Daily Archives: March 7, 2017

What the Health Documentary Shocks, Educates, and Empowers – Clearly Veg (blog)

Posted: March 7, 2017 at 10:10 pm


Clearly Veg (blog)
What the Health Documentary Shocks, Educates, and Empowers
Clearly Veg (blog)
The new follow-up film by Cowspiracy team Kip Anderson and Keegan Kuhn will make your brain explode and then help you piece it back together by inspiring personal empowerment and meaningful measures to take against the state of modern animal ...

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Jeremiah Program Gives Families Home to Help Rise Out of Poverty – TWC News

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AUSTIN, Texas - Its a celebration thats more than a year in the making.

We are so excited to be opening our campus and being able to impact these families two generations at a time, said Shannon Moody, executive director of the Jeremiah Program.

More than 44,000 female-headed families live in poverty in Austin. The Jeremiah Program gives these families a place to live while the mom pursues higher education.

It's an approach that helps the kids too.

If we focus on just the mother, the children may not get the education needed to start kindergarten ready to be successful, said Moody.

Marissa Martinez, 19, says her move to the campus will take some weight off her shoulders.

People frown upon young mothers, and especially at 14. That was very, very young, you know what I mean? And people believed I couldnt do it, said Martinez.

Getting on campus wasnt easy. To live here, women face rigorous program criteria, followed by a 12-week personal empowerment course.

We invite them to move in to a beautiful two-bedroom apartment. We have early childhood education that starts at infant level and goes up to age four, said Moody.

With housing secure, Martinez says her sights are set on a college education in surgical technologya task made easier through Jeremiah.

Safe affordable housing for my sons and I while I get my degree and go to a university as well, said Martinez.

It's been an uphill battle of Martinez, but she has plenty of motivation.

I feel like my sons both know their mother tries. My oldest son knows my mommy goes to college and that shes trying. I hope to give them the sameI hope theyre better than me but I like to show them that I work hard for them.

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Family planning key to women empowerment – K24 TV

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Photo: Family planning. Photo/Courtesy

Collins Baswony

As Kenya today joins the rest of the world in commemorating the International Womens Day 2017, we must renew our commitment towards forging a better working world a more gender inclusive world One path towards achieving gender equality in the workplace is investing in family planning services to ensure access to high quality and affordable services.

Access to family planning services helps girls and women to achieve their ambitions. Whether they are in school, in formal or informal employment, women (and their partners) who have the benefit of choosing when to have children, how many and how much time between them (spacing), stand a better chance of achieving their goals.

Studies show that women who plan their children alongside their personal and family goals are able to attain their academic and professional dreams, get higher incomes and participate in social activities in their communities.

American philanthropist Melinda Gates, a prominent family planning advocate, has told her personal family planning story many times. Last year, she wrote in a letter about the role of family planning in helping her and her husband plan their family as they were building their business.

Also read: Ongeri decries waste discharge into river

Gates said it was not by coincidence that her three children were born when they were born and exactly three years apart. This can be the story of every Kenyan woman: that they can have a family but still pursue career or business dreams.

But for that story to be complete, Kenyan women need access to family planning services. Sadly, Kenya has a high number of women who want to either stop or delay childbearing but are not using any contraception.

According to the latest data, 20 per cent of married women are in that category. #BeBoldForChange This years International Womens Day, whose theme is #BeBoldForChange, provides an opportunity for Kenya to evaluate and renew its commitment towards ensuring that women who need family planning services can easily access them.

Also read: Ahmednasir links Muhoro to Tatu row

Considering that six out of 10 users of family planning services get them from public health facilities, both the National and County governments must invest invest in the services.

Such investment, especially by County governments, are crucial in educating Kenyans about benefits while dispelling the myths and misconceptions surrounding family planning.

Investing in Family planning is also vital now more than ever before because resources from development partners and international donors are shrinking.

The reinstatement of the global gag rule by US President Donald Trump only made the situation worse. For Kenya to contribute to creating a more gender inclusive world, we must make family planning services available to them. The writer is a communications practitioner working with an international development organisation. [emailprotected], twitter: @BwanaCollins

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Cornell Students Plan Service Project in Ghana to Build Relationships, Promote Equality – Cornell University The Cornell Daily Sun

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Michaela Brew / Sun Senior Editor

Five Cornell students will be spending eight weeks in the summer in Tanoso, Ghana through a service-learning program with the nonprofit Voices of African Mothers and the Africana Studies Department.

Five Cornell students will be spending the summer in Tanoso, Ghana through a service-learning program with the nonprofit Voices of African Mothers in the hopes of establishing a long-lasting legacy of empowerment, education and equality in Ghana and beyond, according to Blake Brown 17, program facilitator and former participant.

This four-year Cornell partnership with Voices of African Mothers will allow students to engage firsthand with an organization that emphasizes the transformative power of women and childrens education in African nations, Brown explained.

After this impactful service-learning experience, the Cornell volunteers will be agents of change in their own communities, with a renewed commitment and an insightful understanding of the vital work that VAM and its partners are doing in Ghana and beyond, Brown said.

According to Brown, the Cornell Voices of African Mothers partnership was started by Sam Ritholtz 14 and Ritholtzs advisor, Prof. NDri Thrse Assi-Lumumba, Africana studies.

This year, after an intensive selection process with a record number of applications, five students of diverse backgrounds and fields of study were chosen based on academic merit, extracurricular involvement and interest in VAMs work in Ghana, Brown said. Each student expressed unique, personal and empowering goals for the program.

As an immigrant from West Africa I want to go back to where I originally started from and use what I have learned so far to uplift students in Africa, build unbreakable bonds with them and show them that a dream is not just something in your head, it is a reality that is yet to come, said Clinton Ikioda 19, one of the selected participants.

Kierra Grayson 18 added that her motivation for involvement in the program stemmed from her desire to gain a much more accurate perspective on the breadth of certain issues by talking to someone who is living through them on the daily.

Likewise, participant Matt Jirsa 19 recognized the innate responsibility Cornell students bear in coming to Ghana as outsiders.

Coming from a privileged background, I do not want my role as a volunteer to shift into one of a white savior or as a voluntourist, Jirsa said. I am not going to Ghana to impose my own culture on its people, but [to] use the strengths of collaboration between our cultures to institute realistic and Ghanaian inspired change.

Prior to their departure, co-facilitators Brown and Ali Peterson 17, with the guidance of Assi-Lumumba, will help this years cohort to gain a profound sensitivity and understanding of Ghanaian culture [and history], Brown said.

Once in Ghana, the student experiences will be varied and immersive, Brown added.

During the eight-week service-learning experience, Cornell students will volunteer at a local school and clinic and have the unique opportunity to immerse themselves in Ghanaian culture by visiting various historical sites, learning about the indigenous people and forming authentic relationships with community partners of VAM, Brown said.

Nevertheless, participant Tamzen Naegle 18 acknowledged the challenges present in navigating different conceptions of appropriate treatment of and rights for women in Ghana.

I expect to feel disheartened by the inequalities present in Ghana, as I am a feminist and have been raised to promote human rights for everyone regardless of status or background, Naegle said. By practicing cultural respect [as I will be a foreigner] I hope to adhere to the customs of Tanoso yet also introduce my own views on womens rights and the desired treatment for girls everywhere.

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Taught Me the Difference Between Empowerment and Strength – The Mary Sue

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Editors note: This articleoriginally appeared on ThePortalist.com, and is reposted here with permission.

In 1992, Sailor Moondebuted on Japanese television. Today, the show stands as a classic among shoujo anime. Its themes of friendship, true love, and compassion ring true through the decades, and with a few exceptions, its characters encouraged and inspiredyoung women in the East and West alike.Sailor Moon also succeeded in presenting alternative versions of empowerment that didnt rely on physicalstrength; the show reminded viewers that all people have weaknesses, and instead of shaming ourselves and others for this flaw, we should celebrate it and support one another.

This message has personal significance for me, as I figuredout my own transfeminine identity around the time I became a Sailor Moon fan. Seeing not just a heroic weak protagonist, but a team of girls who were allowed to fail and be insecure, helped me process theemotions that accompaniedmy transition. Below are fivetimes Sailor Moonprovided memorable lessons about vulnerability that apply to my own lifeand maybe to yours, too.

1. Sometimes Your Greatest Weakness Can Also Be Your Greatest Strength

Throughout the first season of Sailor Moon, Usagis perceived cowardice and lack of fighting skill make her the target of frequent jabs from other characters, mostly Luna and Rei. But this is because they dont understand where Usagis real power as Sailor Moon comes from; shes good at bringing people together, not hurting peopleespecially not Tuxedo Mask/Endymion/Mamoru, her destined moon lover.

Because of her championing oflove over violence, Usagi ultimately saves Mamorus soul from corruption by playing the shows theme song for him (yes, seriously) in episode 46: Usagis Eternal Wish: A Brand New Life.Thus restored, Mamoru saves Usagi from Queen Beryls subsequent attack, sacrificing his own life in the process. Usagis greatest weaknessesher inability to fight, coupled with her love for Mamoruturn out to be her greatest assets.

2. Empowerment Doesnt Mean Denying Your True Self

Having dreamt frequently of Usagis death and the destruction of Earth immediately after their wedding, Mamoru dumps Usagi without warning in episode 61: Usagi Devastated! Mamoru Declares a Breakup. When the two meet later to fight a hench-monster, Usagi demands an explanation for why he doesnt love her anymore. Mamoru summons up all the douchebaggery within him (which, judging by his behavior toward Usagi in season one, is a whole lot) and tells her that he doesns like weak women.

Usagi leaves thinking she needs to get stronger to win Mamorus heart back. Shesmistaken, of course. Mamoru is lying; he never fell out of love with her.Weakness is actually part of Usagis essence, and part of why Mamoru loves her. As we later see in episode 71, he even gets a little misty-eyed when seeing Usagi trip and fall while running to him.

3. Embracing Anxiety Can Be Beautiful

Everyone in the group bands together to support Usagi in Episode 71: Shared Feelings: Usagi and Mamoru in Love Once Again, as she struggles with her deep love for Mamoru despite his ridiculous reasons for breaking up with her. Jupiters line of comfort (which sadly isnt in the dub) is especially striking: Worries bring out the beauty in a girl, she smiles, suggesting that a personwithout anxiety or fear might be considered less beautiful than someone who embraces weakness and pushes forward. Hearing this nugget of wisdom from the most physically intimidating member of the Senshi speaks volumes about Jupiters character, and calls to mind Makos own insecurities about her femininity. As someone who worries about performing femininity in a way that looks and feels authentic, its nice to hear my hangups might actually improve my beauty!

4. Crying Is Healthy

In Episode 88: The Final Battle Between Light and Darkness! Love Sworn to the Future! Usagi rises up to defeat the seasons Big Bad on her own. Upon seeing this, Chibiusa is struck with remorse at having betrayed her friends after being tricked and corrupted by the Big Bad in previous episodes. Chibiusabegins to weep regretfully into Mamorus chest. Once she starts crying, though, the Silver Crystal falls into her handswhere it had been since she absorbed it into her body in the futureand Chibiusa suddenly has enough power to lend a hand in her mothers fight.

Crying is often viewed asthe ultimate form of weakness. Cis women who cry have their strength and judgment questioned, and are routinely dismissed ashysterical; trans women have the fun experience of unlearning years of toxic masculinity which tells them theyre not supposed to cry, even in the face of raging hormones and intense adversity. This is a lesson Ive personally struggled withI was intensely relieved after hormone replacement therapy unlocked my ability to cry, asmy dry face even at my fathers funeral had convinced me that I was emotionally broken. Inreality, its goodto open your heart togrief. In fact, as Chibiusa shows us, its often after a good cry that we collect ourselves and find a way through our pain.

5. Sometimes We Have to Lean on Others

In Sailor Moons series finale Episode 200: The Light of Hope: The Final Battle for the Galaxy Usagi attempts todefeat the Chaos that has corrupted Galaxia, restore the Light of Hope within her, and fulfill every magical girl trope at once. WhileUsagi shows her strength in this fight, shes utterly exhausted afterwards. Im not that strong, she says, rejecting Galaxias praise and beginning to cry. Once more, thepoint is made that were all entitled to moments of weakness. Whats more, we deserve support and love from those around useven in the moments after we feel our strongest.

In Sailor Moons final moments, Usagis classic monologue returns, informing us that shes still a crybaby and a little bit of a klutzbut shes also Sailor Moon, and she doesnt have to stop being one to be the other, because weakness and empowerment arent mutually exclusive. While I wish that idea had sunkin for me years ago, Im glad to have had it smack me in the face when I most needed it in my life. Being strong all the time is unrealistic, exhausting, and harmful; Id rather embrace my weakness and learn to coexist with it.

Sam Riedel is a freelance writer and editor from Brooklyn. She subsists on a balanced diet of noodles, Pokmon, and science fiction. Can be observed in her natural environment ontwitterortumblr. Prolonged contact may cause irritation.You can find more of Samswork at SamRiedel.com.

The Mary Sue has a strict comment policy that forbids, but is not limited to, personal insults toward anyone, hate speech, and trolling.

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My Republica – The dotted Muslim daughters that are empowering … – Republica

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International Women's day

Both through the Fatima Foundation and through their personal efforts, the five sisters have been working towards empowering women.

NEPALGUNJ, March 8:When a daughter was born to a Muslim family in Eklaaini town of the district, Amanat Alisa, the baby's father, surprised everyone in his community by naming her 'Tamanna', which means wish in English. The community, which believed that no one really wished for a daughter, was shocked at the father's apparent excitement over having a daughter.

Four more daughters were born in the family. Father Amanat was only overwhelmed over this. He called them his precious gifts.

Amanat is no more alive. However, his love, respect and confidence over the girls continue to live on. All his daughters have established themselves by succeeding in their life. Their family is the only Muslim family in the town whose all daughters are well educated and socially active.

We are five roses that blossomed in the darkness. Our society is dark and we are the light, as our father always told us, said Tamanna. He was always very proud of us. And that was not an understandable matter for the conservative society, she added.

Tamanna's formal name is Shahida Bano Shah. She is counted as one of the popular human rights activists in Nepalgunj. However, reaching to this level was never easy, reports Tamanna.

My father was revolutionary. My mother was supportive, too. However, it's hard to move ahead when the society is against you. The traditional society was my biggest hurdle, she reminisced.

Tamanna's father admitted her to a Madrasa when she was just three. Next year, he sent her to a government school. And this very action enraged the entire Muslim community. The locals said that he was setting a bad precedence. People then strongly believed that daughters should not be educated. My going to Madrasa was not something that the community members approved of. Later, when I went to school, it was even more intolerable for them, Tamanna narrated.

No matter what the people said, Amanat was adamant on educating his daughters. He wanted to see them crossing all barriers and becoming independent women one day.

My birth was really his desire and fulfilling his dreams became my duty, maintained Tamanna. However, at every step, the society would try to block my way, she added.

It would be very difficult for the family when the community would charge them of abusing or disrespecting their religion. Sending daughter to school was something only sinners would do, she said recollecting the conservative views that the Muslim community held around three decades back.

Due to that kind of mindset, girls of my age would hardly go to school. Even if some did, they would quit before completing secondary level education and get married. However, due to my family's encouragement and support, I was able to continue with my studies, Tamanna, 28, said.

Tamanna is now an active member of the Fatima Foundation which works towards the empowerment of Muslim women. Very familiar with the patriarchal scenario in the Muslim community, Tamanna understands girls' and women's problems far easily when they come to seek the organization's support. We handle several kinds of cases. In all the cases, women are victimized by the social structure, she said.

Her four younger sisters live a dignified life, thanks to their education. Her sisters, Hosna and Hasina have completed Bachelors levels, while Mumtaz and Khalida have recently completing their higher secondary school level education.

Early marriage is very common in the Muslim community. However, in the case of this particular family all other sisters are yet to marry, except for Hasina. Hasina had married due to the pressure from her grandmother. However, even that was after she completed her Bachelors degree.

In our family, the biggest struggle was there for her, Tamanna. Since she was the eldest she had to break traditional barriers. The way was far easier for us then, Hasina notes. It's due to her dedication and vision, we all sisters have different life today. It's very rare in the Muslim community here, she added.

The society has, however, not stopped bothering the sisters. They keep asking the reason behind their not getting married. Sometimes we give no answer as that looks wiser. Or else, we make every effort to make people understand that marriage is not the whole essence of life. Moreover, if it's a girl, you should definitely educate her first, said Hasina. She added that the sisters received the urge to change the society from their father. We want to be the light that our society needs. We need a great deal of change to happen in the society, especially in its views towards girls and women and their treatment, she added.

Amanat's daughters, who are proud of themselves, believe that they are one of the strong agents of change in the traditional society. Both through the Fatima Foundation and through their personal efforts, the five sisters have been working towards empowering women. As Tamanna puts it, they have been able to think and act differently because as 'darlings' of their late father, they were inspired to be so.

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Dozens of students fall ill at Freedom Shores Elementary west of Lantana – Palm Beach Post (blog)

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File photo

Dozens of students at Freedom Shores Elementary School west of Lantana have been stricken with nausea and vomiting, prompting an investigation by state health investigators.

More than 100 students were absent Friday at the public elementary school on West Hypoluxo Road, far more than on a typical day, said Tim OConnor, spokesman for the county health department.

Fridays numbers were almost three times what they would normally see, OConnor said.

The high number of absences continued this week, with many students complaining of nausea and vomiting.

The health department is investigating the cause of the outbreak.

In a letter to school parents, health officials said that any of several viruses or bacteria could be to blame for the outbreak, but that the symptoms will most likely subside without medication.

Still, health officials recommended that parents of sick children seek medical attention and keep the children home from school for 48 hours after their symptoms subside.

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Freedom Honor Flight announces 19th and 20th flights – News8000.com – WKBT

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Freedom Honor Flight announces 19th...

LA CROSSE, Wis. (WKBT) - Local veterans wishing to visit memorials built in their honor could have their trips paid for this year.

La Crosse's Freedom Honor Flight released its flight schedule for the year, offering one flight this spring and another in the fall. The Freedom Honor Flight flies veterans to Washington, D.C. to see the veteran memorials built in the nation's capital.

Flight organizers say the trip is an experience every veteran should have the chance to take.

"In terms of personalizing it,the send off, the welcome home and everything that goes on in D.C., we have a great experience for our veterans and that's why we want to keep it going, said Freedom Honor Flight President Pat Stephens.

The first Freedom Honor Flight of the year will take veterans to the capital on May 6. Veterans will have another chance to visit the memorials on September 16.

Veterans can apply for a seat at FreedomHonorFlight.org. All veterans can apply for the trips, but World War Two veterans will be prioritized.

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Democracy and Freedom of the Press – Bureau County Republican

Posted: at 10:10 pm

President Donald Trump recently professed, I love the First Amendment nobody loves it more than me. But last month, he took to Twitter to tar the news media with which he does not agree, as the enemy of the American People. A week later, he doubled down on that allegation.

It does not stop there though. The president has also argued that we should open up libel laws to enable more plaintiffs to sue the news media, prohibit the news media from using anonymous sources, and bar certain news organizations from press briefings.

Trumps stance on press freedom is a radical departure from this countrys long history of protecting the independence of the press.

Inseparable from the identity of the United States is our commitment from even before the founding to the freedom of speech and of the press. It was a British tax on newspapers, in fact, that so incensed the Founding Fathers that they organized the first gathering of representatives from the various colonies to protest the British Governments actions the First Congress of the American Colonies.

So two decades and a Revolutionary War later, when the Founders sat down to draft the Constitution, it was agreed the proposed Bill of Rights would include a provision protecting the press from interference by the government, so that the press could hold it to account. That provision became the First Amendment, which states in part, Congress shall make no law ... abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press.

The Founders, who themselves had contentious relationships with the press, nevertheless understood the importance of this firewall in a democracy like ours. Thomas Jefferson, who President Trump has cited as support for his hostile views on press freedom, made clear his belief that however cantankerous the press can be, it is vital: Were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter.

But the First Amendment is not just the stuff of Founding Fathers and dusty history books. It is active in our lives every day we pick up a newspaper and read a critical account of the governments conduct. Indeed, the Supreme Court has consistently expanded the rights of the news media to report on, largely without fear of reprisal, those in positions of power. In doing so, it recognized that intrusion on the presss independence must be considered against the backdrop of what it called our profound national commitment to the principle that debate on public issues should be uninhibited, robust and wide open, and that it may well include vehement, caustic, and sometimes unpleasantly sharp attacks on government and public officials.

Today, in a climate where everything is political, the First Amendments protections for freedom of speech and of the press are non-partisan issues on which everyone should be able to agree. The presidents calls to weaken those freedoms simply because he does not agree with critical coverage demands continued vigilance in preserving one of this countrys most cherished possessions.

Matthew L. Schafer grew up in Princeton and is a media lawyer practicing in New York City. His column is submitted by Voices From the Prairie, a local grassroots citizens movement that commits to upholding the values of tolerance, fairness, and inclusion in American Society and political life.

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Martin Luther King III Praises Canada As A ‘North Star’ Of Freedom – Huffington Post Canada

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LETHBRIDGE, Alta. The oldest son of Martin Luther King Jr. is praising Canada for being a beacon of freedom.

At a leadership conference in Lethbridge this morning, Martin Luther King III said his father gave a series of lectures in Toronto 50 years ago.

Martin Luther King III speaks to reporters after his meeting with President-elect Donald Trump at Trump Tower on Jan. 16, 2017 in New York City.

He says his father paid homage to Canada for being a haven for those seeking freedom through the Underground Railroad.

King says Canada continues to be a "north star'' for those seeking freedom.

He says Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Canada have set a "wonderful standard of freedom'' watched by millions of people.

King's praise comes as U.S. President Donald Trump imposes another travel ban on people from a handful of predominantly Muslim countries.

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