Tag Archives: school

Ugandan Pastor Calls Rick Warren a "Wimp"

Mariana van Zeller interviews a leading Ugandan anti-gay advocate about his feelings on US evangelicals and their influence on proposed anti-gay laws.

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Ugandan Pastor Calls Rick Warren a "Wimp"

Sneak Peek: What Not To Do at the Beach

Viral Video Film School Prof. Brett Erlich previews tonight’s lesson on what not to do by the pool and ocean this summer. TONIGHT 10/9c

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Sneak Peek: What Not To Do at the Beach

Exclusive: John Legend’s ‘Inspiring Week In Africa,’ In His Own Words

Singer followed FIFA World Cup concert performance with visit to Tanzanian village where his Show Me Campaign is helping to fight poverty. By John Legend Farmers in Mbola tell John how they’ve been able to triple their crop yields using improved seeds, fertilizer and new techniques Photo: MTV News I had an exciting and inspiring week in Africa and I wanted to share the great news with you. The first part of my trip was in South Africa, where I performed at the exhilarating FIFA World Cup kickoff concert and watched my first-ever live soccer match — complete with vuvuzelas — and even visited a lion park. Many thanks to the South Africans for hosting such a thrilling event and giving me such a warm welcome! But before returning home from Africa, I made my way north to a little village called Mbola. Mbola is located in the Uyui district in midwestern Tanzania. Like many parts of Africa, it’s a beautiful place, but life is difficult there. Thirty-one percent of sub-Saharan Africa’s population is chronically undernourished and 63 percent of the people lack access to basic sanitation facilities. Still, the people there are warm, hardworking and optimistic about building a better life for their families and generations to come. The Show Me Campaign is trying to help them do just that. We raise funds to support our friends at the nonprofit organization Millennium Promise, helping them to provide clean water, better access to health care, education, higher-yielding food- and cash crops and Internet connectivity. For those of you who have supported the campaign — thank you from the bottom of my heart. Every time I visit Mbola, I leave feeling hopeful because of the progress they continue to make. Here’s an overview of how far we’ve come: Expanding Educational Opportunities for Children We firmly believe that every child deserves a quality education and we’re working hard to make sure every child in Mbola receives that opportunity. Since we were last there, a secondary school has been built in the area which previously had none. Before the new school was built, students who wanted a secondary education had to travel many miles into Tabora, the nearest town. The unfortunate result was that many youngsters in Mbola did not attend secondary school. Now with the new school in Mbola, a major barrier that prevented young villagers from pursuing a secondary education has been removed. We’ve ensured that we have 90 percent-plus attendance rates in our primary schools by funding new school construction, including classrooms and homes for teachers, and providing free school lunches. This school feeding program is actively maintained by the local community and relies on farmers to give a percentage of their food crops to the school. This encourages farmers to invest in their community and become stakeholders in the long-term development of the community. And we’ve recently equipped the schools with new computers; neither teachers nor students had previously had access. It’s exciting to see them use these incredible teaching and learning tools. Empowering Farmers Through Business Education, Credit and Financial Literacy In Mbola, we’ve always focused on helping farmers become significantly more productive by encouraging best practices in agricultural techniques and providing fertilizer and other tools to increase productivity. Recently, we’ve started the village’s first community bank to extend credit to farmers, helping them manage their small-business and personal financing needs more efficiently. This will make all of the reforms more sustainable, as the villagers will be more empowered and enjoy increased control over their own destinies. Imagine where your life would be if you — and everyone in your family — had never had access to a loan, or savings or checking account. This is what people in Mbola struggled with before. Expanding Health Facilities and Access to Health Care Until recently, there was only one health facility near Mbola, and it was four miles away. When walking is your main form of transportation, four miles is a long way, especially if you are ill. During this visit, I was able to see the dramatically improved and expanded health facilities in the community. New clinics and health centers have been erected to ensure that villagers have accessible health care close to home. We have dramatically reduced malaria through the distribution of medicated bed nets to every family. And if someone happens to get malaria, it is no longer a death sentence since the health centers are now equipped and able to quickly treat and cure malaria with low-cost drugs. Additional promising improvements include access to anti-retroviral drugs for patients infected with HIV and medical advancements to prevent transmission of the virus from mother to child. In addition, Ericsson has donated 3G mobile technology to improve communication between the community and the health centers. The results of this technology are amazing. In a region where distance hinders development, having instant mobile communication can be a lifesaver. Community health workers can not only phone in for emergency services but also use them to help diagnose, record and prescribe treatment. This technology, along with the manpower of trained health workers, is changing the face of health care delivery throughout rural areas like Mbola. Access to Water Many villages in rural Africa have either very little or no access to clean water, and Mbola wasn’t any different a few years ago. Building septic infrastructure is a big part of what we’ve done in the village and I was happy to be able to participate in the groundbreaking ceremony for another water tank. This tank will expand access to clean drinking water for residents by distributing clean water throughout the village via underground pipes. All in all, it was a great trip. I’m still a little jet-lagged from the many hours of travel, but I’m energized by the progress that has been made. Thank you, again, to those of you who have supported our efforts in Mbola. I hope you will continue to support the Show Me Campaign and encourage your friends and family to help us break the cycle of poverty. We can make a difference if we all work together. Asante! Thank you! John For more information on how you can help John’s Show Me Campaign, log on and follow the organization on Twitter , become a fan on Facebook or visit the Show Me Campaign website. Related Photos John Legend’s ‘Inspiring Week In Africa’ Related Artists John Legend

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Exclusive: John Legend’s ‘Inspiring Week In Africa,’ In His Own Words

Hours After Fireworks, Pacifica Aired Michael Moore Saying Americans Will Be Rejected from Heaven

Pacifica Radio, funded in part by federal grants from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, has a habit of ruining the patriotic holidays with their programming. On Memorial Day, their show “Democracy Now” hosted radical leftist Noam Chomsky railing against the “grand criminal” Ronald Reagan . On July 5, while many were still warmly recalling the Independence Day fireworks displays, “Democracy Now” aired a special interview with leftist filmmaker Michael Moore , who concluded by suggesting taxpaying Americans (even anti-war taxpaying Americans) aren’t getting into Heaven due to their government’s warmongering. Moore said he would tell President Obama to withdraw all U.S. troops now from Iraq and Afghanistan, because the wars there were immoral: I just wonder sometimes, who do we think we are as Americans, that we’re not going to have to answer for this someday? You know, whether we answer for it here or there, or if you’re a religious person and you think there’s a life after this, you know, what do you think is going to happen up at the Pearly Gates when they check your citizenship and go, “Oh, you were an American? Ha, well, here’s your list of crimes”? “Oh, yeah. No, I was against the war! I was against the war!” “Did you pay your taxes?” “Well, yeah, you got to pay your taxes.” “Well, then you helped fund this, didn’t you?” “Oh, yeah.” “OK, well, you know, turn around. You’re not coming in the Gates. ” I just—I think that there’s so much good that we could do. You know, if you travel the world, you know that people like us as people, as individuals. There’s something charming about our naïveté and our, you know, right? I mean, you know, “Hey! Hey! How ya doin’! Hey, yeah! I’m from Detroit! Yeah!” They could spot us coming. But I think we’re capable of a lot of good. And when you have a billion people on this planet that tonight cannot drink a cup of clean water, two billion who don’t have clean sanitation, what if we used our money to do that? I read this crazy statistic—and I have not fact-checked this, I’ll just throw this out there—but it was something like, for $15 billion or something like that, we could dig so many—x number of wells in the third world that would greatly reduce that number of how many people don’t have clean water. And I’m thinking, $15 billion is what we’ve been spending almost most every month on Iraq and Afghanistan. So, one month of the killing machine could give clean water to virtually all the people that don’t have it? Wouldn’t you rather be known as, you know, a citizen of a country that a child 10,000 miles away, while growing up, drinking clean water, saw that plaque on that well that said, “Brought to you from your friends in the United States of America”? That’s how I’d like to be known. Earlier in the show, Moore thanked the nuns who foiled his school newspaper career since he wrote the Catholic Church was a “woman-hating institution.” He said he showed his film “Sicko” to elderly nuns in Michigan and “nuns are great, because they know the [bleep] that goes on in the Catholic Church, and they were always more radical and more antiwar and all that, because obviously they were suffering their own oppression being nuns and just taking it out on the rest of us.”

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Hours After Fireworks, Pacifica Aired Michael Moore Saying Americans Will Be Rejected from Heaven

NBC Reporter Discovers New Immigration Law Causing Illegals to Leave Arizona

NBC’s Lee Cowan, on Thursday’s NBC Nightly News with Brian Williams, discovered a stunning result of Arizona’s new immigration policies – illegal immigrants are now leaving the state. Cowan opened his piece noting a long line now “stretches around the Mexican Consulate in Phoenix every day” but noticed a twist, as the line was full of “immigrants trying to figure out not how to stay in Arizona, but how to flee it.” Cowan peppered his story with anecdotes of local businesses losing customers “A look around this once-bustling barrio is telling. The local hair salon has more empty chairs now than customers” and schools losing students as he claimed “School numbers are dwindling, too. This one is 75 percent Hispanic. Since the immigration law passed, they’ve lost more than 100 students.” Cowan even punctuated this factoid with the sob story of a boy being taken out of school by his father to go back to Mexico: LEE COWAN: For the Bolanos family, they stayed as long as they could. MARCIAL BOLANOS, ARIZONA RESIDENT: Arizona is a good state, but no more now. COWAN: He took his 15-year-old son out of school and is headed back to Mexico, which brings Hugo to tears. But you’re really going to miss your friends? HUGO BOLANOS: Yeah. While Cowan did air a soundbite of a Republican state senator who pointed out that it was “kind of a novel idea” that people were “actually worried they may be arrested for breaking the law” he concluded his piece by emphasizing the economic cost of Arizona’s new immigration policy: “It may be months before anyone knows for sure just how many illegal immigrants and their business the law has scared away. Supporters say good riddance, but critics fear the damage has already started.” The following is a transcript of the Cowan segment as it was aired on the July 8 edition of NBC’s Nightly News with Brian Williams: BRIAN WILLIAMS: Now we turn to Arizona, where the federal government is challenging the state’s tough new immigration law. Arizona’s governor set up a fund to defend the law. As of today, 9,000 people, mostly from out of state, have contributed a half a million dollars to the effort. Some of those targeted by the new law are not waiting for it to take effect later this summer. They’re leaving the state now. NBC’s Lee Cowan has our report. LEE COWAN: One way to measure the effect of Arizona’s pending immigration law is the length of this line. It stretches around the Mexican Consulate in Phoenix every day, immigrants trying to figure out not how to stay in Arizona, but how to flee it. LUIS BALENCEA, ARIZONA RESIDENT: There’s a lot of people already leaving for New Mexico, leaving something else, you know. COWAN: Anywhere but here. BALENCEA: Anywhere, yeah. Nobody want to stay here. COWAN: A look around this once-bustling barrio is telling. The local hair salon has more empty chairs now than customers. The owner is even losing two employees. ROSANA QUINTERO, SALON OWNER: People look very sad. And we feel sad, too. COWAN: The café next door is even emptier. MARIA SIERRA, BUSINESS OWNER: I ask the people, and they say they afraid to come out. COWAN: School numbers are dwindling, too. This one is 75 percent Hispanic. Since the immigration law passed, they’ve lost more than 100 students. JEFF SMITH, BALSZ SCHOOL DISTRICT SUPERINTENDENT: This is sort of the tip of the iceberg. More are waiting until the law goes into effect, and then we’ll see more people leaving during the summer. COWAN: To the authors of Arizona’s tough new immigration stance, if there is a mass exodus of illegal immigrants, so be it. REPUBLICAN STATE SENATOR RUSSELL PEARCE: Kind of a novel idea, you know, people actually worried they may be arrested for breaking the law. COWAN: The problem is there really are no hard numbers on the issue. So the question critics are asking: Is this exodus a myth or a fact? BILL HART, ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY: We think it’s fact. We don’t exactly know what’s happening, but we know something’s happening on a large scale. COWAN: For the Bolanos family, they stayed as long as they could. MARCIAL BOLANOS, ARIZONA RESIDENT: Arizona is a good state, but no more now. COWAN: He took his 15-year-old son out of school and is headed back to Mexico, which brings Hugo to tears. But you’re really going to miss your friends? HUGO BOLANOS: Yeah. COWAN: And your school? (Hugo nods head) COWAN: It may be months before anyone knows for sure just how many illegal immigrants and their business the law has scared away. Supporters say good riddance, but critics fear the damage has already started. Lee Cowan, NBC News, Phoenix.

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NBC Reporter Discovers New Immigration Law Causing Illegals to Leave Arizona

Military Patrols Beach in Panama City

In the middle of June it was reported that BP hired private security contractor to keep the media away from sites the transnational corporation claims it is cleaning. “BP, in a move destined to go down as one of the bestest public relations moves ever, has apparently hired a private security company to help to keep pesky reporters from covering the unfolding catastrophe on the beaches of the Gulf Coast,” Adam Rawnsley writes for Wired. Last week the San Francisco Chronicle and CNN reported on the government’s effort to keep pesky journalists exercising the First Amendment from reporting on the supposed oil cleanup and the environmental impact of the worst oil disaster in history. “Under threat of a federal felony, National Incident Commander Thad Allen has banned all media access to boom operation sites and clean up sites,” writes Yobie Benjamin. “Allen’s orders effectively bans all media — print, television, radio and Internet bloggers from talking to to any clean-up worker or to even come close to take pictures or videos of booms, clean-up workers, oil soaked birds, dead dolphins, dead marine life, burned and dead endangered sea turtles.” In addition to acting as National Incident Commander Thad Allen is a retired United States Coast Guard four-star admiral. The Coast Guard is a branch of the United States armed forces and one of seven uniformed services. It operates under the Department of Homeland Security during peacetime. Allen was appointed deputy to FEMA director Michael D. Brown by Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff during Hurricane Katrina. The presence of the military in the wake of Hurricane Katrina was designed to violate the Posse Comitatus Act and condition the public to accept military integration within Homeland Security and the domestic response to natural disasters (and supposed acts of terrorism). Allen’s appointment as National Incident Commander by Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano gives the federal response to the oil disaster a quasi-military cover. Allen’s decree banning the media has the appearance of a militarily-imposed command. It is no mistake Allen often wears a military uniform — even though he is retired from the Coast Guard — when he talks with the media. Now citizens are reporting the presence of soldiers on Florida’s beaches. In the video below, several soldiers in combat fatigues were photographed driving vehicles on the beach in Panama City, Florida. On May 4, up to 17,500 U.S. Army National Guard troops were mobilized by the Pentagon “to help various states with the oil spill,” according to the Associated Press. “Defense Secretary Robert Gates has granted requests to send troops of up to 6,000 by Louisiana, 3,000 by Alabama, 2,500 by Florida and 6,000 by Mississippi.” The military pictured in the video do not appear to be engaged in clean-up activities. It appears their presence on a crowded beach during a holiday weekend has but one purpose — to acclimate citizens to the prospect of troops patrolling public spaces. Florida has yet to experience oil washing up on beaches to the extent occurring in Louisiana and other Gulf of Mexico states. No word if they are enforcing Allen’s command that the media will be arrested for a felony if they dare report the disaster to the American people. added by: im1mjrpain

Widow Lived With Corpses Of Husband And Twin Sister, Say Police

WYALUSING, Pa. (AP)– The 91-year-old widow lived by herself in a tumbledown house on a desolate country road. But she wasn't alone, not really, not as long as she could visit her husband and twin sister. No matter they were already dead. Jean Stevens simply had their embalmed corpses dug up and stored them at her house — in the case of her late husband, for more than a decade — tending to the remains as best she could until police were finally tipped off last month. Much to her dismay. “Death is very hard for me to take,” Stevens told an interviewer. As state police finish their investigation into a singularly macabre case — no charges have been filed — Stevens wishes she could be reunited with James Stevens, her husband of nearly 60 years who died in 1999, and June Stevens, the twin who died last October. But their bodies are with the Bradford County coroner now, off-limits to the woman who loved them best. From time to time, stories of exhumed bodies are reported, but rarely do those involved offer an explanation. Jean Stevens, seeming more grandmother than ghoul, holds little back as she describes what happened outside this small town in northern Pennsylvania's Endless Mountains. She knows what people must think of her. But she had her reasons, and they are complicated, a bit sad, and in their own peculiar way, sweet. Dressed smartly in a light blue shirt and khaki skirt, silver hoops in her ears, her white hair swept back and her brown eyes clear and sharp, she offers a visitor a slice of pie, then casts a knowing look when it's declined. “You're afraid I'll poison you,” she says. On a highboy in the corner of the dining room rests a handsome, black-and-white portrait of Jean, then a stunner in her early 20s, and James, clad in his Army uniform. It was taken after their 1942 marriage but before his service in World War II, in which he fought in the Battle of the Bulge. After the war, James worked at a General Electric Corp. plant in Liverpool, N.Y., then as an auto mechanic. He succumbed to Parkinson's disease on May 21, 1999. Next to that photo there is a smaller color snapshot of Jean and June, taken when they were in their late 80s. In many ways, Jean shared a closer bond with her twin than her husband. Though June lived more than 200 miles away in West Hartford, Conn., they talked by phone several times a week, and June wrote often. The twins — who, as it happened, married brothers — were honored guests at the 70th reunion of the Camptown High School Class of 1937. Then, last year, June was diagnosed with cancer. She was in a lot of pain when Jean came to visit. The sisters shared a bed, and Jean rubbed her back. “I'm real glad you're here,” June said. On Oct. 3, June died. She was buried in her sister's backyard — but not for long. “I think when you put them in the (ground), that's goodbye, goodbye,” Stevens said. “In this way I could touch her and look at her and talk to her.” She kept her sister, who was dressed in her “best housecoat,” on an old couch in a spare room off the bedroom. Jean sprayed her with expensive perfume that was June's favorite. “I'd go in, and I'd talk, and I'd forget,” Stevens said. “I put glasses on her. When I put the glasses on, it made all the difference in the world. I would fix her up. I'd fix her face up all the time.” She offered a similar rationale for keeping her husband on a couch in the detached garage. James, who had been laid to rest in a nearby cemetery, wore a dark suit, white shirt and blue knitted tie. “I could see him, I could look at him, I could touch him. Now, some people have a terrible feeling, they say, 'Why do you want to look at a dead person? Oh my gracious,'” she said. “Well, I felt differently about death.” Part of her worries that after death, there's … nothing. “Is that the grand finale?” But then she gets up at night and gazes at the stars in the sky and the deer in the fields, and she thinks, “There must be somebody who created this. It didn't come up like mushrooms.” So she is ambivalent about God and the afterlife. “I don't always go to church, but I want to believe,” Stevens said. Dr. Helen Lavretsky, a psychiatry professor at UCLA who researches how the elderly view death and dying, said people who aren't particularly spiritual or religious often have a difficult time with death because they fear that death is truly the end. For them, “death doesn't exist,” she said. “They deny death.” Stevens, she said, “came up with a very extreme expression of it. She got her bodies back, and she felt fulfilled by having them at home. She's beating death by bringing them back.” There was another reason that Stevens wanted them above ground. She is severely claustrophobic and so was her sister; she was horrified that the bodies of her loved ones would spend eternity in a casket in the ground. “That's suffocation to me, even though you aren't breathing,” she said. So she said she had them dug up, both within days of burial. She managed to escape detection for a long time. The neighbors who mowed her lawn and took her grocery shopping either didn't know or didn't tell. Otherwise forthcoming, Stevens is vague when asked about who exhumed the bodies and who knew of her odd living arrangement. She blames a relative of her late husband's for calling the authorities about the corpses. “I think that is dirty, rotten,” she said. State police — who haven't yet released the identities of those who retrieved the bodies — will soon present their findings to the Bradford County district attorney. A decision on charges is expected in a few weeks. Stevens has talked extensively with both the police and Bradford County Coroner Tom Carman, who calls it a “very, very bizarre case.” But the coroner has nothing but kind things to say about the woman at the center of it. “I got quite an education, to say the least. She's 100 percent cooperative — and a pleasure to talk to,” Carman said. “But as far as her psyche, I'll leave that to the experts.” added by: TimALoftis

Katy Perry Kissed a Girl and it was Boring of the Day

We get it – she made a reputation for herself by launching her career with a song called “I kissed a girl and I liked it” and now she has to live up to it, otherwise more people will know she’s a pig rolling around in her own fucking bullshit to keep cool…The kiss is awkward and there is no tongue and reminds me of when I used to try to get High School girls to kiss in the park, it’s like no tongue, hardly a kiss on the lips, boring shit you’d see someone do to their dying grandmother in hopes to breathe some life back into her…and not something you’d jerk off to… Now get her fucking song out of my head…they polluted my life with it last year and I can only assume it was some brainwashing technology that made me memorize it without wanting to leading to album sales and I guess the damage is fucking done…and I’m not very happy about it….but I can only blame Katy Perry for doing this to me and I will have to one day find my revenge…ideally via hate-titty-fucking…. Pics via Fame

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Katy Perry Kissed a Girl and it was Boring of the Day

New Uncensored video of Kalamazoo, Michigan Female School Bus Driver Being Beaten

New Uncensored video of Kalamazoo, Michigan Female School Bus Driver Being Beaten added by: CarlosBobthe3rd

‘Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows’ Movie Trailer

At last, “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows” full trailer is now available shows some dark roads ahead for Harry, Ron and Hermione. Every being will need to pick a side in the epic war that’s to begin. This is the final chapter of Harry Potter wherein our heroes leave Hogwarts and embark on a journey to complete Dumbledore’s search for the remaining Horcruxes. Meanwhile, Voldemort has taken over the Ministry of Magic and it’s not safe for anyone who isn’t Team Death Eater. The trailer begins ominously enough as an offscreen voice informs Lord Voldemort (Ralph Fiennes) that “there’s no sign of him, my lord.” The “him” in question quickly makes himself known, as Harry Potter (Radcliffe) emerges in a dark forest clearing, wand at the ready, eyes locked with the serpentine Voldemort’s. “Harry Potter,” Voldemort hisses softly. “The Boy Who Lived … come to die!” Split into two parts, there’s definitely enough material to fill two films. The Horcruxes won’t give themselves up easily. Old friends will risk their lives to beat Voldemort’s forces. And there’s a huge battle over the school and between Harry and Voldemort. Now, fans are getting their first look as to what lies ahead in the final “Harry Potter” adventure, with the first full-length trailer for “Deathly Hallows” debuting online early Monday evening (June 28). Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint and Emma Watson reprise their roles as Harry, Ron and Hermione in “Deathly Hallows,” which has been divided into two films. Despite the decision to split the story in two, the feature-length trailer combines elements from both films for one epic masterpiece highlighting the final showdown between the Boy Who Lived and He Who Must Not Be Named. Trailer describes “Deathly Hallows” as “the finale of the worldwide phenomenon, the motion picture event of a generation.” Based on the footage seen here, those words are hardly an understatement. The first part of “Deathly Hallows” arrives in theaters this November, with the final installment in the “Harry Potter” series unfolding in July 2011. See MTV link here for the full trailer… ‘Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows’ Movie Trailer is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading