Photobucket
Photobucket
Showing posts with label Activism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Activism. Show all posts

Thursday, May 19, 2011

DO SOMETHING: Prevent Sex Trafficking with The Body Shop

In her fabulous blog Fashion Nette-Work, Juanette (Who I swear is my Fashion Fairy Godmother... she never ceases to inspire me!) posted yesterday about the recent DFW Bloggers Meetup held at The Body Shop in the Northpark Mall in Dallas. Amongst the photos of her, all the beautiful attendees and her take of the event, I discovered something AMAZING that I knew I had to blog about.



The Body Shop has partnered with two amazing organizations: ECPAT-USA and the Somaly Man Foundation to campaign against the sex trafficking of children and young people. Every year, it is estimated that 1.2 million children are trafficked for sex. In the United States alone, over 200,000 children will be involved in commercial sexual exploitation.

Please keep in mind that while these numbers are merely estimates, the true numbers are immeasurable and most likely higher.




The Body Shop - Stop Sex Trafficking of Children and Young People from TheBodyShop on Vimeo.

The US should change the laws that allow children to be arrested and prosecuted when
they are victims of sex trafficking. Instead of arrest they should be offered support and
protection as they are in New York and Washington states.

Since the inception of this campaign, much progress has been made. But there is still work to be done, and they need your help. I signed the petition to show support for this important cause and I urge you to do the same.

To do so, please visit http://petition.thebodyshop-usa.com/sign-petition.php

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

DO SOMETHING: Rock the Red Pump... March 10, 2011!!!!!



People who know me may find it very hard to believe that once upon a time I LIVED in heels. In my late teens and early twenties, I was all about big clunky platform boots (3-4 inches high!) and can remember vividly running for the bus from Prospect Park (Think cobblestones... broken cobblestones) wearing 5 inch wedge heels (a gift from La Diva Elaine... I called them my Carmen Miranda shoes) without even stumbling.

In my mid twenties, I had a job at a clinic in an Acupuncture school that required me to be on my feet for several hours at a time... and after a few months of working there, I traded in my platform boots for more "sensible shoes". Two years later, I worked in a call center where sneakers became my uniform. Fast forward to today... I am 33 years old and I merely admire high heel shoes a la distance, as my feet hurt just looking at a pair.

Since I was on the cruise at the beginning of the year, I never blogged about my New Year's Resolutions for 2011, and now that we're in March, it seems silly to write them now. Suffice to say that one of my resolutions was to reacquaint myself with heels and to once again become good friends with "cute shoes". LOL

When I heard about The Red Pump Project and their yearly "Rock the Red Pump" campaign, I knew that this would be the best time to incorporate my resolution for a very very worthy cause.



The Red Pump Project™ raises awareness about the impact of HIV/AIDS on women and girls. Their mission is to promote HIV prevention through education, and open dialogue about the issues that surround sexual and reproductive health.

Founded in March 2009 by Luvvie Ajayi and Karyn Watkins, Red Pump believes that if HIV affects one, it affects us all. Using the red high heel shoe as a symbol of empowerment to represent the strength and courage of women infected (and affected) by HIV/AIDS. The incorporation of fashion into the message of HIV prevention is their contribution with the hope that everyone recognizes that Awareness is Always in Style!

National Women and Girls HIV/AIDS Awareness Day is March 10th every year, and there’s a whole lot of talking and educating happening all over the country in honor. The Red Pump Project was born out of as genuine desire to get conversation started on the issue of HIV/AIDS and ask others to do the same.

So recognizing the powerful medium of the internet, they put out a call for bloggers to “Rock the Red Pump™."



The goal of this initial campaign was 100 bloggers, but over 125 bloggers responded and “Rocked the Red Pump” on March 10, 2009. And, in 2010, the numbers doubled to over 250 sites.

The Red Pump Project has grown from a social media campaign to a national nonprofit working on the ground and online to ensure that women are empowered with knowledge about HIV/AIDS and the issues surrounding it. This year, The Red Pump Project is asking bloggers to participate in the third annual “Rock the Red Pump™” campaign: 500 in 50. Their goal is to 500 blogs in 50 days, leading up to March 10, 2011.

I am proud to say that they have exceeded their goal.. receiving a response of over 700 Bloggers (Lovingly called, "Red Pump Rockers"). I am of course a very happy one in 700, and have proudly displayed the banner on my blog and will continue to do so until the end of the month.

In addition to this, on Thursday, March 10, 2011..... Miss Moon WILL BE ROCKING A RED PUMP!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! And on behalf of the women and girls who are living (and/or loving someone) with HIV/AIDS, I hope that all of you will consider joining me.

In the next two days, all of my posts will be "Red Pump Inspired", and I will of course take lots of pictures to share here and on the Miss Moons Musing Facebook Page. If you'd like to be featured in my post about "Rock the Red Pump™" day, be sure to share your pictures, along with who you're rocking red pumps for on Facebook or by sending me an email.

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

DO SOMETHING: Support Troy Davis' Day in Court

I just signed an NAACP petition seeking justice for Troy Davis, an African American man who has been on death row for the past 18 years for a murder he did not commit.

Would you join me in helping to save this innocent man's life? www.iamtroy.com

There was no physical evidence tying Troy to the crime and seven out of nine witnesses have recanted. On June 30, 2010, Troy will get the opportunity to present new evidence at a federal court hearing.

Please stand with me, the NAACP, and Amnesty International USA. Visit www.iamtroy.com to sign the petition for Troy and learn more about his case and why we must push for real criminal justice reform in the United States.

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

DO SOMETHING: Haiti Earthquake Relief

So I really really really want to blog about Pat Robertson. But I decided against it for two reasons: 1) It would be silly to dedicate two blog entries this week to TWO idiots with "foot-in-the-mouth" syndrome, and 2) I thought it would be MUCH more important to send that flow of energy to the people who actually need it: The People of Haiti.




So here are 5 ways to help out:
  • Text "Yele" to 501501 and $5 will be charged to your phone bill and given to relief projects through Wyclef Jean's foundation, Yele Haiti, or you can make a donation directly to their website http://www.yele.org/

  • CARE has deployed an emergency team to Port-au-Prince today to assist in recovery efforts. Their area of focus is rescuing children who may still be trapped in schools that collapsed. Make a donation to CARE

  • 100% of your donation will go to the relief effort if you make a donation to the Baptist Haiti Mission. They are currently operating an 82-bed hospital that is "overflowing with injured.", and can definitely use the help. Make a donation to http://www.bhm.org/bhm/index.php

  • Doctors Without Borders has BEEN in Haiti and has already set up clinics to treat the growing number of injured. Donate any amount so they can keep their efforts going by visiting http://doctorswithoutborders.org/.

  • The American Red Cross has pledged $200,000 (which isn't a whole helluva lot, let's be honest). They expect to provide immediate needs for food, water, temporary shelter, medical services and emotional support. They are accepting donations through their International Response Fund by going to http://american.redcross.org/site/PageServer?pagename=ntld_main .

For more ideas go to http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/01/12/haiti-earthquake-relief-h_n_421014.html

Peace from Brooklyn & Prayers for Haiti!!!

Friday, September 4, 2009

DO SOMETHING: Tell President Obama, "We're Counting on You"

President Obama will give a major speech next week laying out what he thinks needs to be in the health care bill.

This is a critical crossroads. The president needs to hear that Americans are counting on him to stand up to the status quo and fight for real reform with a strong public health insurance option.

I just signed a petition telling President Obama I'm counting on him to fight hard for a bold health care reform bill. Can you join me at the link below?

http://pol.moveon.org/hcobama

Thanks!

Saturday, August 29, 2009

DO SOMETHING: Sign the Oneness Day Petition from Humanity's Team

I am very proud to have been given the opportunity to place my name alongside Yoko Ono's, Marianne Williamson's, Deepak Chopra's, and Archbishop Desmond Tutu's in this petition, and was thrilled when I thought this would be a perfect addition to my "Do Something" blogs.

From Humanity Team's website:

Humanity’s Team is collecting 50,000 signatures to persuade the United Nations to declare a Oneness Day, a day set aside and embraced by individuals, communities and nations for humanity to celebrate, discuss and experience our commonality, while still acknowledging and respecting our beautiful cultural diversities...a day to unite in Oneness for the greater good of the Human Family.



If you agree we are all One, that life is sacred...to be cherished and shared peacefully...I hope you'll join me in signing the Oneness Day petition. It takes only a minute of your time and will make the world a better place for our children and grandchildren.

To sign the Petition, just click on this link (or cut and paste it into your browser's address bar): http://humanitysteam.org/onenessdaypetition And be sure to tell your friends!

Peace from Brooklyn!

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

DO SOMETHING: The public option is not optional

If we don't make a stand now for a public option, the Obama administration may hedge on its plan for health care reform.

This weekend, the Obama administration indicated that it might be open to passing health care reform without any provision for a public insurance option similar to Medicare that could compete with private insurance companies.

President Obama said that a public option was just a "sliver" of his plan. Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius went so far as to say that the public option was not an "essential" part of reform.

The comments this weekend by the president and Secretary Sebelius rhetorically pave the way for the Obama administration to cave on a meaningful public option and instead accept toothless regional health care co-ops that would be unable to compete with insurance companies and keep them honest.

I just signed a petition to tell President Obama that the public option is not optional and that he should tell Congress and the voters that he will not sign a bill without a robust public option similar to Medicare.

I hope you will sign this petition too. Please have a look and take action.

http://act.credoaction.com/campaign/publicoption_bo/?r_by=5558-1491287-coXuTpx&rc=confemail

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

DO SOMETHING: Save the Bed-Stuy Farm

I am a huge supporter of activism, at a community level and on a global scale, so I've decided to include causes that I support regularly on this blog in a new blog posting called "Do Something".

This first cause is one very close to my heart because I happen to live in Bedford Stuyvesant. From Franklin to Kingston Avenues along Fulton Street there are DOZENS of fast food restaurants, including two MacDonald's, two Golden Krusts, two Crown Fried Chickens, two Popeye's and countless Chinese and Pizza restaurants. There are only two health food stores and four fruit markets along that same stretch.

That may seem like a lot, but consider this: a dozen strawberries are $4. So is a two piece chicken wings with fries and a soda. This is what makes the Bed-Stuy Farm so valuable & so very worth preserving!



From Elizabeth Lazarowitz, NY Daily News:

Brooklyn Rescue Mission could lose half of it's Bed-Stuy Farm property to developmment plans
BY ELIZABETH LAZAROWITZ
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER
Wednesday, July 29th 2009, 4:00 AM

They turned a vacant lot into an edible Eden that provides freshly grown food to thousands of needy Brooklynites.

But the Brooklyn Rescue Mission, an emergency food pantry in Bedford-Stuyvesant, could lose half of Bed-Stuy Farm - its 5,000-square-foot facility on a long-neglected lot - if plans go through to build on it.

"We have this really thriving, amazing farm that's feeding people," said the Rev. DeVanie Jackson, who runs the mission with her husband, the Rev. Robert Jackson. "They're trying to get us to move it, but the other places they wanted to move it to, it wasn't the same."

The Jacksons began farming around the mission on Bainbridge St. in 2004, after seeing that much of the emergency food doled out to poor families was filling, but not healthy - canned and packed with sugar and salt.

Two years later, the couple adopted the lot on Decatur St., which had become a weed-clogged garbage dump and neighborhood eyesore. They turned it into a garden that produces 7,000 pounds of food a year, including zucchini, collard greens, tomatoes and broccoli.

A nonprofit housing developer, Neighborhood Partnership HDFC, had earlier bought the land from the city to renovate an old house into affordable units, but structural problems forced the developer to raze the building. The lot sat empty until the Jacksons started the farm.

Neighborhood Partnership now wants to sell the land, city officials said.
"The intent was always to do affordable housing on this site," said Housing Preservation and Development Department official Margaret Sheffer. "The garden had essentially come in as a squatter."

HPD has been working to broker a deal for the mission to buy the property, she said, but the Jacksons said they can't afford to purchase it.

Alternative sites offered by the city have either been too small or too shady, they said.

HPD spokeswoman Catie Marshall said Neighborhood Partnership needs to recoup around $275,000 in costs.

"Ideally, we would like the see the Brooklyn Rescue Mission garden remain," she said, adding that HPD was unable to find donors to buy the property for the mission, but is still trying to find a way to transfer the land to them. (elazarowitz@nydailynews.com)


For more information on the Brooklyn Rescue Mission, please visit their website at www.brooklynrescuemission.org . And you can sign the petition to show your support of their good works and The Bed-Stuy Farm by clicking here. Do Something!