Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity. —Robert J. Hanlon

Who Are the Homeless?

Posted by Justin under Poverty View recent posts with the tag Poverty on Technorati Seattle View recent posts with the tag Seattle on Technorati Social Justice View recent posts with the tag Social Justice on Technorati World View recent posts with the tag World on Technorati 

The United Way of King County has published an ethnographic study of homelessness (PDF) that shatters many of the myths and generalizations about homeless people.

From the introduction:

Fundraising for the Campaign to End Chronic Homelessness is at its halfway point, and the associated resources are now beginning to be deployed in the community. To ensure that we and our partners truly understand the shape and scale of the problem, and use our resources to the best possible effect, we commissioned this Ethnographic Assessment of Homeless Street Populations. It is Washington State’s first-ever effort to take a probing, anthropological look at the people and places of King County homelessness, and capture the diversity of the homeless experience.

Not everyone who is lingering on the street is homeless, and not everyone who is homeless is on the street. Drug and alcohol use is widespread, but hardly universal, and different ages of the homeless have different preferences in substances.

For some homeless people, life will turn around if there is a dependable roof overhead. For others, the challenge is deeper, and success will hinge on supportive services, including mentorship in regaining critical social skills.

All this and more emerges from this rich, textured, and challenging report. As we move forward in United Way of King County’s work to end homelessness, the report will guide our effort to be as comprehensive and effective as possible in our approach. link

Story in the Seattle P-I

Further down, the report notes:

Now, there are evidence-based practices for serving the chronic homeless population. Positive results have been found for models that incorporate Housing First principles, recovery first models, generic outreach, employment options, day centers, harm reduction, and motivational interviewing approaches to chemical dependency. Seattle has yet to develop a coordinated effort incorporating all of these components. However, as reported earlier, MID workers noted a clear difference on the street with the opening of the 1811 Eastlake Project (DESC) for chronic alcoholics and Real Change, which provides the opportunity to earn cash by selling papers. The innovations of Housing First principles have transformed the service philosophy toward this group in recent years. Equally transformative approaches are needed for other homeless streetbased
populations.

In other words, we may need to suspend some of our assumptions about what we should do and look at the research. Many people objected when 1811 was opened, as it lets alcoholics drink in their rooms, but it does get them off the street, giving them a greater chance of achieving sobriety and employment.

The “Chronic Homeless” category used in this report is a bit broad; it’s designed to encompass groups that aren’t adequately described by the other categories “Chronic Public Alcoholic,” “Mentally Ill and Mentally Ill Offender,” “Drug Addicted Offender.” I think the simply down-and-out are a bit overlooked, though I haven’t read the report in its entirety. What about those who have chronic, untreated health issues? Getting such issues fully treated is not easy for the homeless, and such issues can quickly lead to homelessness for those without insurance.

For those of you who know our homeless friend Paul, I’m saddened to report that he passed away about two weeks ago, after spending several weeks in a coma. While he did have some drug issues in his past, most of his issues were related to chronic health problems. We saw over and over that he’d get short-term treatment for his MRSA infections and then be released, so the infections would never go away. They eventually destroyed his kidneys, forcing him to go to dialysis four times a week. A number of other complications made the kidney failure worse, and ultimately contributed to his untimely death.

These are serious issues, and United Way’s $25 million campaign to end homelessness will be a necessary start in addressing them.

Paradoxes of Making a Difference

Posted by Justin under Human Rights View recent posts with the tag Human Rights on Technorati Social Justice View recent posts with the tag Social Justice on Technorati World View recent posts with the tag World on Technorati 

Today we watched the short documentary film Invisible Children, which has an associated a nonprofit organization to help children in war-torn southern Uganda. These children are constantly at risk of being conscripted into militias, so they cannot sleep in their rural homes, and travel into cities each night to avoid abduction. Our friend Greg Kendall-Ball is going to Gulu, Uganda in January to shoot photos for Invisible Chilren, and is accepting donations to support his trip.

If you haven’t seen the film, you might not know that it was made by three American college students, who didn’t know what they were going to do when they arrived in Africa. Invisible Children happened, and now their organization provides education and mental health care to help re-integrate former child soldiers into society (and prevent further abductions).

After watching Invisible Children in church today, we discussed the film and what we can do. The film bothered me because it comes from a rather arrogant, youthful American perspective. The filmmakers went to Africa to “conquer” it and fix whatever problems they encountered. Can you get any more imperialistic?

That got me thinking about actual imperialism and colonialism, which are now considered bad and wrong. Are things really any better now, though? I’m not suggesting that we go back to colonialism, but that we really look at why some things are worse now than they were under colonialism. The quality of governance comes to mind.

Again, though, it is not our job to solve another continent’s problems. We can help, but African leadership will be the ultimate source of solution to Africa’s problems. Oprah’s leadership school for girls comes to mind as a way to make a difference while encouraging local leadership.

Another question involves the proliferation of nonprofit organizations. Is it really necessary for every American who visits Africa to come home and start their own nonprofit? Doesn’t this just introduce more administrative overhead, wasting money that could be funneled into existing organizations that already have their overhead covered?

I checked and Invisible Children’s overhead is 14.6%, compared to 13.5% for World Vision. Compassion International’s is higher, at 16.2%. So, while it’s a bit silly to duplicate administrative functions for each organization, at least IC is keeping their expenses at a reasonable level (which is why, for example, Greg is raising his own support).

On the other hand, the proliferation of charities does give people a more personal connection to the work being done in other countries. For example, it’s much easier for people in Searcy to feel a part of the mission of the Kibo Group than the work of WorldVision, simply because the Kibo Group is based in Searcy (my college town).

The main problem in all of this is hubris. I too am inspired by the ambitions of the One Campaign and other groups to end extreme poverty in our generation. But it’s imperialism all over again to think that we can simply march in and fix the world’s problems.

David closed our gathering today with a prayer, in which he asked that we not be paralyzed by the complexity and difficulty of these problems. Indeed. Thoughts?

Kiva Continues to Expand - Now Offering Microfinance in Iraq

Posted by Justin under Economics View recent posts with the tag Economics on Technorati Social Justice View recent posts with the tag Social Justice on Technorati World View recent posts with the tag World on Technorati 

A few months ago, I blogged about a loan I helped fund for Sikinanene Sauyi, an entrepreneur in Kenya who used the $450 she borrowed from Kiva to buy some steers to raise.

Many other people contributed to Sikinanene’s loan; she received the funds a few weeks later and used the funds to purchase the steers.

Sikinanene

Now, she has paid back the loan in full - $450 in ten months. This is the first loan in my Kiva portfolio to be fully repaid, and now I am loaning the $75 to three other borrowers. For me, this is a gratifying proof that the concept works. I don’t know how much better off Sikinanene is, but I assume the loan made a difference, and I know the money is being used properly and is being paid back.

Kiva continues to expand, and struggles to post enough loan requests to keep up with the funding demand that follows each big media story on their operation. ABC News had a story on Kiva in June, shortly after they started offering loans to Iraqis. Over 1,000 people signed up with Kiva within 24 hours, donating over $100,000:

The first Iraq entrepreneurs to join this lending service went up on the Kiva Web site just two weeks ago. Photographs of their faces were blurred to protect their identities…

“A lot of people had the same reaction I did, which was, ‘This is my chance!’” said Christian Conti of Washington, D.C., who loaned $25 to a mobile phone shop owner in Kirkuk. “As someone who watches the news play out day to day & and all you hear is the negative news & you say, ‘Man, I wish I could do something.’”

“Right now the Iraqis are going to quickest. I think they all got funded in half a day, which is the fastest sector on our site right now,” [Kiva spokesperson Matt] Flannery added.

Some of the Americans who responded told ABC news the loans were their way of helping with Iraq’s reconstruction, lifting an economy left in tatters by the U.S. invasion.

It’s working - all 411 loans listed in the Middle East region, which includes Iraq and Afghanistan, have been fully funded (if more loans in the Middle East are posted and still in need of funding, they’ll show up here).

Kiva has also managed to do a great job of ensuring people pay back their loans by working closely with local lending agents:

Only one out of 9,000 borrowers has defaulted on a Kiva loan; all others have paid back or started to pay back their lenders. While the individual lenders on Kiva don’t collect interest on their loan, the borrowers do pay interest to Kiva’s field partners at a rate of roughly 13 percent to help cover their operating expenses. That’s usually far less than the interest charged by banks or other institutions that are available to make loans.

Kiva provides people like you and me - people with PayPal accounts and a little cash we can spare - the opportunity to invest in others, making a sustainable difference in their lives. This is not charity; it is microfinance.

Loan money to entrepreneurs around the world with Kiva

Kick In The Neck Awards #1: Healthcare for Kids is Bad

Posted by Justin under Media & Culture View recent posts with the tag Media & Culture on Technorati Social Justice View recent posts with the tag Social Justice on Technorati 

Inspired by my friend Lukas and by Mark Elrod’s Signs of the Impending Apocalypse (which is basically wacky Friday news), I am starting a new serial feature called the Kick In The Neck Awards (or KITNA, archived here), celebrating those whose accomplishments/antics are worthy of nothing less than a kick in the neck. Think of it as an ig-Nobel Prize.

Mike Leavitt

Our first winner is Mike Leavitt, Secretary of Health & Human Services, who said recently that expanding the S-CHIP program, which provides health care coverage for children from low- and moderate-income families and is currently up for debate in congress, would be bad because it would cause longer lines at the doctor’s office:

If you increase the … number of people who are covered by government insurance, you’re ultimately going to see higher taxes, you’re going to see long waiting lines, and you’re going to see lower quality. link

The expansion would be funded by a $0.61 per pack cigarette tax, in case you’re wondering exactly which taxes Mr. Leavitt is talking about.

Let me get this straight: If we provide free healthcare for more children, the children of America will suffer because the lines will be longer, and doctors will magically reduce the quality of treatment they provide, presumably because they are being paid by the government instead of a private insurance company or the parent.

Let’s sharpen that comparison a bit: Mr. Leavitt is saying it would be better for some kids to receive no medical care at all than to wait in longer lines due to the increased number of people with access to medical care. I assume he means the lines will be longer for those who currently have medical coverage, since the rest can’t even get in the line.

It sounds like Mr. Leavitt subscribes to Richard Nixon’s theory of healthcare: the less, the better. You can hear the audio tape of Mr. Nixon discussing the benefits of private health insurance in Michael Moore’s film SiCKO.

It seems as if people assume that medical care is like candy - if you make it free, people will take too much, and it will be bad for them as well as too costly for taxpayers. Is that really what medical care is like? While I realize that there are hypochondriacs who may seek unnecessary medical care, the DSM-IV says that only 1-5% of the population suffers from this disorder, and at any rate, the medical decisions are made by competent doctors. We should never have a goal of minimizing the amount of medical care we provide; we should provide what is necessary according to sound medical judgment, not economics.

So, Mr. Leavitt, congratulations on being the first person declared by this website to be worthy of a kick in the neck.

*Disclaimer: I am not actually advocating violence against any public figure; I am simply pointing out that if an action movie were made about a KITNA laureate’s life, and Matt Damon were to kick said individual in the neck, I would enjoy watching that particular scene.

Note: If you were to make a logo for the KITNA, I would be most amused.

Habeus Corpus amendment likely to go up for vote in Senate

Posted by Daniel under Human Rights View recent posts with the tag Human Rights on Technorati Politics View recent posts with the tag Politics on Technorati Social Justice View recent posts with the tag Social Justice on Technorati 

The Habeas Corpus Restoration Act of 2007, introduced by Senators Spector (R-PA) and Leahy (D-VT), looks like a really important piece of legislation that may go up for a vote by this Thursday.

S. 185 (now renamed S. Amdt. 2022 as an amendment to the Department of Defense authorizations bill) is short and sweet:

RESTORATION OF HABEAS CORPUS FOR THOSE DETAINED BY THE UNITED STATES.

(a) In General.–Section 2241 of title 28, United States Code, is amended by striking subsection (e).
(b) Title 10.–Section 950j of title 10, United States Code, is amended by striking subsection (b) and inserting the following:

“(b) Limited Review of Military Commission Procedures and Actions.–Except as otherwise provided in this chapter or in section 2241 of title 28 or any other habeas corpus provision, and notwithstanding any other provision of law, no court, justice, or judge shall have jurisdiction to hear or consider any claim or cause of action whatsoever, including any action pending on or filed after the date of the enactment of the Military Commissions Act of 2006, relating to the prosecution, trial, or judgment of a military commission under this chapter, including challenges to the lawfulness of procedures of military commissions under this chapter.”.

(c) Effective Date and Applicability.–The amendments made by this section shall–

(1) take effect on the date of the enactment of this Act; and
(2) apply to any case that is pending on or after the date of enactment of this Act.

The good part is section (a): “(a) In General.–Section 2241 of title 28, United States Code, is amended by striking subsection (e)“. Subsection (e) is a lovely bit to get rid of:

“No court, justice, or judge shall have jurisdiction to hear or consider an application for a writ of habeas corpus filed by or on behalf of an alien detained by the United States who has been determined by the United States to have been properly detained as an enemy combatant or is awaiting such determination.”
-from the Military Commissions Act

Here is the list of the cosponsors:
•Joe Biden (D-DE)
•Jeff Bingaman (D-NM)
•Barbara Boxer (D-CA)
•Sherrod Brown (D-OH)
•Robert Byrd (D-WV)
•Maria Cantwell (D-WA)
•Ben Cardin (D-MD)
•Thomas Carper (D-DE)
•Hillary Clinton (D-NY)
•Chris Dodd (D-CT)
•Dick Durbin (D-IL)
•Russ Feingold (D-WI)
•Dianne Feinstein (D-CA)
•Tom Harkin (D-IA)
•Ted Kennedy (D-MA)
•John Kerry (D-MA)
•Amy Klobuchar (D-MN)
•Frank Lautenberg (D-NJ)
•Patrick Leahy (D-VT)
•Carl Levin (D-MI)
•Claire McCaskill (D-MO)
•Robert Menendez (D-NJ)
•Bill Nelson (D-FL)
•Barack Obama (D-IL)
•Jay Rockefeller (D-WV)
•Ken Salazar (D-CO)
•Bernie Sanders (I-VT)
•Debbie Stabenow (D-MI)
•Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI)

If your Senator’s name is missing from the list, such as our very own Patty Murray, why not give them a call and ask them to co-sponsor it? I just got off the phone with a staffer at Senator Murray’s office, had a very nice little chat, and he said he’d pass on my request to the Senator. This could be important, even if they are already planning (as is Senator Murray, I was told) to vote for the Act.

Call the US Capitol toll-free at 800.862.5530, or use the Senate’s directory (.pdf - the numbers all start with 202.22). The direct line to Senator Murray’s office is 202.224.2621.

(via via)

Update on Flickr/Yahoo and the censorship scandal

Posted by Daniel under Social Justice View recent posts with the tag Social Justice on Technorati Technoblogging View recent posts with the tag Technoblogging on Technorati 

BBC has picked up on the story (see my first post for the breakdown).
censorship
I’m getting the impression that Flickr/Yahoo thinks that this problem will go away with time as the blog heat dies down over this. Methinks that it’s certainly not. Google “flickr” and “censor”. 1.5 million results don’t just disappear.

They have apologized and claim that policy changes are being considered, but have yet to announce exactly what they are going to do to change their policy of “delete first, ask questions later”. It’s especially disturbing that in the current setup, when a photo page is deleted by Flickr staff, it is gone permanently, with no advance warning, explanation or opportunity for recovery or contest.

Via Thomas Hawk.

Flickr/Yahoo censors the victim of art theft (only-dreemin)

Posted by Daniel under Social Justice View recent posts with the tag Social Justice on Technorati Technoblogging View recent posts with the tag Technoblogging on Technorati 

Where to start on this one? It’s been a dramatic couple of days…

•On Monday, Rebekka Guðleifsdóttir, one of Flickr’s most popular photographers, discovered that only-dreemin.com was selling her work on ebay and in their online store. They had profited thousands of dollars from this blatant copyright infringement.
•Rebekka posted about it on Flickr, under a composite image of the images that had been stolen (still available at her blog), starting a major @#$%-storm on Digg, Reddit, thomashawk and elsewhere.
•The page on Flickr had thousands of page views (over 101,000 views at the time of its deletion), and hundreds of comments (~450) offering support and advice to Rebekka.
•Yesterday, Flickr permanently deleted the image - along with all the comments, page views, favorites, etc. According to Flickr staff member Heather, “We maintain a rolling snapshot of the site to recover from outages etc. When a photo, comment, FlickrMail, tag, note, etc., is deleted, it’s removed from that snapshot.” An email was sent to Rebekka, accusing her of harassment and threatening account termination: “Flickr is not a venue for to you harass, abuse, impersonate, or intimidate others. If we receive a valid complaint about your conduct, we will send you a warning or terminate your account.”
•As should be expected, there’s a bit of an uproar about Flickr/Yahoo’s action here. See Rebekka, Thomas Hawk, and Digg. It’s currently the top story on Reddit.
•Flikr has apologized, admitting a “mistake”, but denying censorship: “Actions taken by the team to ensure that any content or activity on the site resides within these boundaries is not and cannot be viewed as censorship. That said, the removal of rebekka’s photo was a mistake.”
•There’s a discussion going on in Flickr’s forum about all this. Thomas makes a substantive point here saying (emphasis his),

The problem is with Yahoo’s process which is thoughtless and irresponsible at best. When a “mistake” happens over and over again you have to expect that a little “oopsie, we made another mistake,” might not be enough…Yahoo’s *process* needs to be changed. It should be changed. It could be changed in a very simple way to prevent most incidents like this from happening in the future.
1. Do not delete any image permanently.
2. Provide Flickr users a 48 hour rebuttal time to dispute those that would wish to censor their work.
3. Have an actual competent human being review the decision.

Thomas has been burned in the past by Flickr’s overeager deletion policy. He points out that the Flickr help forum has 90 threads on “censorship” - so there’s obviously a systemic problem with the Flickr/Yahoo process. The fact that it has been used (in at least two documented cases now) in favor of abusers over against the abused makes this a justice issue in my book.

getting out my hammer…

UPDATE: Stewart Butterfield, “one of the co-founders of Flickr, and … the general manager with overall responsibility for all things Flickr”, has posted a very thorough explanation and heartfelt apology for the entire situation, and claims that “There are several policies which will be changing as a direct result of this incident and the goal is that nothing like this ever happens again. Any errors from now on should be on the side of caution.” I very much look forward to hearing more about the policy changes.

God Hates You

Posted by Daniel under Media & Culture View recent posts with the tag Media & Culture on Technorati Religion View recent posts with the tag Religion on Technorati Social Justice View recent posts with the tag Social Justice on Technorati 

A new video from the band Evening Service and “ministry” (sneer quotes intended) Love God’s Way, euphemistically titled “The Bible Says” (Come on, why don’t you title it the repeated verse in the chorus?).

[Video removed by MySpace]

I’m appalled and offended. It’s bad enough coming from Fred Phelps, but nobody takes his screeds seriously. When it’s actually combined with decent web design and catchy music, I’m afraid that this will be interpreted as more “mainstream” than it is in reality.

Next Page »



Get RC Via Email



FriendFeed

    Tagegories

    Browse by category:

    Explore by tag:

    Recent Posts

  • Blogroll

  • Archives


    Use the calendar below to find posts by day (mouseover a day on the calendar to see all posts from that day). If you're looking for a specific post, it's much faster to use the search box above.

    November 2008
    S M T W T F S
    « Oct    
     1
    2345678
    9101112131415
    16171819202122
    23242526272829
    30  

      Recent Comments


      Creative Commons License
      We aren't very into all that copyright stuff. Creative Commons licenses are better, so RC is licensed under this one.
      Quote Radical Congruency at will. Inbound links are appreciated, and required for direct quotations.