“The illiterate of the 21st century will not be those who cannot read and write, but those who cannot learn, unlearn, and relearn.” -Alvin Toffler

Tuesday, November 22, 2022

Your Vacation Supports this. Exclusive: Dominican Republic expelled hundreds of children to Haiti without their families this year

Your vacation within the Dominican Republic supports the expelling of Haitian children from parents within the Dominican Republic.

BEMA Internatonal




Exclusive: Dominican Republic expelled hundreds of children to Haiti without their families this year

 By  and , CNN
Updated 8:31 PM EST, Mon November 21, 2022

Members of the Specialized Border Security Corps (Cesfront) open the entry gate at the Dajabon and Ouanaminthe border bridge in Dajabon, Dominican Republic, on Sunday, Aug. 14, 2022.

I understand. This Video — It Will Change Your Mind

What separates the two of us?  
  • Funding to get the project, the idea, the solution done.
  • The same drive, the same visions but one element lacking.

CDS








Monday, November 21, 2022

Financial Disaster Assistance. Hurricane Ian. November 14 - December 19

From November 14 through December 19, the Red Cross will be working diligently to provide Individual Assistance (IA) to those whose homes suffered major structural damage or were destroyed as a result of Hurricane Ian.

The American Red Cross will make every effort over the next several weeks to reach those whose homes were destroyed or sustained major structural damage.  If the Red Cross has contact information AND a qualifying damage assessment for an affected household, then that household should receive an invitation to complete an application for this assistance, through an email, text message, or phone call by November 27, 2022. 

Thousands of affected households will receive an invitation to complete an application through an email, text message or phone call directly from the Red Cross during this time. People who fall into this category include those whose homes for which the Red Cross has contact information and have been verified by FEMA, the Red Cross or another agency to have sustained major structural damage or have been destroyed. The person must complete the Financial Assistance application by responding to the email and/or text from the Red Cross.

The initial amount of damage-based assistance will depend on the number of people in each individual household. For 
  • a household with one to four people the amount will be $515
  • a household of five to eight will receive $824, and 
  • households with nine or more people will receive $1,236
After a household’s application is approved, Red Cross financial assistance will be 
delivered through one of several electronic funds transfer (EFT) methods including 
  • PayPal, 
  • Zelle, 
  • Mastercard Send, or 
  • Walmart Direct2Cash; 
  • or through a Red Cross issued debit card.
If an affected household does not receive a text, email, or telephone notification to enroll between now and November 27, 2022, then the household may enroll in person at a Red Cross service site beginning on November 28. These service sites will be announced before November 28.

The Red Cross works with many different partners to help to provide assistance to those affected by disasters. 

To find out more about other programs or assistance available, contact 211 or go to https://resources.redcross.org/.

Please share as appropriate and let us know if there are any questions.

________________________________________________________________

Earl R. Brown | National Partner Relations & Agreements| National Disaster Partnerships

Webinar: Including persons with disabilities in local disaster resilience planning Tuesday 6 December

 

Some one billion people around the world live with some form of disability. In every disaster, a disproportionate number of persons with disabilities suffer and die. Local disaster prevention measures are regularly designed and implemented without including persons with disabilities. Rarely are the unique perspectives and contributions of these communities engaged in local efforts to reduce disaster risk. The Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction makes the case for an inclusive, accessible, all-of-society approach to protect lives, livelihoods, and wellbeing as being the most effective pathway towards resilient and sustainable cities.

A new Annex to the Scorecard for the Inclusion of Persons with Disabilities opens the way for local governments to strengthen their capability to design, formulate, and implement policies that include persons with disabilities. This Making Cities Resilient 2030 (MCR2030) webinar coincides with the release of a new Annex for the Disaster Resilience Scorecard for Cities: Inclusion of Persons with Disabilities. The annex provides a ‘window of opportunity’ for municipalities to engage people and communities previously overlooked. The webinar will make the case that utilizing the new tool will prove to be an investment and not a cost for resource-constrained municipalities. The discussion will bring together representatives from local government and civil society. 

Please register for the webinar by scanning the QR Code of by clicking here

Grant Opportunity: $700K. Assistive Technology Program for Farmers with Disabilities

USDA

Department of Agriculture

National Institute of Food and Agriculture Assistive Technology Program for Farmers with Disabilities Synopsis 1

https://www.grants.gov/web/grants/view-opportunity.html?oppId=344549

Corruption and Embezzlement. A Global Crisis. The Elephant in the Room that No One Discusses.

 



    Investigation Thwarts Brazen Bribery Scheme

    An attorney, an elected official, and a businessman engaged in an outrageous corruption scheme, but the FBI thwarted their efforts.

    Nov. 16, 2022

    Full Story



Portion................................
 
“We were able to intercept him in real time accepting and demanding bribes,” said Special Agent Robert Beeckman, 
who investigated this case out of the FBI’s Detroit Field Office. Agents also saw Reynolds accepting a cash delivery.
 
As a local legislator in the 10th largest Michigan municipality, Reynolds used his connections for capital gain.
 
Reynolds made sure to have connections in the garbage industry, one of the township’s biggest expenses. 
 
On the other end of several phone calls was Chuck Rizzo, president of Rizzo Environmental Services, Inc.
Rizzo’s company had one of the largest and most lucrative garbage businesses in Southeast Michigan.
 
He offered Reynolds bribes to secure favorable contracts. He spoke specifically about securing Reynold’s vote
on an $18 million contract.
 
In exchange for the lucrative contract, Rizzo paid Reynolds’ divorce expenses.  
 
Rizzo asked his lawyer Jay A. Schwartz to provide a variety of services, including advice about how to
commit bribery and divorce counsel for Reynolds. Schwartz agreed. A subpoena of his billing software
confirmed that $40,000 worth of legal services were provided for free. 
 
As the divorce went on, Reynolds fought a custody battle that required a psychological evaluation.
Another wiretap caught Schwartz proposing that a third party could pay for it; however, that person
needed to have one very crucial ability.  
 
“[Schwartz] talked about finding a third party who could hold up on the witness stand if ever
questioned under oath about where the money came from.
 
You have an attorney, an officer of the court, proposing a bribery scheme with a view towards perjury if necessary…
hiding it from a judge,” Beeckman said.
 
Schwartz swindled an unsuspecting family friend into the scheme.  
  •  Schwartz was sentenced to 27 months in prison and fined $250,000. 
  •  Rizzo was sentenced to 66 months in 2018. 
  •  Reynolds was sentenced to 17 years in prison in 2019. 
  •  A total of 22 people were indicted in the scheme.  
The FBI prioritizes these cases because systemic corruption can cause a domino effect leading to
general mistrust of authority
 
“There are places in the world that have given up. They have corruption at such a level that their governmental systems have completely failed,”      Beeckman said.
 
“The public there has no confidence in the people who run their country.
We’re not there in this country, and we have no intention of getting there.”  
 
Bribery is a federal crime. If you suspect it, contact the FBI.  
 
A common worry is that if you submit a tip, you will be the sole cause of an open
investigation about a public official. This is not accurate.
 
Beeckman confirmed that a public corruption case cannot be opened based on a single source.  
 
“No detail is too small. You could be the person who supplies the last bit of
information that we need—the puzzle piece that makes it all make sense,” he said.  
 

Sunday, November 20, 2022

Be at Peace. Have a warm, safe, and wonderful Thanksgiving with your most precious gift, Family.

 


Everyday same story: The Story of the Donkey and the Tiger

 

The donkey told the tigerThe grass is blue

The tiger repliedNo, the grass is green.

The discussion became heated, and the two decided to submit the issue to arbitration, and to do so they approached the lion. 

Before reaching the clearing in the forest where the lion was sitting on his throne, the donkey started screaming: ′′Your Highness, isn't it true that the grass is blue?"

The lion replied: "True, the grass is blue". 

The donkey rushed forward and continued: ′′The tiger disagrees with me and contradicts me and annoys me. Please punish him".

The king then declared:

′′The tiger will be punished with 5 years of silence".

The donkey jumped with joy and went on his way, content and repeating: ′′The grass is blue"..

The tiger accepted his punishment, but he asked the lion:

       ′′Your Majesty, why have you punished me, after all, the grass is green?"

The lion replied: ′′In fact, the grass is green".

The tiger asked: ′′So why do you punish me?"

The lion replied:

That has nothing to do with the question of whether the grass is blue or green.

The punishment is because it is not possible for a brave, intelligent creature like you to waste time arguing with a donkey, and on top of that to come and bother me with that question

The worst waste of time is arguing with the fool and fanatic who doesn't care about truth or reality, but only the victory of his beliefs and illusions. Never waste time on discussions that make no sense...

There are people who for all the evidence presented to them, do not have the ability to understand, and others who are blinded by..
         - ego,

        -hatred and

        -resentment, and

        -the only thing that they want is to be right

               even if they aren’t 
 
When ignorance screams, intelligence shuts up.

 Your peace and tranquility are worth more.

 

Environment and Racism: Even when addressing the issue of environmental concerns our children making a difference and participating must deal with reality.

Listen to the CNN coverage.  Notice a child described as a woman.

Fear of Black Women and Girls. 

Fear of Black Children.

FEAR.

New Jersey is taking a lead by incorporating climate change within their school system.
                 https://www.nj.gov/education/standards/climate/ 

Fear and racism must also be incorporated to make the change.

Listen to the CNN coverage.  Notice a child described as a woman.

BEMA International


https://www.cnn.com/videos/us/2022/11/19/neighbor-police-black-girl-spotted-lanternflies-orig-contd-llr.cnn

'It scares me': Man calls police on 9-year-old Black girl while she sprayed lanternflies






















 




Philanthropy News Digest publishes Requests for Proposals (RFPs)


Poll

This year's disaster philanthropy report from Candid and the Center for Disaster Philanthropy found a surge in funding in 2020 in response to the COVID-19 pandemic while other areas of disaster philanthropy remained unchanged.

What area of disaster relief are you most likely to donate to?

  • Public health crisis (i.e., COVID-19)
  • Natural disasters/severe weather
  • Man-made emergencies (e.g., conflicts, genocide, refugee crises, industrial accidents, etc.)

Whole Community: Raising her autistic son taught this mom hard lessons that she’s used to help thousands of underserved Chicago-area families




“I was the only Black woman there, I was the only person that had low income,” she said. “The women – they were great. They were giving me resources. But they would say, ‘They only cost $500.’ And I’m trying to figure how I’m going to get groceries for next week. Imagine how I felt then – even more helpless.”


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