Filed under: Interesting | Tags: 2009, A Dare to Remember, Africa, AIDS, Canada, Charity, Event, Foundation, HIV, k-os, news, Philanthropy, Stephen Lewis, Unicef, United Nations
Stephen Lewis is a former Canadian diplomat with quite the resume. The former Canadian ambassador to the United Nations was also deputy director of Unicef, and the UN’s special envoy for HIV/AIDS in Africa. The man knows Africa.
This October (17-25), he’s daring Canadians from all over to do something extraordinary for Africa. He’s daring you to do something funny, healthy, sporty, quirky—anything at all. Pledge to raise a certain amount (any amount at all) and get people to sponsor you. Then, between October 17-25, perform the dare.
You can sponsor other people who are daring to make a difference for AIDS affected families in Africa. Or, you can dare someone. Check out the A Dare to Remember website and see what other people, like musician k-os, are doing.
What’s different about the Stephen Lewis Foundation is that there is no middleman. All funds raised go directly to the families who need it.
Are you up for the challenge? I’ve been dared to ride 10k on a bicycle by the bike enthusiasts at work. There are a multitude of dares you can do, and the possibilities are endless. Raise money and dare yourself to stay away from Facebook for a day or a week. Raise money and dare yourself to eat only vegetables for a week.
Maybe raise money and dare Dwyer to live in his tree house for three days straight. Better yet, get him to clean his room.
Dare Kaitlyn to not drink coffee for a week.
Dare Joanna to update her blog for a week with posts only talking about chicken wings.
Dare Lisa to wear the same outfit for a week straight. (Dwyer, this one is too easy for you).
I’ve tagged a bunch of people who I think might be up for it, and if you are, create a dare profile page here. If you don’t want to perform a dare, sponsor someone who is! Or, dare someone you know!
You can take social media to the next level and take this campaign to new heights. Post to your Facebook, Twitter or blog and alert other people about this initiative.
Filed under: Interesting | Tags: 2009, Anna Lenzer, Bottled, Business, Fiji, Fiji Water, Finance, Magazine, Mother Jones, news, Report, Scandal, Tourism

I don’t really get Fiji Water. They have a pretty robust marketing plan in place, but for the most part it’s a total lie. If you’ve been to Fiji—and I mean the real Fiji—you know that how the bottled water company markets itself and the country is totally not speaking truths about the island nation.
Anna Lenzer’s article for Mother Jones magazine is interesting. An investigative look into the relationship between the corrupt and scandal plagued military government of Fiji and the glamorous water company shows a lot of cracks. I don’t think Lenzer gives the people of Fiji or its history much justice, but at least it will finally dispell the exotic myths about a country that barley has any clean water. I also think she embellishes a little too much in an attempt to paint a gruesome picture of the place.
My family is from Fiji. I am Fijian by origin and its high time someone spoke out about the shitshow happening in the country. Unfortunately it just wasn’t the greatest with this article. I guess it’s a start?
Filed under: Music | Tags: 2009, Death, Life, Michael Jackson, Music, news, Remember the Time, Tribute, Video, Youtube

Despite the accusations made upon the man, his music will stand as a testament of how amazing he was. Was. That is so creepy—if I was writing this last week, I would have been using is.
It’s seriously the saddest thing I’ve heard, and probably one of the most important passings of my time. I never cared much for Michael the alleged child molestor, and when you strip all that away, you see how amazing he was. His moves, his voice and his trademarks.
I still can’t believe it.
Filed under: Interesting | Tags: 2009, Did You Know?, Facts, Information, Life, news, people, World, Youtube
This is an awesome video with awesome facts. The music just adds to the intensity.
Filed under: Interesting | Tags: 2009, Books, Culture, news, The Guardian, Will Self, writers, Writing, Writing For A Living

Writers are probably some of the most annoying people in the world. They complain way too much about how writing is so hard, when it’s what they chose to do. Insert eye roll here. The Guardian asked several authors about writing for a living; is it a joy, or a chore? A lot of them come off as whiny little brats, but you can always rely on Will Self to say something uplifting:
I gain nothing but pleasure from writing fiction; short stories are foreplay, novellas are heavy petting – but novels are the full monte. Frankly, if I didn’t enjoy writing novels I wouldn’t do it – the world hardly needs any more and I can think of numerous more useful things someone with my skills could be engaged in. As it is, the immersion in parallel but believable worlds satisfies all my demands for vicarious experience, voyeurism and philosophic calithenics. I even enjoy the mechanics of writing, the dull timpani of the typewriter keys, the making of notes – many notes – and most seducttive of all: the buying of stationery. That the transmogrification of my beautiful thoughts into a grossly imperfect prose is always the end result doesn’t faze me: all novels are only a version- there is no Platonic ideal. But I’d go further still: fiction is my way of thinking about and relating to the world; if I don’t write I’m not engaged in any praxis, and lose all purchase.
Filed under: Interesting | Tags: 2009, Asia, Benazir Bhutto, Bhutto Family, Decan Walsh, Fatima Bhutto, Gandhi Family, George Clooney, Guardian UK, India, Kennedy Family, National Enquirer, news, Pakistan, Politics, Women

The Bhutto family of Pakistan have a long and sad history reminiscent of a soap opera. Like the Kennedy’s or the Gandhi’s, they are pained with many violent and unsolved deaths within their family. Declan Walsh from the Guardian wrote an interesting article last month on a new up and comer within the Bhutto clan. Fatima Bhutto, neice of the late Benazir Bhutto, talks about the family rift, the losses, and her future political career. She’s also making headlines because George Clooney wants to date her, or something.
Politics in India and Pakistan is so goddamn interesting.
Filed under: the ussh. | Tags: 16, Bahamas, Celebrity, Dead, Disease, Entertainment, Jett Travolta, john travolta, Kawasaki Syndrome, Movies, news
This is sad, John Travolta’s eldest child, Jett, passed away from Kawasaki Syndrome. No, it wasn’t on a bike, LOLOLZ:
Reuters reports Jett Travolta, 16, suffered a seizure at his family’s vacation home at the Old Bahama Bay Hotel on Grand Bahama Island, attorney Michael Ossi said. Ossi also confirmed attempts were made to revive him, but he died at the scene.
Travolta has denied that his son is autistic, but confirmed that he suffered from Kawasaki Syndrome, which often leads to heart disease.
That’s too bad, I like Travolta.
Filed under: Politics | Tags: 2008, cupe 3903, Humour, news, Over!, Politics, strike, yorku
Bahaha, that’s probably gonna tie some balls in a knot. Just kidding. This duder knocks some sense into the situation though. Cheer up people, it’s almost New Year’s Eve; the greatest night ever! If you haven’t figured it out, the strike isn’t over.

Bunny!
Filed under: the ussh. | Tags: 2008, Asia, Attacks, Awareness, Culture, Ignorance, India, Life, Mumbai, news, november, Pakistan, Poltics, terrorism
The recent events in Mumbai have garnered considerable attention, and a few posts ago I had spoken out about the awareness India was receiving. I was angry because any other extremist attack involving the country would have been largely unnoticed by the media, and largely ignored by the public. The web is being engulfed by people who are suddenly aware of what is going on, telling anyone who will read how they feel, that they understand what’s going on. I find that to be the largest form of ignorance.
All of a sudden this awareness entitles you to a voice. You want to share with the world that what has just happened was not OK, because you love India, because for some retarded reason, you know India better than Indians. So you’ve been to your local bookstore and browsed the travel section, maybe even rented a copy of Gandhi–better yet, you’ve gone out and eaten curry. You no longer see India as that exotic destination you want to backpack through, you now understand India. You have become aware of India. You’re saddened that people would do such a thing to a country that you never really cared about because the incident involved international citizens.
I can’t stand the word awareness. Gint said it best, and I can’t remember the exact wording, so I’m going to paraphrase it: “Learning about something and being aware of it doesn’t mean that you understand it.” It doesn’t give you the right to go around commenting on what you believe should have been the right solution with your eyes closed in some smug asshole like manner. People are suddenly sympathetic, their “prayers go out to the families that have lost loved ones”. Fine, you feel hurt. People died, innocent people. But I ask you this; where was that sympathy and support when it was just Indians being blown up and shot?
The attacks are now horrifying, terrible instances of cowardice by extremists religious groups who took out their frustration on innocent tourists. The tragedy that happened last week goes beyond the fact that those killed were mostly from the Western world. It goes beyond their hate for Western practices, and it goes beyond our time. What’s been going on there has been going on for centuries. I’m angry now because it’s only because of last week that people really noticed what’s going on, but still they have the wrong idea. Don’t tell me that these acts of injustice are random or unprovoked–that they could have happened anywhere. These events happen for a reason, and these reasons have been boiling far longer than a lot of you could care to notice. When it finally hits close to home, when one of your own ends up in the middle of someone elses conflict, do people realize what the problem is.
India, the Middle East, and most of Asia has been a hotbed of modern “terrorism” for a large part of the 20th century. These conflicts arise from religious clashes, dispute over land, and governance. To say that Mumbai has been cursed with a future of unstable tourism and that people would assume danger when hearing about the region is wrong. It only opens up the hypocracy of their understanding. Western media has tainted the region, spewing non stop headlines and breaking news because some of their own have been caught in the crossfire. Stuff like this has been happening for a long time, yet people still flocked to India. But when you take one isolated incident and blow it up to really strike the fears of ignorant people, that’s when you cause the real damage. A small blurb in the daily newspaper is one thing, but when you sensationalize the angle of foreigners getting hurt, that’s when it suddenly becomes a front page expose. Why can’t it be of front page importance when 500 locals are killed, people who are just as innocent as the foreigners? This coverage should be considered for all incidents, be they in Asia or not.
“But Kavi, if we gave every incident in the world the same importance, people would just live in a constant state of fear!” Sure, unfortunately people are just as ignorant then. But you can’t sensationalize and pin point one incident that involved a fellow American or Briton. That’s what instills the most fear in people, the idea that one of their own has been hurt in a country that they know nothing about. Then Mumbai’s economy crumbles, tourism dies, and the city becomes a no-no.
Now people are criticizing the local governments for not being prepared, for not being on the look out. You don’t know how India works, how it runs. There’s no way you can say that they weren’t prepared. Maybe they were prepared, but not to the same standards of how things run here. Things move differently over there, and sadly some aspects are weaker than others, but that’s how it is. The country is young, it’s still growing, trying to figure out where it belongs and how it works. In sixty-one years, India has managed to become a future super power. Sixty-one years after the United States gained independance, the nation was just as divided and in a state of turmoil. You can sit there all high and mighty and say “We would’ve ran things differently”. You can judge all the people from that region for being a problem, but in the end, it’s you that’s the problem. The ignorant human being.
You may never understand something that doesn’t affect you directly, but the least you could do is say that you don’t get it. We don’t want to hear what should have been done or what could have been done, we just want you to know that shit happens regardless of any Westerner around.
