Thursday, October 27, 2005 

Rosa Parks

What a phenomenal way to honour one who inspired greatness but lived modestly.

... WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The late civil rights icon Rosa Parks will be the first woman to lie in honor in the U.S. Capitol Rotunda, a tribute usually reserved for presidents, soldiers and politicians.

The U.S. Senate voted on Thursday to honor Parks and the U.S. House of Representatives is set to approve the tribute on Friday...

you can check out the whole article, which includes a bio... Reuters

 

as i come back

live a little
laugh a lot
complain
asking is ok

trusting is
trust is...
optional
or is it?

smile back
learn all
teach them
indulge you

let go of...
all of it
possible?
it must be

Tuesday, October 18, 2005 

Clinton Speaks...

to Toronto, ON. Yeah, okay he earned money to do it but at least his message is positive, please see article:

Western nations can defuse the terrorist threat that looms over wealthy countries by sharing their prosperity with the half of humanity that feels the system "is rigged against them," former U.S. President Bill Clinton said today.

Security policies alone will never thwart the destructive ambitions of terrorist groups like Al Qaeda, Clinton told an audience attending a motivational seminar in Toronto.

"We have no excuse now for not building a world with more partners and fewer terrorists," he said.

"We cannot kill, jail or occupy all of our enemies, we cannot have a security policy only."

Clinton, in Toronto during a speaking tour of three Canadian cities that ends Wednesday in Calgary, spoke of his vision of a more secure and equitable world.

"We have to find a way to reach out to the half of the people in the world who think we don't care about them and, in fact, that we've got the system rigged against them," he told the audience, many who paid as much as $1,300 to attend the day-long event.

"Unless we can do this we can never hope to build a world totally free of terror, or dangerous weapons, or human conflict."

Non-governmental organizations and the Internet will be instrumental in allowing citizens of western countries to affect real change in the developing world, he said.

Clinton noted that charitable donations from individuals, when taken together, outstripped those of governments during the relief effort in the wake of tsunamis that ravaged southeast Asia last year.

Clinton also talked about Toronto's SARS crisis in 2003, which he said illustrated the political power of the Internet.

"When people in Canada were terrified about (SARS) in the beginning, the Chinese government was denying that it was such a big deal," he said. The people of China jammed their government's website, demanding to know the truth about the threat the disease posed.

"The government heard them, and a terrible calamity was avoided. An epidemic that could have killed tens of thousands of people was shut down."

That power will soon enable individuals to bring prosperity to the developing world, he noted.

"We know how to promote economic growth through aid trade and debt relief. We know how to get the 130 million children who aren't in school in school," Clinton said.

"You have the power now to do things citizens in the entire history of humanity have never been able to do, because of the rise of the Internet and the rise of the non-governmental organizations."

..i'll be back soon, i promise...