Tuesday, February 10, 2009

It's Tuesday! DO SOMETHING!

Yes, I'm actually starting a feature! A "segment," if you will. Every Tuesday (hopefully), I'll be posting a few ideas of things you can do to help the world. Some will be letter-writing campaigns or donation opportunities and some will be little things that you can do at home to try to step a bit more lightly.

Here's the list for this week:

  • Call on the International Community to Help Protect the People of the Democratic Republic of Congo
    The situation in Congo is dire--send a message to the international community that the time to act is now. You need to sign up as a member of Amnesty International to send the letter, but AI is a wonderful source of information globally and well worth joining. The call to action has recipients named from the previous administration here in the US, but it will actually get to the proper people. (And don't worry, AI won't send you a million emails--or indeed, any at all if that's your wish.)
  • Do Something Useful with Those Empty Bottles
    If you do have empty water bottles around (try not to, but if you do), there's a great way to reuse them that doesn't involve washing them and drinking out of them again (which may or may not cause more chemicals to leak out of them). Fill them with cold water and stick them in the back of your fridge. Air in a fridge rushes out when you open the door, and the warm air that replaces it has to be chilled all over again, using energy. Cold things, on the other hand, stay cold when you open the door (if you don't leave the door open all day). The more stuff in your fridge, the less air in your fridge, the less your fridge has to work.
  • Help Improve Education through Small-Scale Donation
    Because of the lack of public school funding in the US, teachers often end up spending a distressing percentage of their incomes buying simple yet needed supplies for their classrooms. Donors Choose is a website designed to provide targeted funds to targeted classrooms. Teachers write up grant proposals and donors choose which program to give their money to. It's a fantastic way to give a gift to a friend, by the way. My best friend got a donation made in her name to a school in her area, which made it both very personal and very conscious. No gift wrapping, no fuss, no overhead. Just a teacher who now has the books she needed to help further her students' educations.
That's all for today! Have a good one--and do something!

2 comments:

  1. Hey, I'm a part of IA :-) I'm so happy you mentioned it in your blog.

    I just got back from seeing FLOW: For the Love of Water. I'm not sure if you've already talked about it, but wanted to say something as I believe it'd be a film you'd find very interesting.

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  2. One of the things I'm working on today is looking at what some people are trying to do in the Third World about healthcare. One approach is use of tele-heath. You are someone who has many ideas about using technology in greener ways. Is it possible somehow to fuse a greener use of technology to provide cheaper healthcare? A simple thought came to be this morning. A hundred people drive to a doctor's office to take certain tests. Why shouldn't the tests come to them on a bio-diesel van? What kinds of tests can be done with tele-health? The savings on cutting down travel would be significant. Perhaps you could think about this and make suggestions.

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