinds of decisions.

 

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Filed under academics, capitalism, feminism, health, learning, propaganda, representation, resistance

Kites

Parafoils in Malaysia photo by Amirul Lazan, via Flickr

It is a stunning beautiful day in Humboldt.  Psyched about this article on kites.  I’d quote the cool section about fighting kites in India if I wasn’t going to go outside and fly a kite.

Involves Oklahoma pizza chains, globe traveling kite aficionados, a kite called the ‘skynasaur,’ and more.  Don’t sleep on Lisa Hix’s nice write-up.

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Filed under learning, sport

Bikers against child abuse

Nice profile of Bikers Against Child Abuse in AZCentral.com.  The author, Karina Bland, spent a few months traveling with a chapter of Bikers Against Child Abuse.  Potent, emotional prose.

The girl chewing on her lip was abused by a relative, according to police reports – someone she should have been able to trust. He’s not in the state any longer, but the criminal case is progressing slowly, so he’s not in jail, either.

He still terrorizes her at night, even though he’s nowhere near. She wakes, heart pounding. The nightmare feels real again. She never feels safe, even with her parents just downstairs.

The unruly-looking mob in her driveway is there to help her feel safe again. They are members of the Arizona chapter of Bikers Against Child Abuse International, and they wear their motto on their black leather vests and T-shirts: “No child deserves to live in fear.”

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Filed under communication, human rights, juxtaposition, learning, representation, resistance

Kid President and Obama

Power of the internets x 1,000,000,000.

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Filed under communication, learning, media, memorial, representation

Freaky glass science in slo-mo!

Thanks to Boingboing for the link.  My only gripe is the description of the hammer strike as “pansy” from our exuberant host, but hey, good math and nice camera work.

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Filed under academics, art, learning, science