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August 31, 2011
Building Camelot One Essay At A Time
Man designed a god who fit within the scope of his limited experience and tiny imagination. He tried to squeeze his god inside scrolls and temples. He made pictures and statues of his "god", but he never did see Him. Man just imagined, within the limited scope of his imagination.
But, as time passed, the Creator burst out of the confines of man's imagination and escaped into the infinite universe.
After centuries of blundering around, trying to keep his god under control and all for himself alone, man created eyes in the sky and he finally started to catch faint glimpses of the Creator - sparks and bursts of light in the distant distance beyond his imagination.
And man developed a sense that, somewhere out there - here - everywhere - the Creator moves and sees and plans, and marvels at how slow we are to get the message.
Someone wrote a song called, "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds."
It seemed a silly song to me. But my imagination is limited. Scientists have just discovered diamonds in the sky. In fact, one huge, impressive diamond.
Anything is possible. Don't make God small and try to fit "Him" into your limited imagination. Don't try to keep Him for yourself alone in a book or a building.
They seek Him here.
They seek Him there.
But truth be told,
He's everywhere.
Phyllis Carter
August 25, 2011 3:40 PM EDT
4,000 light years away exists an exotic planet made of diamond five times bigger than Earth, spotted by astronomers.
As part of an ongoing search for pulsars, the diamond planet was discovered by a team of astronomers, led by Professor Matthew Bailes of Swinburne University of Technology in Melbourne, Australia.
Found to be the remnant of a once-massive star that lost its outer layers, the diamond planet is estimated as 34,175 miles across, which is about five times Earth's diameter.
It orbits a millisecond pulsar, known as PSR J1719-1438, which lies around 4,000 light-years away in the southern constellation Serpens, located about one-eighth of the way toward the center of the Milky Way galaxy.
A pulsar is a small spinning star that emits a beam of radio waves from its poles, which are detectable from Earth. A millisecond is a pulsar with a rotational period of about 1-10 milliseconds.
The new found pulsar is tiny and compact, measuring only about 12 miles across, has a mass of1.4 times that of the Sun and completes more than 10,000 rotations every minute.
http://newyork.ibtimes.com/articles/203982/20110825/diamond-planet-pulsar-star-earth.htm
At any time they wanted, they came and had sex with us. There were so many men. You could have one man who had sex with you and then he left. Then, a second came and then went back to his home and so on.
They did what they wanted with me. Even if you refused, they did anyway - they would insist.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/shared/spl/hi/picture_gallery/05/africa
_tales_of_rape_in_dr_congo/html/4.stm
In the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, the prevalence and intensity of rape and other sexual violence has been described as the worst in the world by an article [1] on September in the Washington Post.
Fighting in this region broke out in 1998, and is a fight between three national armies, which includes Congo, Rwanda, and Uganda.[2]However the fighting includes many other groups such as rebel groups and local militias.[3]The war began over elections and foreign power intervention. However another reason that these militias groups are so involved is because of money. A very rare mineral Known as Coltan is found in many electronics is being mined illegally for the profit by many of these soldiers that are also causing the violence to women.
Three million people have bean-estimated dead since this war began,[4]and Tens of thousands of women and girls have been raped in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.[5] It is estimated that there are as many as 200,000 surviving rape victims living in the Democratic Republic of the Congo today.[6][7] This however is only a small portion of the of the actual number of rapes due to the fact that many women do not want to come forward and discuss this issue due to fear and humiliation.[8] In the Democratic Republic of Congo sex has frequently been described as a "weapon of war" by commentators.
These women are being severely injured by these soldiers and the people that are supposed to be helping them such as the RCD.[9]These women are terrified and are no longer going about their daily routine work, which is having a major effect on their economy.[10]They are too scared of soldiers to go into the fields and work and therefore many people are going hungry. These issues are all of major concern and this is the first time that women are talking about their fight.
Louise Nzigire, a local social worker, states, "This violence was designed to exterminate the population." Nzigire observes that rape has been a "cheap, simple weapon for all parties in the war, more easily obtainable than bullets or bombs."[11] Women in this area are condemned at birth.[12]There have bean 50,000 reported cases however this is only a small fraction of what the true number is because women are afraid of what there family may think.[13] They have no one to protect them from the terrible reoccurnaces of violence. Women young and old have bean victims to this sexual abuse.
There are women, girls as young as 5 and as old as 80, who have been systematically raped several times, tortured and injured by fire arms[14]
The acts of violence are so horrendous and unstoppable. Many women have had their genitals cut off with a razor blade or have bean shot in the vagina.[15]Women are being raped with sticks and having other devices inserted into there vagina's.[16]They have no choice but to give into these attacks because if they do not the soldier will just call for reinforcements or call for back up[17] In one incident four soldiers cut off the breast of a women who resisted and mad her hold it in her hand as they raped her.[18]
These groups have bean known to force attack entire villages and drag women out to the woods. Once there these women are forced to be sexual slaves and do whatever there masters want until they become pregnant in which case they move on to the next village. Women are so terrified that this will happen to them that they flee into the woods with there children however if there children are too loud they bury them alive to keep from being heard.[19]This may seem as a horrible act however it is the only thing that they can do to protect themselves and there families from the harm because. Families are sometimes violated together. These families are being traumatized together and these villages are being torn apart because of it.
"They forced a women to have sexual relations with her son. If she refuses, they kill her....They obliged a boy to have sex with his mother, if not they kill him."
after this violence in some cases mother's children will be killed and the mother will be forced to eat her own child.[20] The RCD, which was created to monitor these crimes, is also very guilty of these types of sexually related crimes.[21]All armed forces in the conflict are guilty of rape, though the militia and various insurgent groups have been most culpable.[22] Of particular medical concern is the abnormally high proportion of women suffering vaginal fistulae, usually as a result of being gang raped. The nature of rape in the conflict is, beyond the physical and psychological trauma to the individual women, and is contributed to the spread of sexually transmitted diseases, including HIV, in the region.[23]
Kahindo Ndasimwa, dressed in little more than rags, told of how militia attacked her village one night two years ago, forcing her to flee into the bush. Four men then repeatedly raped the 40-year-old - their legacy a continual stream of urine down her legs. (BBC, 2004)[23]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Airving11
See also books by Stephanie Nolen
When I was just a little girl, I asked my mother, What will I be, Will I be pretty ? Will I be rich ? Here's what she said to me, Che Sera, Sera, Whatever will be will be.... When I was just a little girl I was in the school basement At recess one day, And I was singing. And the smartest girl in my class, Molly Katz, said, "You sing like Doris Day ! " Molly Katz was the smartest girl, But she could not have known What a profound influence Her compliment Would have on my life. Today, Doris Day at age 87, Has issued a new record album. And all her life, She has been saving animals. Doris Day was, and still is, The quintessential model Of beauty and goodness We need in the world. |
The United Nations has airlifted emergency food aid destined to victims of the drought in Somalia.
His anguished eyes, hollow cheeks and fragile limbs show just how severe the famine in East Aftrica is becoming.
His mother, Asiah Dagane, walked for a week from neighbouring Somalia with Mihag in her arms after all her family's sheep and cattle died.
Click here to see how you can make a difference
"In my mind, I'm not well. My baby is sick. In my head, I am also sick," she said.
Mihag is severely malnourished. Nurses at the camp say they never tell the mothers that their babies might not make it. "We try to give them hope," one said.
Mihag is just one of 800,000 children officials warn could die across the region. Many remain far from aid and medical care in the refugee amps in Kenya and Ethiopia.
An estimated 3.7 million people in Somalia - around a third of the population - are on the brink of starvation and millions more in Djibouti, Ethiopia, Kenya and Uganda have been struck by the worst drought in the region in 60 years.
Hundreds of thousands of people have fled Somalia into neighbouring Kenya, but thousands have gone in search of aid in the Somali capital of Mogadishu.
"Over the past month, UNHCR figures show that nearly 40,000 Somalis displaced by drought and famine have converged on Mogadishu in search of food, water, shelter and other assistance," said Vivian Tan, spokeswoman for the UN High Commissioner for Refugees.
"A further 30,000 have arrived at settlements around Mogadishu.
"In total, it is estimated that Mogadishu has received up to 100,000 internally displaced people over the last two months. The daily numbers are still around 1000 in July," added the spokeswoman.
With relief supplies entering the country insufficient to cope with needs, the jostle for food "has caused serious crowd crushes and even some looting".
"As a result, some of the weakest and most vulnerable are left with nothing, despite the best efforts of agencies and charities," said the UNHCR.
The UN's World Program Program was preparing on Tuesday to airlift food aid into the Somali capital Mogadishu, but efforts were hampered by last minute paperwork in Kenya.
"We are still hoping it will take off today," said WFP spokesman David Orr, noting that the flights had a narrow timeframe to take off, offload food and then return to Nairobi.
"If not it will be going ahead on Wednesday," he said, adding that the flights were waiting only for clearance forms to be completed before taking off.
The UN last week officially declared a famine in two regions of southern Somalia.
The WFP flights will be carrying around 14 metric tons of high energy food aimed to combat malnutrition, especially in children.
Flights will also go to the Ethiopian town of Dolo on the border with Somalia and to the town of Wajir in northern Kenya.
Other organisations have already made relief deliveries, with the UN children's agency airlifting five tonnes of aid into rebel-held part of southern Somalia earlier this month.
The International Red Cross on Sunday said it had handed out 400 tonnes of food in drought-hit areas controlled by the hardline Shebab insurgents, the first ICRC-led drops into such areas since 2009.
The WFP was forced to pull out of southern Somalia last year after a series of threats and curbs on its operations from Shebab rebels, but it has continued to operate in Mogadishu and central and northern regions of the war-torn country.
In Mogadishu alone, WFP assists approximately 300,000 people and it has been scaling up operations with three new centres to feed the large numbers of internally displaced people flooding into the city from the south.
The UN last week declared famine in two parts of southern Somalia.
According to the UN's Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, some 3500 Somalis cross the border into neighbouring Kenya and Ethiopia every day, adding to the over 740,000 refugees who have already fled across those borders.
"This creates strain on the fragile semi-arid environment, increases tensions with the local host communities and the risk of fire or the outbreak of diseases," Tan said, speaking of conditions in Kenya.
Where you can donate
Several aid organisations based in Australia have launched appeals for donations to help the people of East Africa.
Donated money goes towards providing health care, food, water, sanitation and refugee assistance and protection.
Many organisations are already on the ground in East Africa, including UNHCR, CARE, The Red Cross and Medecins Sans Frontieres.
Most donations are tax deductible. Information about how your donation is spent can be found on most organisations' websites.
Unicef Australia East Africa Emergency Appeal
World Vision East Africa Emergency Appeal
Oxfam East Africa Food Crisis Appeal
Red Cross East Africa Drought Appeal
Care Australia East Africa Drought Crisis Appeal
Islamic Relief Australia East Africa Food Crisis Appeal
Australia for UNHCR East Africa Crisis Appeal
Save the Children Australia East Africa Food Crisis Appeal
Anglicord East Africa Drought Relief Appeal
by: Michaela Keyserlingk Like many Canadians we lived, at least in our eyes, happy and satisfying lives. Like many others we married forty-six years ago, were lucky enough to have had rewarding jobs, had children who all found their own niches and who produced adorable grandchildren. Retirement was there to do all the things for which we did not have enough time during our busy working- lives. Top of the list, as for many of us, were endless summers at the cottage gardening. It should have ended - as all good stories do…. so they lived happily ever after. But real life is not always a fairy story. In May 2007 my husband, who had run marathons, was a non-smoker and had lived a healthy life, developed trouble breathing. His right chest was filled with fluid which was pressing on his lung. Doctors kept on asking him if he had ever worked with asbestos. My husband was a University history professor, hardly a profession where you would come in contact with asbestos. But questions persisted; had he been on ships? There it was! In his youth 40 years ago, while in university he had been for a number of glorious summers a naval cadet on Canadian naval ships. The navy had used asbestos generously to fireproof and insulate pipes and wiring all over their ships. None of the present safety regulations were yet in place. Neither my husband nor the other sailors aboard these ships realized that with every breath they were inhaling invisible asbestos fibers, a substance that would cause many of them to fall ill with cancer and asbestosis years later. Asbestos has been used all through the industrialized world with what we now know are devastating consequences. Workers who came in contact with asbestos fibers are at an extremely high risk of developing cancer and asbestosis many years later. They brought the deadly fibers home on their clothing exposing their unsuspecting families to breath in the same deadly threat. By the 1990's asbestos was banned in the Western world. In the developed world, only Canada continued to mine chrysotile (white) asbestos which de facto can not be used in Canada except under the strictest safety regulations which call for extensive training and certified personal protective equipment. My husband was diagnosed with mesothelioma. When we received his diagnosis our life changed totally. He, and with him his family, entered another world which was different from everything we had known. This disabling cancer attacks the internal wall around the lungs and the respiratory system caused from earlier exposure to asbestos. There are many other Canadians afflicted with the same deadly cancer: it is Canada's major cause of work-related deaths. There is no cure, no hope, and no release but certain death, which follows usually in the first year after diagnosis. In all cases asbestos is the villain. My husband entered a world of trial drugs, chemo therapy and palliative radiation treatments, embolisms and chest infections. The gift we received was the knowledge that our children are here for us 24 hours a day; so are our friends. We also discovered that the Canadian health system is unparalleled when you have cancer. It is staffed by outstanding professionals, delivering prompt and caring services and in our case the Department of Veterans Affairs has done all it can to help us. Relatively speaking we are the lucky ones; my husband is still with us nearly two years after his cancer was discovered. During this time, we daily learn more about his dreadful disease. But the most disturbing realization is that Canada is the only member of the G8 to still mine and export chrysotile asbestos to developing nations such as India and China. 200,000 tons yearly are shipped to unsuspecting workers in Asian and African countries. There Canadian chrysotile asbestos is used to reinforce cement in building materials. We Canadians cannot enforce our safety standards in developing countries. We cannot ensure that foreign workers handling Canadian chrysotile asbestos are protected by the same strict safety regulations as exist in Canada. In fact, we know that there are no safety regulations for handling asbestos in those countries. There workers come home with the deadly fibers in their chests, lungs and on their clothing endangering their families as used to happen here. What we could do as a minimum, but do not, is label the bags containing Canadian chrysotile asbestos as carcinogenic. On June 10, 2009 CBC television aired a documentary by Melissa Fung which clearly illustrated how deadly asbestos is in the hands of untrained and unprotected Indian workers. The first cases of asbestosis and mesothelioma are just starting to surface in India. As much as I wish, I am unable to change my husband's sickness. But I, my family and our friends will not stand by and watch how unsuspecting thousands of workers in the developing world are exposed to my husbands suffering without doing a thing about it. We cannot rest until our government stops this deadly export. I have written numerous letters to Prime Minister Stephan Harper, his cabinet colleagues and to the Leader of the Opposition Michael Ignatieff. Most of my letters are not even acknowledged, and if they are, I am fed standard noncommittal government paragraphs how safe asbestos is if handled properly and how it is not our job to police working standards in other countries. We are not alone in our moral outrage. The Canadian Cancer Society, the Canadian Medical Association, the International Agency for Research on Cancer, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the World Health Organization and reputable Canadian university scientists all agree that chrysotile asbestos is a dangerous carcinogen. The European Union, and many other countries have repeatedly condemned Canada's export of chrysotile asbestos to developing nations. Our reputation as Canadians is on the line. The export of Canadian chrysotile asbestos to developing nations has to stop. Otherwise, the death from cancer of those many Canadians including my husband will have been for naught. |