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Trade: You’ll Pay For This Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Posted by Lars Almquist in Global Interest, Immigration, Justice.
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Trade: Welcome to America   How do you trust when hope seems lost?     Trade: You’ll Pay for This (Marketed elsewhere as ‘Trade: Welcome to America’) is finally being released in select theaters THIS FRIDAY, September 28th.  After being delayed for nearly half a year, it is time.  I haven’t seen a movie in the theaters in nearly 3 years, mostly because I cannot justify paying $10 for a one-view, two-hour experience (roughly 8 cents per minute of film)…however this movie may tip the balance.   

I only hope that Trade is not an overly-Hollywoodized film that prostitutes a sexy justice issue to make money for a large movie conglomerate while leaving the systems of the world that perpetuate human trafficking untouched and unaltered.  See ‘Blood Diamond’ and ‘The Eleventh Hour’ for Hollywood’s exploitation of an issue to make money and leave the viewer with nearly no tangible way to affect global and local change as a way to respond to the film and the realities it purports to bring to life.     

The danger with an issue like human trafficking is that Trade will drop a bomb in our laps and then leave us to sort out the emotional, moral, economic, and sociological fallout that it creates – with no recourse to affect systemic change other than to give money to some non-profit org.     

There’s nothing wrong with giving money.  However, charity and justice are in no way the same.  Charity doesn’t change the systems and structures that perpetuate injustice.  Charity doesn’t empower others into freedom.  Charity doesn’t allow others to engage the life Jesus created them to live where they have previously been held in bondage.  Charity doesn’t cost us much.  Authentic justice requires all of us.  It may mean we alter our lives, our economies, our living situations, and set down our idols of comfort, convenience, and upward social mobility.     

  I pray that Trade highlights the reality that we are all connected to the issue of human trafficking.  90% of the cocoa that goes into the chocolate you eat passes through slave hands in West Africa.  40% of the steel eventually finding its way into our automobiles originates in slave-labor-dominated kilns in the deep rainforest areas of northern and western Brazil.  This says nothing of the products forced upon us from the GAP (parent of Old Navy and Banana Republic), Wal-Mart, or your average coffee shop or department store.     

How are we to respond to our complicity in the reality of human trafficking, both in our city, across our borders, and in the villages and slums of impoverished, desperate communities?  Where are we perpetuating the system of human trafficking?  Do our retirement funds support companies that abuse slave labor and are guilty of trafficking persons across international borders? (see www.warslavery.org for the scary facts on the Iraq war and where your tax dollars are going)  How are we to respond?  How are we to alter our lives?  Will Trade move us deeply enough that we will forsake our comfort and privilege in favor of releasing others into freedom?   

One can only hope this will be the case. 

Youth For Human Rights #4 – No Slavery Sunday, September 23, 2007

Posted by Lars Almquist in Global Interest.
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True Story: A Christianity Worth Believing In Monday, September 17, 2007

Posted by Lars Almquist in Book/Music Reviews, Jesus.
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 Check out some of the great work that we’ve been developing on behalf of the Kingdom in San Diego with InterVarsity Christian Fellowship….Please check out how James Choung has formulated palatable explanation and proclaim-able Gospel that Christians can believe in, and then call others into believing also, through True Story: A Christianity Worth Believing In. We’ve been wrestling with the questions, “What is the Gospel?”  ”Is it really Good News?”  ”How do we call people into this?”  Here’s How. 

Cancer’s High Toll on the Uninsured Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Posted by Lars Almquist in Health.
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Praise Jesus for the American Cancer Society and their fight to bring care to the most desperate medical cases, especially when the patient has no medical insurance.  Now if only those in Congress and the Oval Office would follow suit.  

The society decided to devote its entire advertising budget this year to the problem of inadequate health coverage after reaching a stark and sobering conclusion. It has no hope of meeting its goal of reducing cancer death rates by 50 percent, and incidence rates by 25 percent, from 1990 to 2015 unless cancer patients gain quicker access to screening and treatment. 

 

Many patients are impoverished by their battles against cancer. A survey last year found that one of every four families afflicted by cancer used most or all of its savings in the battle, including one in five families with insurance. Their limited benefits could not come close to meeting the high costs of cancer treatment. 

Miss Teen South Carolina Answers A Question Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Posted by Lars Almquist in Humor, Stupid Crap.
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Ok, now I know I don’t hold South Carolina (or much of the South, for that matter) in high esteem…the whole slavery, Jim Crow, lynching thing was pretty stupid. And the fact that South Carolina got rid of the Confederate Flag from their government buildings and the rest of their state less than 7.5 years ago freaks me out.  But this is 2007, how backward is SC that this is the product of their educational system and a symbol of the beauty of their state?  Anyone who’s seen Little Miss Sunshine has witnessed the commodification of beauty of young American girls…now we’re witnessing the commodification of stupidity.  And another thing, South Carolina holds the 3rd US primary coming up!!!  This is who gets to vote first to shift the balance of power of our country?!  I think I’d rather be waterboarded…   

Hip Hop Police Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Posted by Lars Almquist in Uncategorized.
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 I didn’t know Chamillionaire was so informed…  Got to love the plague forecast! 

Diamonds Are Forever Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Posted by Lars Almquist in Uncategorized.
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Father’s Day Sunday, July 29, 2007

Posted by Lars Almquist in Uncategorized.
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Stanford Prison Experiment Thursday, July 19, 2007

Posted by Lars Almquist in Justice.
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Oh man, how unchecked power corrupts….Here are two videos chronicling the 1971 Stanford Prison Experiment conducted by Philip Zimbardo.  Note the striking Guantanamo / Abu Ghraib similarities in the captives’ response to their captivity in the face of the abuse of power…. it’s sickening what evil ‘good’ people can unleash on each other, justified under the guise of authority and legitimacy.

You can create in the prisoners feelings of boredom, a sense of fear to some degree, you can create a notion of arbitrariness that their life is totally controlled by us, by the system, you, me, and they’ll have no privacy… We’re going to take away their individuality in various ways. In general what all this leads to is a sense of powerlessness. That is, in this situation we’ll have all the power and they’ll have none.
— The Stanford Prison Study video, quoted in Haslam & Reicher, 2003.

Obama’s Opening Statement at NAACP Annual Convention Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Posted by Lars Almquist in Obama.
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