Monday, July 3, 2017

The Best Way!

The best way to celebrate Canada Day

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Ed Broadbent, Broadbent Institute

<info@broadbentinstitute.ca>
Sat, Jul 1, 2017 at 9:08 AM
To: Joseph Raglione <human4usbillions@gmail.com>

Broadbent Institute
Dear Joseph,
So much of what makes us proud about Canada is the product of the dedication of principled activists who won’t take “No” for an answer. We had a great example of this earlier this month when Parliament adopted a bill prohibiting discrimination against transgender Canadians and affording them protection against hate crimes.

The Canada we are proud of is also the product, whether explicit or not, of a social democratic engagement to put equality and the good of all first.

As my friend Rosemary Brown, the first Black woman elected to a Canadian legislature, famously said “Until all of us have made it, none of us have made it.”

Though we’ve come a long way, Canada remains a work in progress. The narrative of an inclusive Canada is a story that is still at odds with the lived experience of too many Canadians.

And nowhere is the gap between rhetoric and reality more glaring than in the case of First Nations.

On Jan. 26, 2016, the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal (CHRT) ruled that the Government of Canada racially discriminates against 165,000 First Nations children. The Tribunal has since issued three non-compliance orders. Meanwhile, First Nations children and their families are suffering irreparable harm.

In collaboration with Cindy Blackstock and the First Nations Child and Family Caring Society, the Broadbent Institute has launched a petition calling on the Government of Canada to fully comply with the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal. Please add your signature.

As we reflect on what we need to improve, at this moment of Canada’s 150th birthday, it’s important to remember the hard work of reconciliation has only just begun.

The best way to celebrate Canada Day is to rededicate ourselves to making good on this promise — for all.

Please join me in adding your name to this petition and sending it to everyone you know: http://www.broadbentinstitute.ca/fn_chrt.

Thank you,
Ed
--
Ed Broadbent
Chair
Broadbent Institute
Broadbent Institute · Canada
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Joseph Raglione

<human4usbillions@gmail.com>
Mon, Jul 3, 2017 at 2:43 PM
To: "Ed Broadbent, Broadbent Institute" <info@broadbentinstitute.ca>
Dear Mr. Broadbent:

 Your letter is honest and the first non-hype I have received from the
NDP. I was about to write-off your party but I am happy to note you
are still part of the party.

 There are Two serious problems with politics. 1. is pretentious
pomposity and 2, beaurocratic regulations which take years to
implement and which often fail when they are implemented! In other
words nothing changes and the imperial economic status quo remains the
same with corporate lobbyists pushing for undeserved tax breaks for
their companies. Companies such as Oil and Gas and Car continue to
dominate our Canadian economy but not for much longer. If the N.D.P.
wants to profit from future economic trends, I suggest creating
government owned Plastic recycling plants and water filtration plants
as well as water pipelines. It will shift our economy from pumping gas
into the atmosphere to using oil and recycled Plastic for creating
plastic pipes and planks and plastic insulated Blocks. Why Plastic? 
 Because there are millions of Tonnes of free plastic floating in our Oceans
and sitting in recycle bins across Canada.
With 90 percent going to waste it is not honestly being
recycled. Plastic is dangerous to our Ocean fish and it helps create
global warming. With building materials created from Plastic, there
will be less demand to cut Trees from what is left of our Forests.

 I suggested years ago a unity of Green with NDP to form a stronger
bond but it was the Green Party that refused to merge. This time
around I was happy to hear how Vancouver Greens united with D-Pers to
form a new government.

 What makes me nervous is the fact that a socialist NDP government
needs Tax money to distribute to certain segments of the general
population. It will not hurt so much if across Canada home owners are
provided with free 4x4x2 garden boxes and free vegetable and flower
seeds with full growing instructions, compliments of the Canadian
government. Distributing these Plastic containers will work as well as
the large Blue Recycling containers we continue to use today.
Canadians are not fools and most of us understand how much of the
meterial we place in recycle Bins end up as waste in garbage or land
fill dumps.

 Creative ideas such as those mentioned above are good but here is one
idea that is not as esoteric. Bring Dentists and Dentistry into the
Medicare system. Millions of poor people are suffering with bad teeth
because they can't afford to visit a Dentist. One of those people is
me!

You can use this important Dental political plank in your Plastic
political platform.

Thanks for reading this letter, Mr. Broadbent,
and I hope to read you again sometime soon.

Joseph Raglione
Dir: The World Humanitarian Peace and Ecology Movement.
human4us2.blogspot.com
human4usbillions@gmail.com





On 7/1/17, Ed Broadbent, Broadbent Institute <info@broadbentinstitute.ca> wrote:
> Dear Joseph,
>
> So much of what makes us proud about Canada is the product of the dedication
> of principled activists who won’t take “No” for an answer. We had a great
> example of this earlier this month when Parliament adopted a bill
> prohibiting discrimination against transgender Canadians and affording them
> protection against hate crimes.
>
> The Canada we are proud of is also the product, whether explicit or not, of
> a social democratic engagement to put equality and the good of all first.
>
> As my friend Rosemary Brown, the first Black woman elected to a Canadian
> legislature, famously said “Until all of us have made it, none of us have
> made it.”
>
> Though we’ve come a long way, Canada remains a work in progress. The
> narrative of an inclusive Canada is a story that is still at odds with the
> lived experience of too many Canadians.
>
> And nowhere is the gap between rhetoric and reality more glaring than in the
> case of First Nations.
>
> On Jan. 26, 2016, the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal
> <http://decisions.chrt-tcdp.gc.ca/chrt-tcdp/decisions/en/item/127700/index.do?r=AAAAAQAcRmlyc3QgTmF0aW9ucyBDYXJpbmcgU29jaWV0eQE>
> (CHRT) ruled that the Government of Canada racially discriminates against
> 165,000 First Nations children. The Tribunal has since issued three
> non-compliance orders. Meanwhile, First Nations children and their families
> are suffering irreparable harm.
>
> In collaboration with Cindy Blackstock and the First Nations Child and
> Family Caring Society, the Broadbent Institute has launched a petition
> calling on the Government of Canada to fully comply with the Canadian Human
> Rights Tribunal. Please add your signature
> <http://www.broadbentinstitute.ca/fn_chrt>.
>
> As we reflect on what we need to improve, at this moment of Canada’s 150th
> birthday, it’s important to remember the hard work of reconciliation has
> only just begun <http://www.broadbentinstitute.ca/fn_chrt>.
>
> The best way to celebrate Canada Day is to rededicate ourselves to making
> good on this promise — for all.
>
> Please join me in adding your name to this petition and sending it to
> everyone you know: http://www.broadbentinstitute.ca/fn_chrt.
>
> Thank you,
>
> Ed
> --
> Ed Broadbent
> Chair
> Broadbent Institute
>
>
>
> -=-=-
> Broadbent Institute  - Canada
> This email was sent to human4usbillions@gmail.com.  To stop receiving> emails: http://www.broadbentinstitute.ca/unsubscribe
> -=-=-
>
> Created with NationBuilder - http://nationbuilder.com/

Thursday, June 29, 2017

Gays and transgender people are normal in nature.

Finding his place in the world

Aaron_thumbFor as long as he could remember, Aaron knew he was a boy. He was born and raised a girl, and he endured violence and cruelty for being transgender. A Google search taught him that there was a larger world where he could find safety, love and acceptance, so he clung to the hope he might one day escape.
For Aaron, life was intolerable. He was tormented by bullies. Young men his age would yell at him, drive their cars toward him to run his bike off the road, or pick fights with him.
“I knew I had an issue, so I looked online to see whether how I felt was normal. I never told anyone,” Aaron recalls. Internet searches taught him he was transgender and an understanding psychiatrist gave him hope that he was not alone. But he was physically attacked every couple of months.
Aaron was born in the Bahamas, where so many Canadian tourists flock. But in this tropical paradise, few people understand what it is to be transgender.
Even for trans kids raised in Canada, bullying, violence, family rejection and social stigma are common. Parental support is one of the most important ways to help trans youth succeed, but many kids arrive at our doors having been kicked out by their families. According to a recent study, an estimated 46 percent of trans Ontarians either seriously considered or attempted suicide in the previous year, but this figure was an improvement over past years because of positive changes in social attitudes.
Aaron was only four when his mom passed away. With no other family, he was sent to an orphanage. As a child, he spent his days playing in the street with the boys from the home.
“From a young age, I was running outside with the guys, playing football with my shirt off. I never grew up wearing girls’ clothes,” he says. It mostly went unnoticed in the busy group home that he never chose to wear a dress. Girls’ clothing felt unnatural to him, so he could not bear the thought of living in it. But by 14, staff labeled him “uncontrollable” for refusing feminine clothes and sent him to juvenile detention.
Aaron was released a few months later, but decided to spend as much of his time as possible in school away from the group home. “School wasn’t a safe place either, but I made it through. I did well in school. I didn’t want to drop out, because it felt like education was the only way out.”
One day, two men beat him up. “I thought something needs to happen.” A friend on Facebook found a better life by moving to Toronto and she urged him to join her.
Aaron managed to get a plane ticket to Toronto, but he arrived here with nothing and no place to stay. “I didn’t feel good about being homeless, but I knew it was still better than being at home, so I just accepted it.”
When he came to Covenant House, he found that staff were welcoming and compassionate—a profound and transformative contrast from what he had been experiencing. We assured him that we would help him get settled and set out on a new path. He had big dreams and we knew we just had to help clear the way for him.
It has only been a few months since Aaron arrived, but he has already landed an apartment with help from our housing team. We continue to check in with him through our YIT (Youth in Transition) program, supporting youth living in the community who could still use some assistnace, and he appreciates the continued connection to Covenant House.
At 23, with his calm, gentle spirit and resolute determination, he is a leader and a voice for change. He is a trans youth advocate with the Provincial Advocate’s Office and he volunteers to meet with donors at our events.
Aaron has a new job in specialized lending at a major bank, his chosen field. He is waiting to hear about his application to University of Toronto with plans to study economics and finance.
Aaron’s goal is to be a Chief Financial Officer some day and give generously to those in need. “I got a lot of help in this country. I want to be able to give back,” he says. “The only way things get better is by helping one another.”

3 THOUGHTS ON “FINDING HIS PLACE IN THE WORLD”

  1. Excellent work so hopeful
  2. Know that you are all beautiful, perfect, worthy, you are Divine, you are Love & you are loved. Thank you for being. – Blessing, brother James
  3. I love it that you are so open to and compassionate about sexual diversity. People are made as they are made, and it is so sad they have to suffer for something they have absolutely no control over. God bless these young people – and all of you.

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Don't buy poisoned Apple computers!

This device can cause cancer...


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Demand Apple and Samsung Protect Workers from being Poisoned
Sign Now
Joseph,
When Xiao Ya moved from her mountain village to Shenzhen, the teenager was amazed at how large the Chinese city was. She was thrilled to get a job in an electronics factory, where she spent all day cleaning computer chips with industrial solvents.
But the job she thought would be her ticket to a bigger and better life made her sick instead. The assembly line was unventillated. She eventually got used to the smell of the chemicals, but worse than the smell was the paralysis. She was soon unable to walk, too weak to work. The diagnosis was occupational benezene poisoning.
Complicit, a new documentary, tells Xiao's story, along with those of other workers who have been poisoned while making the devices we can't live without.
It is heart-breaking to hear the first-hand accounts of workers dying of cancer just so Apple, Samsung, and other electronics manufacturers can save a few pennies, and so consumers can have the latest upgrade.
It doesn't have to be like this. Experts estimate that eliminating dangerous industrial chemicals from the manufacturing process would add less than $1 to the price of each device.
Watch the Complicit trailer and sign the petition demanding Apple and Samsung protect workers by removing all known toxins and cancer-causing chemicals such as benzene and n-hexane from all stages of the device manufacturing supply chain.
Thank you for taking action,
Aaron V.
The Care2 Petitions Team

Tuesday, June 27, 2017

DISABLED VETERANS FIGHT UNHEALTHY REPUBLICAN BILL.


John Fay, left, leads a line of fellow honor guards from the Lone Star Chapter of the Paralyzed Veterans of American during the Pledge of Allegiance before a Veterans Day parade in downtown Dallas on Nov. 11, 2014. LM Otero AP
JUNE 27, 2017 6:14 PM

Veterans groups: Repealing Obamacare will hurt disabled, other vets


How Senate Bill Would Break Trump's Biggest Health Care Promises
Inform

  Hello my good friend Valdemar Oliveira! I am happy to hear you had a successfull heart operation.  I hope you live to be 110. I may not be...