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Blog Action Day: Water

by: The Opportunity Agenda

Sun Oct 17, 2010 at 18:00

(It's a bit late to frontpage, but things got so busy Friday afternoon, I just didn't have space to promote this properly.  Besides, it's not as if the issue is going away... - promoted by Paul Rosenberg)

Blog Action Day is an annual event held every October 15 that unites the world's bloggers in posting about the same issue on the same day with the aim of sparking a global discussion and driving collective action. This year's topic: water.

Right now, almost a billion people on the planet don't have access to clean, safe drinking water. That's one in eight of us who are subject to preventable disease and even death because of something that many of us take for granted.

The global water problem is severe:

1. Unsafe drinking water and lack of sanitation kills more people every year than all forms of violence, including war. Unclean drinking water can incubate some pretty scary diseases, like E. coli, salmonella, cholera and hepatitis A. Given that bouquet of bacteria, it's no surprise that water, or rather lack thereof, causes 42,000 deaths each week.

2. More people have access to a cell phone than to a toilet. Today, 2.5 billion people lack access to toilets. This means that sewage spills into rivers and streams, contaminating drinking water and causing disease.

3. Every day, women and children in Africa walk a combined total of 109 million hours to get water. They do this while carrying cisterns weighing around 40 pounds when filled in order to gather water that, in many cases, is still polluted. Aside from putting a great deal of strain on their bodies, walking such long distances keeps children out of school and women away from other endeavors that can help improve the quality of life in their communities.

4. It takes 6.3 gallons of water to produce just one hamburger. That 6.3 gallons covers everything from watering the wheat for the bun and providing water for the cow to cooking the patty and baking the bun. And that's just one meal! It would take over 184 billion gallons of water to make just one hamburger for every person in the United States.

5. The average American uses 159 gallons of water every day-more than 15 times the average person in the developing world. From showering and washing our hands to watering our lawns and washing our cars, Americans use a lot of water. To put things into perspective, the average five-minute shower will use about 10 gallons of water. Now imagine using that same amount to bathe, wash your clothes, cook your meals and quench your thirst.

Access to clean water is not just a human rights issue. It's an environmental issue. An animal welfare issue. A sustainability issue. Water is a global issue, and it affects all of us.

Learn more about the water crisis.

Sign a petition supporting the United Nation's goal of providing clean drinking water to everyone.

Finally, donate directly to help those in need.

Discuss :: (3 Comments)

Creative Minds Needed -- Help Us Rename the KDP Blog!

by: Mike Nellis

Mon Aug 31, 2009 at 11:19

It's been about three months since I headed South to Kansas to take over the online operations at the Kansas Democratic Party. I've had the chance to do some cool things and meet a lot of interesting people. But nothing has me more excited than what we'll be rolling out online in the next few months.

Our new website won't be done for a little while but we're leaking a bit of it today. (I couldn't wait!)

One of the newest features of our new website will be a fully functional, community blog in the style of Daily Kos and Open Left. We haven't worked out all the kinks yet but we want to create a place where all Kansas Democrats could go to talk about their local party, candidates, and partner organizations.

Hopefully, it will become the new standard for state Democratic Party blogs.

This new blog will be 100% free to all Kansas Democrats. All we need to do to make official is give it a new name! Can you help us out by suggesting a blog name for our new community blog?

There's More... :: (2 Comments, 423 words in story)

Rejoinder to Al Giordano: Are netroot bloggers in danger of blowing it?

by: ThomasPaine

Wed Sep 03, 2008 at 16:12

On his front page of his blog now, Al Giordano has a post entitled, "don't blow it, netroot bloggers."

Read here: http://narcosphere.narconews.c...

He worries that the netroot blogging community - and I think he means those who run blogs, write on blogs and contribute to them - are in danger of giving Palin and the GOP a valuable way of striking back.

More below the fold.

There's More... :: (7 Comments, 232 words in story)

Where Do You Get Quality Expert Opinion? (Hint: Not on Cable)

by: tremayne

Mon Apr 21, 2008 at 17:41

Last week over at Big Orange Satan, Kos asked "Why are the "serious" Beltway blowhards always so wrong?" Turns out the answer was "because they're paid to be wrong."  He didn't know it at the time (or did he?) but a few days later the New York Times exposed that at least in the arena of military analysts, many of the so-called experts were even less unbiased than we might have thought.   

Most of the analysts have ties to military contractors vested in the very war policies they are asked to assess on air.....Some analysts acknowledge they suppressed doubts because they feared jeopardizing their access. A few expressed regret for participating in what they regarded as an effort to dupe the American public with propaganda dressed as independent military analysis.

Regrets. Oops, sorry! How did these people get on the air to begin with? Because they're Very Serious People with opinions that are therefore serious and much more likely to be correct than opinions of unserious people like, uh, bloggers. The TV producers who booked these guests knew they were serious because they had uniforms with medals (Producer: "I don't care if you're retired, please wear the uniform, it looks good on TV"). Now the "experts" in this case were TV talking heads frequently appearing on Fox, MSNBC and CNN.  While kudos are due to the NY Times for this story, the paper has had its own problems with serious-people-itis.  Judith Miller learned from very serious people (like Dick Cheney) that Iraq was a threat, a Serious threat. Nevermind that invading a country with no justification is usually a bad idea. Simple ideas are not always obvious to the Very Serious.

And newsflash to traditional media: serious people sometimes lie. Seriously lie. In fact, they are probably better at it than unserious people. Money has a way of focusing one's efforts. And when it does we can call the very serious people "Professional Liars."

Discuss :: (3 Comments)
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