Fidelity Out of Sudan

I can’t remember if I blogged about this a while back or if I just mentioned it to Josh for a CRM post. Well, I just wanted to add to what Josh had mentioned about why Fidelity is no a good company to invest with. I’m just going to include a couple excerpts from the Fidelity Out of Sudan website:

The government of Sudan continues to pursue genocide in Darfur, drawing on its oil revenue to provide arms and funding for the genocide, rather than economic development for the poor people of Sudan. Despite the mass atrocities in Darfur, Fidelity, through its mutual funds, not only has been a major investor in oil companies operating in Sudan, but, until recently, had been significantly increasing its holdings. In its February SEC filing, Fidelity’s global holdings of PetroChina topped $1.3 billion and it was the largest holder of PetroChina (PTR) on the NYSE. Fidelity has significantly reduced its holdings in PetroChina and Sinopec on the NYSE, but continues to be a very large holder of these stocks. Join us and tell Fidelity to stop investing our money in companies helping to fund the genocide in Darfur.

The Good news is the campaign seems to be having an effect. From a recent email update:

Our collective efforts are paying off. Fidelity’s May 15 filing with the SEC showed that as of March 31, Fidelity had sold 91% percent of its PetroChina shares and 99% of its Sinopec shares that trade on the New York Stock Exchange. This action by Fidelity is a significant step in the right direction and evidence that your voice and those of thousands of others are being heard.

And now SaveDarfur is joining in with some TV ad campaigns:

“Fidelity portfolio managers make their investment decisions based on business and financial considerations, and take into account other issues only if they materially impact these considerations or conflict with applicable legal standards.”
– Fidelity letter of October 5, 2006

So, as if Playboy wasn’t enough to keep you from investing in Fidelity, maybe genocide is.

Murderers! And The Lives They Live

There was quite a bit of conversation last week after I posted about the benevolent act of Philip Workman, a man executed in Tennessee last week for murder. The initial comments put me deep in thought and I’ve been trying to think through my values and ethics and trying to make sure I’m not holding double standards. This is not a direct response to those comments, but it was provoked by those thoughts. Today, I simply wanted to write a brief devotional thoughts post about some of the heroes of the Christian faith.

Moses seemed to often be in the right place at the right time. As a baby, when his fellow Hebrew tots were being killed off, Moses managed to get in with Pharaoh’s family and grow up as royalty. Then he grew up, learned a bit about his history, and in a moment of zeal kills a guy. He lives as a fugitive in the desert for about forty years and then goes on to lead one of the greatest freedom movements of ancient times, the exodus of the Jewish people out of Egypt. Moses was a murderer, though never captured and convicted, and he then went on to be a famous leader and a pillar of the Jewish and Christian faith.

David is the original Cinderalla-story: Shepard boy becomes Israel’s great King. Every kid in a church grows up hearing about how David slays Goliath. And we don’t really see it as murder, it’s the epic good vs. evil story, redemptive violence at its finest. So, most wouldn’t agree that David qualifies as a murderer for that. But the other story we don’t teach many kids in church, is about David committing adultery and then having a man killed to protect his crime. And as repentant as David might have been, David was a murderer. David even recommended the death penalty for a person who committed a crime such as his, but the sentence was never carried out. David is remembered as one of Israel’s Greatest Kings, which seems to overshadow his death-deserving crime.

Paul is, next to Jesus, probably the most influential forefather of the Christian faith. The guy wrote half the New Testament, established churches all over the Roman Empire and was a martyr for the faith. Paul was so special, Jesus even paid him a special visit after he’d already ascended to heaven. By his own admission Paul was a murderer of Christian’s prior to becoming one himself. The fact that Paul’s murderous campaigns were one of the greatest original threats to Christianity does not seem to phase us now as we lift him up as one of the founding pillars of our faith.

Jesus himself was more or less a fugitive for part of his three years of ministry. He constantly avoided certain areas and had to duck away from persecuting crowds (how he managed that is a mystery to me). And Jesus, who maintained his innocence until the very end received the death penalty.

The point of this short run down of Biblical figures was not to make a statement that murder is okay, by no means do I think killing someone is ever a good idea. It was a chance however to reflect on how four of the greatest figures in the Bible were or were treated as criminals, and yet we are able to look through that, around it, in spite of it and see the great good that was accomplished through them as well. I have the great honor to work with many youth who in their own moments have made grave mistakes and they are paying a price for that. However, I would hope I, and no one else, ever stamps a permanent label on them that keeps them from having a second chance and keeps others from recognizing each benevolent act that they make. Here’s to every murderer who has turned their life around and contributed to the well being of humanity, I applaud you.

Flash Back: Writing for RelevantMagazine.com

In 2005 I had the opportunity (multiple ones) to write articles for Relevantmagazine.com. I really enjoyed it and it was a chance to see what writing on deadlines and for a professional media company was like. I enjoyed the discussion that came from the articles and the audience that had the chance to read them.

I’ve had problems with Relevant magazine, but I feel like the audience they are reaching is the same audience I would like to reach, so as they gave me opportunity I wrote. Below is links to the images of each article, and below that are the links to the actual articles. If you want feel free to take some time to read the articles. Hopefully you find they stay true to my passions and not just me catering to the Relevant crowd.

Getting published

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In Order: What Would it Take, Poor College Students, Remembering 9/10, Crisis in Darfur, Earthquake in Pakistan, Fair Trade at the Supermarket, New Year’s Resolutions. (click on the image for an image of the page, they are no longer available on the relevant website).

The year concluded with another exciting development, my article (edited by Jesse Carey) about New Year’s Resolutions was the featured article on the email newsletter, 850 words of Relevant.

What If Diamonds Were Just Rocks?

Seeing a movie like, Blood Diamonds is enough to move anyone to rethink their views on Diamonds. I’ve posted other posters, facts and videos about it in the past as well. There’s a line in that movie that says something to about how when something becomes valuable people our oppressed. They said something much more eloquent. Today, I want to envision what might happen if tomorrow, like the Emperor’s new clothes, everyone realized Diamonds are just rocks, and overnight the diamond industry is over, not a single additional sale of shiny rock things, not for wedding rings, necklaces, grills, nothing.

What Price for Those Diamonds?
Honestly, I think things would change extremely quickly. The flow of money into diamond galleries, diamond companies (De Beers), and the oppressive armies and regimes that enslave people to mine the diamonds would suddenly be gone. I’m not sure what would happen to the guys in suits who have lived lavishly off the diamond trade, they might be able to survive on their spoils from years past, but maybe they’ll find themselves head over heels in debt. I’d rather talk about the people in the mines.

Time and time again, when I talk about oppressive situations, be it sweatshops, diamond trade, child labor, etc. A common response is, well if ‘Walmart’ (insert other oppressive companies here) didn’t employ them, nobody would. And “25 cents an hour might not be great,but it’s better then nothing, besides it can buy you a lot more over ‘there.'” I think people use the justification a lot, and I have no doubt, it’s one of the reasons the realities of the diamond industry haven’t pricked more hearts.

If diamonds lost their value over night, somewhere around a million people would lose their ‘jobs’ mining diamonds. For some though, that ‘job’ was working as a slave for no pay and very little care for their well being; with the diamond industry gone, they would be free! The money used to fuel war in multiple countries from the diamond trade would also be gone. Oppressive regimes would need to find some other way to make money, or maybe, with the lack of a valuable commodity to fuel their greed and oppression, they would simply cease to exist.

What if all it took to end Slavery for hundreds and thousands of people in our world, was for us to stop attributing monetary value to shiny rocks?

Guest Writers Anyone?

I’ll start by saying I love writing, I also love reading. I enjoy talking to people and hearing others thoughts. I love that this blog has to a small degree become a place of dialog and a place were daily I can share and discuss with many others from different walks of life. I also know at times or maybe by some natural inclination, we might tend to flock towards people similar to us. It’s nice to be around people who will agree with you, but it’s probably not best.

I’m not sure how to do this in a way that works, but here’s my thoughts. Reading through my blogs you can get an idea of some of my values. If you read the comments of some of the regular readers around here, you can see that to some degree they share some of the same values. That’s not to say that we all think the same, but there are a number of shared beliefs, yet we still have interesting and constructive dialog. However, at the risk of offending someone, I think this dialog is lacking.

I’d like to open this blog somehow to those that think differently then me, that might disagree with my beliefs, my faith, my lifestyle choices, or anything else. I want to listen, not for a chance to argue, but for a chance to grow and learn. Hopefully for a chance to think through and experience a glimpse of life from a perspective I haven’t thought of before, or haven’t considered, or previously dismissed.

The Floor is yours. And there’s two ways we can do this. If you’d like just feel free to leave a comment below. But if you want to put a little more time and effort into it, use the contact form or mention below that you’d like to make an official post, and I’ll take five posts and make them each a daily post next week. Those posts will show up in the feed readers and email boxes of all the subscribers to my blog, it’s your chance to step on the platform and give voice to your concerns, my ears, and others are listening. If you drive an SUV, or wear Nike shoes, or drink lattes daily, the floor is yours. If you don’t believe in Jesus, or you do believe in Santa Claus and presents, the floor is yours. If you just wanted to finally have a chance to speak your mind to me, the floor is yours. And you have my word, I’ll do my best to listen and learn.

Other People’s Writings

Some how I haven’t written for the last week or so, and I don’t have the time this week to process any worthwhile thoughts either, so I thought I’d just highlight a few other blogs and maybe that would spur on some discussion. Here’s a couple clips worth checking out…

Life of Linne:

It seems strange what seeing $150 in your bank account can make you think. When I first saw, I thought “oi – we’re poor.” But we’re not poor. We don’t have a right to claim being poor at all. We have no idea what it really means to be poor.

I almost struggle with knowing what poor means. If we only had $150 and no paycheck coming next month… then maybe I’d have a sense of being poor. I have hope, though, because I know that money is coming. I don’t know what it feels like to not know when the next time we’ll have money is. College was only a few years ago… and yet have we been so “successful” that we’ve forgotten what it’s like to be struggling for money, having friends pay for dinner and being content with just what we already have?

I’ll be honest – I don’t want to be poor.

PeacefulVeganMom (Who some how manages to quote Jim Wallis in one blog post and me in the next; I’m honored):

Unfortunately, in our current culture, we have exemplified with our lifestyles that war is sometimes just, a child who hits others deserves to be hit, a man who kills others deserves to be killed, and when another country commits acts of violence against us, we should return that violence in kind. Why does the myth of redemptive violence run rampant in our hearts when Jesus clearly came to teach us there is another Way?

Where is the love and grace when we, as the wealthiest 20% of the world’s population, own and consume 80% of the world’s resources while the other 20% of the world live in utter poverty and despair? Where is the justice? What happened to the golden rule?? What are we teaching our children about the importance of compassion and the evil of the love of money??

iHajj:

As a church leader, I am very well aware that political conversations are dangerous. This is especially true in our current cultural setting where people are so divided between “red” and “blue.” I have no desire to politicize my church (as many other pastors have done). I want my church to be a place where people find their identity in Christ, not in their class, party, race, etc. I would never, for instance, even suggest which candidate a person should vote for, or what party they should support. Further, I don’t see that any politician or political party well represents my understanding of Christian political ideas.

All that said, it just seems that our government must hear the voice of Believers. For me, that means I am currently writing a personal political statement. Not a “red” or “blue” statement, but a statement of political values that I hold. I have also decided that I need to express some of these values on this blog. I am not interested in attacking any politician or party. However, I think there are issues that, as a Christian, I must speak about.

10 Things You Can Do To Help End Tennessee’s Death Penalty

Despite clear and convincing evidence that Philip Workman did not fire the bullet that killed Lt. Ronald Oliver, Workman was executed early yesterday morning. In the end, the courts rejected Workman’s challenge to Tennessee’s new execution protocols and Workman went to his death without the full facts of the case ever being given a full and fair hearing. Any argument that Tennesseans can rely on the capital punishment system to provide fair, just, and accurate outcomes died with Workman at 1:38 am yesterday morning. Not content with executing Workman, the Attorney General’s office has requested that execution dates be set for the four men whose executions were stayed during the Governor’s 90-day moratorium, E.J. Harbison, Pervis Payne, Mika’eel Abdullah Abdus-Samad, and Daryl Holton. These men could face execution in as little as a week. But now, even as we mourn, this is the time to rededicate ourselves to bringing an end, once and for all, to executions in our state. Changes are made by ordinary people taking small tasks upon themselves to achieve great things. So choose one (or even two or three) of the actions below and help our state move away from vengeance, violence, and killing.

1. Attend your local TCASK Chapter meeting or contact the state office to start a local chapter

2. Write a letter to the editor of your local paper about why Tennessee doesn’t need the death penalty

3. Get a friend to sign up for the TCASK mailing list

4. Write to your state representatives about why you oppose the death penalty

5. Gather moratorium petitions from 5 small businesses and organizations in your neighborhood

6. Talk to you pastor about engaging your church in the death penalty issue

7. Host a house party

8. Volunteer in the TCASK office

9. Bring a TCASK skills training (public speaking, lobbying, or strategic planning) to your local group

10. Make a donation to TCASK – it’s easy just click here.

I would also recommend you subscribe to the TCASK blog or newsletter yourself if you haven’t already.

CRM: 4 Reasons Why I’ll Take the Thrift Store Over Target Any Day

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Last week for Corporate Responsibility Monday’s we talked about purchasing generic brand items over name brand when you were unsure of the ethics of the companies and their human rights history. I’ll encourage you to continue in that capacity but I want to take even another step away from Corporations and emphasize the value of buying second hand.

I know some people have an apprehension to buying used items, whether it’s clothes, kitchen items or toys, but I’ll just say right here, get over it. There are a few isolated unique situations were for sanitary health concerns or otherwise you need to buy new, but the vast majority of items can easily be used second hand. Here are three reasons why I think buying second hand whenever possible is the way to go.

  1. It’s More Environmentally Friendly– No matter how ‘green’ your household items become, there is still production, packaging, shipping and more that is done to get them to you. The items you buy second hand have already gone through that stage and are ready to be loved a second time, packaging not included. Since most of the items that are in thrift stores got there by being picked up or dropped off as donations, the same amount or less of travel and energy that would have taken the items to a landfill, I’d argue that thrift store items have nearly a zero environmental impact (relative to new items).
  2. It’s Cheaper. My goal is never to spend more money. If the product is good, fair trade, and environmentally sound, I’m willing to pay a higher premium, but I don’t go out and throw my cash around just because. Buying second hand will keep tons of money in your pocket, which you can then pass out to the valuable causes you wish to support. I would argue that shopping second hand rather then Target will save you 80% easily of what you would have paid if you bought things new (how do you like that ambiguous number?).
  3. You Support Local Business. Isn’t it brilliant that we can create businesses and entire industries out of reusing products? Goodwill has some great billboards up around Nashville lately that say, “When you give it to Goodwill, you give me a job.” They speak to the very practical impact thrift stores have. Supporting Goodwill and Salvation Army, among other local businesses, is a way to create a sustainable world beyond a charity check or donation.

Get over yourself and start shopping at the Thrift Store. Find some bargain duds and empty your closet of the things you don’t need at the donation center while you there. Take the money you saved by not buying new and take a person without a home out to eat. Give Target your business when your looking for toothpaste and TP, thank them for their services and tell them you’ll be back in a month or two, maybe.

Mother, There is No Other, So Treat Her Right

This is Mindy’s first mother’s day as a mom. Carrying around a human being in your body for 8 months definitely qualifies you to be celebrated (changing diapers, screaming babies, and all that comes next certainly isn’t a walk in the park either). I’ve had the chance to be around some amazing mothers, so I feel shout outs are in order.

Mindy- The first inklings of love I ever had for my (now) wife were when I saw her playing with kids. She’s such a natural loving and caring person and I distinctly remember thinking I wanted those qualities in a wife; I got exactly what I wanted! It’s amazing to behold this reality and I am honored and forever grateful for the opportunity to raise children with my beautiful wife.

My Mom- I’ve waxed eloquently before about my mom, so here’s an additional bit of love. As I think about all the ins and outs of raising my own children, I continually look back and see how my mom has loved and raised me, she’s a solid example of what it takes day in and day out to selflessly raise children. I think I turned out okay don’t you? For real proof my mom is amazing you just have to meet my brother and sister.

Mindy’s Mom- I can’t possibly say thank you enough to those that have been a part of Mindy’s life, her mother is no exception. From putzing in the kitchen to counting out mints for Christmas stockings, Mindy’s mom has been a joyous addition to my life and a stable foundation from which Mindy has been able to flourish. She’s raised a beautiful daughter that I am touched and honored to have the opportunity to share a life with.

Dawn- For the past year, I’ve had the joyous (and I truly mean joyous) opportunity to share daily life with a family who have become our family. As the mystery of parenthood approaches I, unlike the vast majority of guys entering fatherhood, have had the opportunity to practically have a practice run at seeing life with children. Dawn has been a wonderful example and a kind friend to have opened such a cherished part of family life to Mindy and I.

And in case you thought the shout outs were over, there’s room for three more minutes of fun. This goes out to all you folks, young and old, who have mothers…

Flash Back: The Podcasting Beginnings, We Could Have Been Famous

We had huge potential. I heard about Podcasting in some obscure tech magazine or forum or something, before Apple had even heard of it, and Adam Curry was the only one doing it. I already had a nice microphone an something to record with cause I liked audio. My wife and I were sharing our apartment with our good friend, Zach, in Wheaton, the last semester of our senior year of college. I was trying to sell Zach on the idea that we should be podcasting. He’s funny, smart, witty, and I can press record. Needless to say, in the spring of 2005 in didn’t happen. We could have been famous.

Okay, maybe that was a pipe-dream and we never would have had even a couple minutes of fame. But we did stat podcasting. We jumped on the bandwagon in December of 2005 and did it mostly cause we wanted to. Zach and I were calling each other from different states, but it’s been fun to do. As you know, the podcast isn’t really running these days. We lost steam, but for those who are interested there’s plenty of archived files around.

Today I’ll just leave you with the audio and a link to the post. Enjoy.

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