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Re: DSF HAITI DISASTER DONATIONS & SHIZZLE

Posted: Thu Jan 21, 2010 8:30 pm
by NilsFG
You know, I sincerely find it terrible what happened in Haiti. And I don't believe they diserved it.

But... all the shit on TV, the internet and the newspapers is getting terribly boring.

Re: DSF HAITI DISASTER DONATIONS & SHIZZLE

Posted: Thu Jan 21, 2010 8:49 pm
by aspect-dubz
NilsFG wrote:You know, I sincerely find it terrible what happened in Haiti. And I don't believe they diserved it.

But... all the shit on TV, the internet and the newspapers is getting terribly boring.
you serious man :|, it's not like the MJ fiasco..... over 200,000 people have died in just over a week. sorry to preach but that comment sounds pretty insensitive and i'd rather be updated on the going's on in the world rather than be kept in the dark

Re: DSF HAITI DISASTER DONATIONS & SHIZZLE

Posted: Fri Jan 22, 2010 12:04 am
by Firkles
I think there needs to be more media coverage not on the earthquake as such but why aid is not getting through, it's a spit away from the most powerful and richest country in the world and they can't even fix a small Island, but hey, they look at New Orleans - it doesn't matter when it's poor black people does it? America and Britain can send a cruise missile through the window of a building and down a corridor hitting it in the center but can they sort out a few blankets and basic medical supplies to be dropped within a matter of hours? Pfft

Anyway...... this thread isn't about any of this, it's here so people can donate and post news updates that may have been overlooked. Sorry to get all pious but there are nearly a quarter of million people dead.

Re: DSF HAITI DISASTER DONATIONS & SHIZZLE

Posted: Fri Jan 22, 2010 3:58 am
by upstateface
At least my cousin's okay :) His orphanage got wrecked but all of the children are okay and have food and other aid.

Re: DSF HAITI DISASTER DONATIONS & SHIZZLE

Posted: Fri Jan 22, 2010 4:00 am
by Firkles
That's awesome news man :)

Re: DSF HAITI DISASTER DONATIONS & SHIZZLE

Posted: Fri Jan 22, 2010 8:17 am
by betamorph recordings
http://www.americares.org/aboutus/index.html


Who We Are
In times of epic disaster, daily struggle or civil conflict, AmeriCares restores health and saves lives by delivering donated medicines, medical supplies and humanitarian aid to people in need around the world and here at home.

The World Health Organization estimates one-third of the world’s population - nearly 2 billion people - lack access to essential medicines. In addition to a shortage of medicines, health care professionals in poor countries struggle daily with a lack of supplies such as gloves, syringes, gauze and bandages. That’s where AmeriCares comes in. Since our founding in 1982, AmeriCares has provided more than
$9 Billion
of aid to 137 countries. To accomplish these results, AmeriCares assembles product donations from the private sector, determines the most urgent needs and solicits the funding to send the aid via airlift or ocean cargo to health and welfare professionals in the indigent locations. The model is time tested, cost effective and experience driven. Historically, for each $100 donated, AmeriCares delivers more than $3,500 in emergency relief and humanitarian aid, including medicines, medical supplies, clothing, blankets and nutritional supplements.

AmeriCares has a longstanding commitment to fiscal responsibility and has consistently received high rankings from Charity Navigator for our efficiency. These ratings reflect the fact that more than 99% of our total expenses directly support programs and relief for people in need – and less than 1% represent administrative costs.

Our Programs

Global Medical Assistance
With the support of generous corporate and financial donors, AmeriCares largest program, Global Medical Assistance, provides medicines, medical supplies and other relief on an ongoing basis to hospitals, clinics and community health programs in over 40 countries, including the United States. The program helps our health care partners deliver quality care by providing aid to fill critical resource gaps, including essential products that are unavailable or financially inaccessible. We also supply more than 150 health care clinics serving the uninsured and underinsured in over 35 states throughout the United States and provide free prescription medications in all 50 states through our Patient Assistance Program. Read more.

Emergency Response
Our emergency response teams deliver urgently needed relief to survivors of natural and manmade disasters both globally and domestically. They provide medicines, hospital supplies, bottled water and water purification treatments, nutritional supplements and other critically needed aid. Read more.

Medical Outreach Program
The Medical Outreach Program donates medical products to U.S.-based health care professionals who travel overseas as volunteers to provide primary care and surgeries for people in need. For many of the people they treat, it is the first time they see a doctor. Read more.

AmeriCares Free Clinics
AmeriCares Free Clinics provide primary health care to the uninsured in Connecticut. Three clinics in Bridgeport, Norwalk and Danbury offer medical services to thousands of residents every year, thanks to the work of dedicated and committed volunteer doctors, nurses, interpreters and administrative personnel. We also work closely with local hospitals, labs and specialists who donate their services. Read more.

AmeriCares Gift-in-Kind Model
Our gift-in-kind model enables medical supply manufacturers and pharmaceutical companies to donate essential products while we raise the funding necessary to transport the products to a network of partners providing primary health care. This, in turn, empowers health care workers to save lives and restore the health of people who often lack the basic medicines, medical supplies and aid they need to survive.

Partnerships Make It Possible
Partnerships allow us to help more people around the world live longer, healthier lives by providing them with critical medicines and improved health care. We work closely with leading pharmaceutical companies and medical manufacturers, as well as corporate and individual donors and health care providers. Our on-the-ground partners include over 2,000 hospitals, clinics and community health programs in every region of the world, as well as international and local nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) and government ministries. They help us assess the health priorities in their communities so we can deliver the medicines and supplies they need the most.

Maximizing Every Donation
The AmeriCares model is time-tested, cost-effective and experiencedriven; and for donors, the value proposition is powerful. For every $100 in cash contributed, AmeriCares is able to deliver more than $3,500 in humanitarian relief, including medicines, medical supplies, nutritional supplements and other assistance. Read more about our award-winning efficiency.

Our Distribution Network
AmeriCares operates three warehouses, one each in the U.S., Europe and India. Our warehouses serve as vital hubs for distributing critical aid during emergencies and responding to ongoing needs around the world with greater speed and efficiency.

Contact Us

88 Hamilton Avenue
Stamford, CT 06902, USA
info@americares.org
Direct: 1-203-658-9500
Toll Free: 1-800-486-HELP (4357)

Re: DSF HAITI DISASTER DONATIONS & SHIZZLE

Posted: Fri Jan 22, 2010 12:33 pm
by magma
Firkles wrote:I think there needs to be more media coverage not on the earthquake as such but why aid is not getting through
Top three BBC stories are in and around this topic:

Misguided fears test Haitians' patience: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/8473722.stm

Tracking aid from the UK to Haiti: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/8473786.stm

What Is Delaying Haiti's Aid: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/8472670.stm

Re: DSF HAITI DISASTER DONATIONS & SHIZZLE

Posted: Fri Jan 22, 2010 8:06 pm
by alien pimp
a guy compares haiti with new orleans after katrina
In the days after Katrina, there was no rescue plan for the thousands of people trapped in Orleans Parish Prison, most of whom had not been convicted of any crime, the majority held for nonviolent offenses that ranged from drug violations to traffic tickets. In Port Au Prince, nearly 4,500 Haitians held in a prison built for 800 had the walls fall around them. Many died while others managed to escape. And the corporate media used the fact that these prisoners had freed themselves as an excuse to sow fear against the earthquake victims.

Now, just as after Katrina, the media is eager to demonize and criminalize the victims as "looters." Pat Robertson has even added a new twist to this old libel, accusing the people of Haiti of literally making a deal with Satan.

New Orleans' education, health care, and criminal justice systems were already in crisis before Katrina. In Haiti, two hundred years of crippling debt imposed by France, the US and other colonial powers drained the country's financial resources. Military occupation and presidential coups coordinated and funded by the US have devastated the nation's government infrastructure.

Haitian poet and human rights lawyer Ezili Dantò has written, "Haiti's poverty began with a US/Euro trade embargo after its independence, continued with the Independence Debt to France and ecclesiastical and financial colonialism. Moreover, in more recent times, the uses of U.S. foreign aid, as administered through USAID in Haiti, basically serves to fuel conflicts and covertly promote U.S. corporate interests to the detriment of democracy and Haitian health, liberty, sovereignty, social justice and political freedoms. USAID projects have been at the frontlines of orchestrating undemocratic behavior, bringing underdevelopment, coup d'état, impunity of the Haitian Oligarchy, indefinite incarceration of dissenters, and destroying Haiti's food sovereignty, essentially promoting famine."
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jordan-fl ... 27108.html

Re: DSF HAITI DISASTER DONATIONS & SHIZZLE

Posted: Sun Jan 24, 2010 12:07 pm
by jaydot
DSF Haitian Disater Charity Collab song????????

Re: DSF HAITI DISASTER DONATIONS & SHIZZLE

Posted: Sun Jan 24, 2010 3:00 pm
by betamorph recordings

Re: DSF HAITI DISASTER DONATIONS & SHIZZLE

Posted: Sun Jan 24, 2010 7:00 pm
by Firkles
Cheers for posting that, some good reading. I read this earlier and it is incredibly depressing, I post it in response to mag's links from the BBC which are quite frankly piss poor (no offence to magma but all offence to the BBC)

http://haitianalysis.com/2010/1/19/haiti-s-classquake

Just five days prior to the 7.0 earthquake that shattered Port-au-Prince on January 12th, the Haitian government’s Council of Modernisation of Public Enterprises (CMEP) announced the planned 70% privatization of Teleco, Haiti’s public telephone company.

Today Port-au-Prince lies in ruins, with thousands, possibly hundreds of thousands dead, entire neighborhoods cut off, many buried alive. Towns across the southern peninsula, such as Léogâne, are said to be in total ruin with an untold number of victims. Haiti’s president, René Préval, and his administration remain largely inept, absent from Port-au-Prince and even the local radio.

At Pont Morin in the Bois Verna section of the capital, Teleco’s office building is badly damaged. One twitter poster in Port-au-Prince on Monday warned local residents to evacuate “After the latest evaluations of the building, they've noticed that the main poles of the structure are damaged.”

With masses of people unable to get critical emergency medical care, water and basic supplies, the lack of local state infrastructure and personnel is plainly apparent.

Instead of investing in social programs and government infrastructure that could have helped care for the people of Port-au-Prince, especially following such a natural disaster, Haiti’s government has long been pressured by the United States and International Financial Institutions to sell off its infrastructure, to shut down government sponsored soup kitchens, to lower tariffs that might benefit the rural economy.

The demographic trend in Haiti over the last few decade’s showcases the impact of capitalist globalization: the movement of rural folks to slums in Port-au-Prince, often perched in large clumps precariously on hillsides.

"Slums begin with bad geology,” writer and historian Mike Davis explains. In his book Planet of Slums, Davis describes the explosion of slum communities in today's era of global capitalism. Billions have no choice but to live in close proximity to environmental and geological disaster, Davis explains.

In mid-2007, Haitian journalist Wadner Pierre and I wrote a piece for IPS (Inter Press Service) that investigated the gutting of Haiti’s public telephone company. We interviewed public sector workers laid off in droves. The government’s plan was to reduce Teleco employees from 3,293 to less than one thousand. By 2010 Préval’s appointed heads of Teleco had terminated employment for two-thirds of the workers at the company. During his first term in office from 1996-2001, Préval had already sold off the government’s Minoterie flourmill and public cement company.

Préval now follows through with the Cadre de Coopération Intérimaire (CCI), a macro-economic adjustment program formulated by his unelected predecessor (the interim regime of Gerard Latortue), along with international donor institutions and local sub-grantee groups. Privatization has been one plank of neoliberalism in Haiti.

Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, Haiti was pressured to lower tariffs on foreign rice, bringing down the few protections in place for its local economy. With a lack of opportunity in the countryside, migration to the nation’s capital intensified. Hundreds of thousands took up residence in poorly constructed shantytowns, many in hillside slums such as Carrefour.

Using the worn-out rhetoric of nationalism to draw attention away from the implementation of policies favorable to global capitalism, government functionaries in Haiti have worked closely with IFI, NGO and governmental advisors and experts from abroad. For those Haitian politicians unwilling to go along with these plans, the brute force of coup d’états, economic embargo and reoccurring civil society training missions from abroad have reinforced the “right way” to govern.

In the aftermath of the earthquake, the Haitian state evaporated. Police searched for their own loved-ones, as government ministries and UN bases lay in ruins, many top officials now dead under tons of fallen concrete.

Widely criticized for failing in the days following the quake to visit or speak out on the radio to the neighborhoods of the capital in turmoil, Préval and other aloof Haitian government leaders have been encamped at a police station on the cities edge meeting with foreign leaders and journalists. On Tuesday Préval went to Santo Domingo in the neighboring Dominican Republic to confer further with aid officials.

The Washington Post explained “The U.S. government views Préval, an agronomist by training, as a technocrat largely free of the sharp political ideologies that have divided Haiti for decades. But at a time when tragedy is forcing the country essentially to begin again, Préval's aversion to the public stage has left millions of Haitians wondering whether there is a government at all.”

Hundreds of journalists have streamed into Port-au-Prince, while the U.S. military has set up base-camp at the damaged national airport with U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on the ground. Giving priority to unloading heavy weaponry, U.S. forces have turned away a number of large planes carrying medical and rescue equipment, prompting protests from France, Venezuela and the Médecins sans frontières.

International media outlets show images of Haitians digging with pieces of concrete at collapsed buildings. But over the days the cries of loved ones buried below have slowly fallen silent.

Other media have begun to show images of poor people in the capital's downtown searching for food, calling them "looters", when in fact mass starvation is setting in. This occurs as shotgun-wielding security guards attempt to cordon off the rubble of some of the larger markets.

Given the past decades of forced austerity measures imposed upon Haiti, it has been nearly impossible for the country to build up a larger government, one with more capacity to deal with emergencies, to support social investment projects, soup kitchens, or even improved slum housing. The overthrown Aristide government, 2001-2004, though severely crippled by aid embargoes and elite-backed death squads and opposition groups, had refused privatization, instituted a national program of soup kitchens and literacy centers, and even constructed a few blocks of improved slum housing in the capital (as covered at the time in an article by the former government newspaper L’Union).

Those small but welcome measures are a thing of the past. The repression of attempts by the people to have a say through democratic means and the forced subjugation of the local economy to global capitalism parallels the assumption of power by elites disconnected from the people they govern. These are the technocratic elites that Sociologist William I. Robinson in his book A Theory of Global Capitalism refers to as “transnationalised fractions of local dominant groups in the South…sometimes termed a ‘modernizing bourgeoisie’, who have overseen sweeping processes of social and economic restructuring and integration into the global economy and society.” Out from the ashes, do not be surprised if the Haitian people refuse to accept this.

Geographer Kenneth Hewitt coined the term 'classquake' in examining the 1976 earthquake in Guatemala that cost the lives of 23,000 people, because of the accuracy with which it struck down the poor. The classquake in Haiti today is much worse, compounded by decades of capitalist globalization and U.S. intervention.

---

Jeb Sprague received a Project Censored Award in 2008 for an article he published with the Inter Press Service (IPS) from Port-au-Prince, Haiti. Visit his university website: http://www.uweb.ucsb.edu/~jhsprague/

Re: DSF HAITI DISASTER DONATIONS & SHIZZLE

Posted: Sun Jan 24, 2010 10:13 pm
by alien pimp
:o :o


Re: DSF HAITI DISASTER DONATIONS & SHIZZLE

Posted: Mon Jan 25, 2010 10:37 pm
by Grimstep
alien pimp wrote::o :o

We live in a world where money and power is more valuable than lives...its a sad thought but a true thought in most cases.
Wtf are these troops doing 'guarding dieing people' there is already peace they need help, if there was enough aid there they wouldn't have to stop people fighting over the supplies 'which i suspect is there excuse for the amount of troops'

Re: DSF HAITI DISASTER DONATIONS & SHIZZLE

Posted: Tue Jan 26, 2010 4:23 am
by alien pimp
Grimstep wrote:
alien pimp wrote::o :o

We live in a world where money and power is more valuable than lives...its a sad thought but a true thought in most cases.
Wtf are these troops doing 'guarding dieing people' there is already peace they need help, if there was enough aid there they wouldn't have to stop people fighting over the supplies 'which i suspect is there excuse for the amount of troops'
then think who finances the troops and who elected the leaders that send them there and once the sins are acknowledged and accepted healing action can begin

Re: DSF HAITI DISASTER DONATIONS & SHIZZLE

Posted: Tue Jan 26, 2010 10:39 am
by alien pimp
the sharks already gather around the wounded:
As efforts continue to provide emergency relief to keep people alive, IMF staff are already in Haiti making preliminary assessments of needs, and have been working with the central bank to restart the banking and payments systems to help people gain access to cash.

The IMF has pledged a $100 million loan but officials say it is too early to estimate the final reconstruction bill, which could run into billions of dollars.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000142 ... 52664.html

Re: DSF HAITI DISASTER DONATIONS & SHIZZLE

Posted: Tue Jan 26, 2010 12:51 pm
by bokatordubstep
alien pimp wrote::o :o


Re: DSF HAITI DISASTER DONATIONS & SHIZZLE

Posted: Tue Jan 26, 2010 12:56 pm
by Firkles
In happier news...

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/8478244.stm

A seven-year-old west London boy has now raised more than £130,000 for Haiti quake victims in a sponsored bike ride.

Charlie Simpson, from Fulham, had hoped to raise £500 by cycling five miles (8km) around South Park on Sunday for Unicef's relief efforts in Haiti.

A day after his five-mile ride Charlie said: "My legs are a bit sore after the ride, but it was really fun."

His effort led to donations pouring in on the JustGiving website from as far away as New Zealand and Hong Kong.

Charlie, who went back to school earlier, is still unaware of how much he has raised but Unicef said he will be told when he visits its office later.
8)

Re: DSF HAITI DISASTER DONATIONS & SHIZZLE

Posted: Tue Jan 26, 2010 12:58 pm
by bokatordubstep
CHARLIE IS A PIMP

Re: DSF HAITI DISASTER DONATIONS & SHIZZLE

Posted: Tue Jan 26, 2010 1:06 pm
by alien pimp
charlie belongs to pimp

Re: DSF HAITI DISASTER DONATIONS & SHIZZLE

Posted: Fri Jan 29, 2010 9:13 am
by alien pimp
this is how you do it when you really wanna do it
http://story.irishsun.com/index.php/ct/ ... 93414/cs/1