Tag Archive: people


When Victims Become Traffickers

Burmese police announced this week that out of the hundreds of human traffickers they have arrested over the past several years, at least 100 of them were once victims. Sadly, trafficking victims becoming traffickers is not unusual. But what makes a person go from victim to trafficker?

Most of the 100 victims-turned-traffickers were trafficked from Burma into China and Thailand for forced labor, forced prostitution, or forced marriage. Once discovered, they were shipped back to Burma, sometimes deported, and usually with no compensation. Back in Burma, there were no support services for them, no money for counseling or job training, no help with medical bills or education. The lack of support for victims traps them in a vicious cycle. Some people end up trafficked again and again because they cannot break out of that cycle. Others eventually break the cycle, by becoming traffickers themselves.

Victims can turn into traffickers for a number of reasons. For those trafficked as children, there may be no other conceivable industry for them to enter other than the one they were sold into as a child, whether that’s commercial sex, brick making, or domestic service. So as an adult, they follow the only career path they’ve known and recruit other children into the same industry. Others many find that the only model of power in their life is the person who owns and controls them — their trafficker. When they look around for ways to empower themselves, becoming a subjugater of others is all they see. Still others, as is the case with many of the 100 Burmese nationals, may not even realize what they’re engaging in is against the law. They know the trafficking routes, brokers, and bosses from the time they were forced to work. That they should recruit others to do the same thing might feel like the natural extension of their previous “job.”

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When Victims Become Traffickers

Burmese police announced this week that out of the hundreds of human traffickers they have arrested over the past several years, at least 100 of them were once victims. Sadly, trafficking victims becoming traffickers is not unusual. But what makes a person go from victim to trafficker?

Most of the 100 victims-turned-traffickers were trafficked from Burma into China and Thailand for forced labor, forced prostitution, or forced marriage. Once discovered, they were shipped back to Burma, sometimes deported, and usually with no compensation. Back in Burma, there were no support services for them, no money for counseling or job training, no help with medical bills or education. The lack of support for victims traps them in a vicious cycle. Some people end up trafficked again and again because they cannot break out of that cycle. Others eventually break the cycle, by becoming traffickers themselves.

Victims can turn into traffickers for a number of reasons. For those trafficked as children, there may be no other conceivable industry for them to enter other than the one they were sold into as a child, whether that’s commercial sex, brick making, or domestic service. So as an adult, they follow the only career path they’ve known and recruit other children into the same industry. Others many find that the only model of power in their life is the person who owns and controls them — their trafficker. When they look around for ways to empower themselves, becoming a subjugater of others is all they see. Still others, as is the case with many of the 100 Burmese nationals, may not even realize what they’re engaging in is against the law. They know the trafficking routes, brokers, and bosses from the time they were forced to work. That they should recruit others to do the same thing might feel like the natural extension of their previous “job.”

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The End of Chivalry as We Know It

Woe to women, bewails the Washington Times. For all feminists’ claims about improved gender equality and gains for women, they say, things “are pretty dismal.”

The conservative Times cites a recent Harris Poll, which finds that 7 out of 10 respondents don’t believe women receive equal pay for equal work. Two-thirds believe that women are discriminated against in trying to climb the corporate ladder. Complete gender equality is far off on the horizon and things are not a-okay between the genders.

I’m not sure how any of this is antithetical to the claims of the feminist movement. We’re pretty clear on the fact that women don’t get equal pay, that they continue to run up against a glass ceiling. Women certainly make more on the dollar than they used to and there have been improvements, but, c’mon, the feminist movement doesn’t still exist today because everything is just perfect.

But none of of this is really the point, or important enough for the headline of the Washington Times article. What is unequal pay or sex discrimination, after all, compared to a decline in chivalry? Four in five people weigh in that women are treated with less chivalry than in the past.  P.M. Forni, founder and director of Johns Hopkins University’s Civility Initiative (seriously, I had no idea that existed either), says that chivalry has been a “victim” of the women’s rights movement, which is a setback for society. Now that is what we should really be worrying about.

Or, you know, celebrating.

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In Freedom we trust

The star spangled banner. Moving, beautiful, and above all symbolic to the people, do we dare change it’s lyrics to be constitutionally sound?

We think so. Have you ever noticed the discrepancy? The First Amendment reads, “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof . . .” Although an anthem is no law. There is no legal basis to our request. I think common sense would imply that separation of church and state applies here as well.

So we the people suggest: that the line – ‘And this be our motto: “In God is our trust.” be changed too ‘And this be our motto: “In freedom trust.” This great song would give our motto as something that all faiths could sing in equal good faith. For I think we can all agree that in America the Brave. We are free to worship what gods we will.

O! Thus be it ever, when freemen shall stand
Between their loved home and the war’s desolation!
Blest with victory and peace, may the heav’n rescued land
Praise the Power that hath made and preserved us a nation.
Then conquer we must, when our cause it is just,
And this be our motto: “In Freedom we trust.”
And the star-spangled banner in triumph shall wave
O’er the land of the free and the home of the brave!


In Freedom we trust

Reinstate Clarenceville Custodians

The school board in a 4-3 vote decided to fire its custodial staff (when they offered huge concessions to help with the budget) and replace them with a for profit company that has promised a savings of 1.2 million over 3 years. Simply dividing that savings equals about 45,000 per employee per year. One word, impossible. Words to our school board, reinstate the people we know and trust to be around our children and resume negotiations
Reinstate Clarenceville Custodians

Help get Zander back

Mindy McCready needs our help. She is trying to get her child, Zander, back. Her mom is doing everything to stop that from happening, and the people who are listening to her mother aren%u2019t listening to Mindy%u2019s side of the story or giving her a chance to be heard. Please help us help Mindy get her baby back by sending this to people via email, Facebook, etc%u2026. Please sign this and try to get as many people as possible to sign too. Mindy needs our help. So lets do everything and anything in our power to get Zander back to her. Thanks for your support.
Help get Zander back

The Death of a Climate Giant

The global warming movement is in mourning this week.

Dr. Stephen Schneider, who died suddenly yesterday of a heart attack, devoted his life to the climate cause. If Al Gore is the poster child of the climate campaign, Stephen Schneider was the science, messaging and brains behind the show. This humble genius was a power-broker who changed the world and was doing it well before most others arrived on the scene.

Schneider has long been an inspiration in his ability to inspire other scientists, politicians and average citizens to care about global warming, which was, and still is, no small task. I first met him more than 10 years ago when he spoke at the annual conference of a faith-based global warming groups. What impressed me most was how he commanded the awe and respect of religious leaders of all denominations. He had the unique ability to speak with both scientific authority and with respect and honor for those who took stock in the power of faith. He knew, early on, the climate movement needed their voices and clout. Part of his genius was his ability to bring together people of all stripes.

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Six Degrees of Bob McDonnell

Virginia Gov. Robert McDonnell (R) is no friend to the LGBT community. He is, however, related to it — and that points to an important truth about our society and our approach to LGBT rights.

As a legislator, McDonnell was chief sponsor and author of a state constitutional amendment banning same-sex couples from marriage. McDonnell’s Web site proudly boasts that he was twice named “Legislator of the Year” by the Virginia Family Foundation, an ultra-conservative group. As governor, in February 2010, he signed an executive order banning discrimination against state workers on the basis of race, sex, religion and age — but not sexual orientation, as his predecessors had done. A month later, after much criticism, he issued an executive directive (not as strong as an executive order), saying that he would not tolerate discrimination of any kind, including that based on sexual orientation. And his Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli forced the halt of a proposed state regulatory change that would have allowed government employees to add same-sex partners to their state health benefits.

McDonnell’s former in-law, however — the divorced spouse of his wife’s sister — is transgender. In April, at an LGBT-rights rally held by Equality Virginia, she announced to the crowd, “I am father to three of the present governor’s nephews and nieces.” She said she wants to use her association with the governor to advance LGBT rights, especially because she fears her personal situation may have “hardened” some of his views.

The Washington Post has a long piece today on Deane, and reports that several LGBT activists are skeptical of Deane’s motives. Sen. A. Donald McEachin (D-Richmond), an advocate of LGBT rights, told WaPo that “several activists have told him they are worried that Deane will shift attention from the cause to her,” and that “It’s incumbent to all of us to keep the issue front and center. The more all of us do to speak out about the issue, the more it becomes about the issue.”

Wait just a minute. The “issue” here is civil rights — and civil rights are about people. One cannot separate them from the people whom they affect.

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teaching Wisdom in our Schools

Imagine our country (the world) in two generations time when the people now in power have been developing and practising Wisdom in their personal and professional lives since kindergarten .
Tell our government and schools that we want a better future for our kids.
The prevailing influences on our kids now are to feel more and spend more and to kill if you get frustrated.
To balance this we have to discover another way of relating to daily life.
Teaching Wisdom from kindergarten onwards sounds like a wise thing to consider.
teaching Wisdom in our Schools

My hometown station, FOX Chicago, recently dared to question what is perhaps America’s most sacrosanct institution: the public library. Are libraries a waste of taxpayer money?, the station asked, managing to irritate people on both sides of the aisle.

You know they’re on a no-holds-barred offensive on big government when they go for your local library. When the internet is everywhere and paperbacks are cheap, who needs a library anymore?

FYI, FOX Chicago. Not everyone has home access to the internet. I know, it’s a surprise, given the hoards of people navigating downtown Chicago in Brooks Brothers suits with only their iPhones as company, but much of the city and the nation still doesn’t have internet access.

Among Chicagoans, 40 percent of people don’t have regular access to the internet. Of those, 25 percent have no access at all. In a time where people’s wallets are getting thinner, the internet can be one of the first things to go.

Take a look at this riveting investigative journalism:


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