With the economy taking a hit, and a feeling of 'change' in the air, perhaps this holiday season, we should put gifts thatgive back at the top of our wish lists. There are plenty of 'philanthropic' presents out there that will allow people to reap the rewards long after December 25 has passed.
- Show you care by what you wear. Invisible children bracelets are trendy black reed bracelets with copper wire brackets that both guys and girls can wear. There are 5 different color brackets - each representing the story of a different Ugandan child affected by the country's civil war - and each bracelet comes with a DVD telling that child's story. The bracelets are woven by women in Uganda to generate jobs and 100% of the proceeds go to the Invisible Children Foundation to help bring education, mentorship, safety, and stability to the children affected by the war in Uganda. www.store.invisiblechildren.com (Bracelets are $20 each and come in red, blue, green, white and black.)
- Step it up. Put a kick in your step and help kick AIDS by purchasing shoes from the Converse PRODUCT(RED) line. There are 100 different PRODUCT(RED) shoes to choose from, or you can custom make your own. 15% of the proceeds go to the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria.
www.converse.com/#100ArtistsRed (Prices vary.)
- Bottle it up. Keep your beverages in a stainless steel bottle such as those from Swigg. They look sleek, and you can reuse them without creating waste or worrying about recycling. The different sizes, colors, and patterns put boring plastic water bottles to shame, especially since, according to earth911.org, 38 billion water bottles end up in landfills each year.
www.mysigg.com (Prices vary- sold at local Whole Foods stores.)
- Help them help you. Do your online shopping at a nonprofit cyber boutique like BuildaNest.com that sells clothes, accessories and home goods made by women in third world countries. Not only are you purchasing original art when you shop here, but you are also supporting women in need, as Nest provides them with micro-credit loans to support their small businesses.
- Cage it. Have a soft spot for the four legged? Make Fido's day by donating a cage ($100 for a cat cage and $200 for a dog cage) to the local S.P.C.A animal shelter. You can choose to have your name, the gift recipient's name, or your pet's name engraved on a plaque that will be mounted on the cage for a year. The S.P.C.A will even send you a picture of your cage. If the dogs have an especially big place in your heart, you can donate a complete heartworm treatment for only $250.
www.spca.org
- Adopt! Organizations like PlanUSA allow you to provide support for a child in any one of several countries around the globe. Your monthly payments of $24 help provide your child and their local community with improved health care, food, education and more. Once you adopt a child, you'll get their picture, a packet of information on their community, and the opportunity to correspond with them. Sponsoring a child gives you a face to put with the struggles experienced in developing countries as well as a direct way to help.
PlanUSA.org
- Have a cow. Or chicks. Or a pig. Or splurge on a water buffalo. Heifer International allows you to give farm animals to those in need around the world- in the name of your friends and family. These animals can make a big difference in the lives of the recipients. They can provide income and help families develop financial independence. An amazing success story of Heifer's animal-giving is that of Beatrice Biira of Uganda. Beatrice is a graduate of Connecticut College, all because her family received a goat which had babies, which produced milk, which helped Beatrice's family generate an income, which allowed them to send her to school. She excelled in school in Uganda and was then able to pursue a college education. Heifer International lets you custom design cards so the recipients of the gift get a 'proof of purchase.'
www.heifer.org (Prices vary based on animal selected.)
Whether it be a fashionable bracelet, support for a child from the Dominican Republic, a stainless steel water bottle or a flock of geese, giving a present with a purpose will allow you to receive as much satisfaction as the person getting the gift.
(Read it at home if you like, but it's important.) ( All views expressed in this letter and the associated blog are opinions and/or allegations associated with someone having firsthand knowledge of the facts.)
WOW !
This matter should be of great concern to every man, every minority and even any employee at all, especially if you ever do or desire to work with children or youth! Things like those mentioned, below, must not be allowed to happen in the workplace & should be stamped out right away.
If YOU were in the news business, in the Houston (TX) area, wouldn't YOU want to know about a MAJOR NPO "allegedly"(lol) stealing overtime pay, demanding employees write only straight hours to show none of their overtime on timesheets and telling a supervisor "Don't hire too many men" & "...keep them separated"?
Wouldn't you ALSO want to know about a "claim" that the SAME employer also told someone, twice, "Don't hire too many blacks" & "keep them separated"?
What if, even more, that SAME employer "ALLEGEDLY" denied the person one position & removed him from a 2nd position, due to gender-bias, and... forced him to take a $2.90/hr. summer-paycut so an obese person could stay indoors in the A/C?!!
What if the person "alleging" these things was slapped multiple times in the office, with witnesses, ...and the local news media wouldn't touch the matter? (Have you ever heard about it on the news?) -- Is the YMCA really that powerful & that "sacred" that justice is swept away?
It is NOW Federal Civil Action 4:08-cv-03247, by a former Houston, TX area YMCA employee now living in a tent.
He had to file "pro se"(as a pauper), being alone & too poor to hire an attorney but outraged over apparently having to choose between his job or a clear conscience. (-He went with conscience.)
Want "the rest of the story"?
... See the YAHOO! Buzz site, above URL, & then the link to the blog.
Please consider forwarding the link so that others may also compel the YMCA in Houston to do what is right, (not just sweep the pilaging of this man under the carpet. )
-- Change will likely only come with actions. Thank you!