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Canadian politics is getting heated.

It's not very often that there can be a blog title like this one. Canadian politics = exciting? What? Where am I? But for once - we've got something going on. I think what is happening now in Ottawa might actually be more exciting than what is happening right now in American politics. What is happening right now in American politics is Obama naming Hilary Clinton his Secretary of State which isn't exciting because everybody already knew it was happening two weeks ago.

Whereas no one in Canada saw this one coming. Bam! The Liberals, NDP and Bloc have all been secretly scheming against our latest Harper government since they all 'lost' to him during an election featuring one of the worst voter turnouts of all time.

If Harper's government tries to pass a budget that includes no stimulus package for the Canadian economy and cuts public funding for political parties they are going to pounce! If Harper's government presents a revised budget they will probably pounce anyways! Bringing down the government in a no-confidence vote and then asking to create a government made up of a coalition of Liberal, NDP and the Bloc when they feel like it.

This is pretty exciting for people who like watching Harper's sneaky plans to establish a Conservative monopoly within Canadian politics blow up in his face.

I like the coalition idea because it's a risk, it's new, it's sticking it to Harper, and it feels more like real politics than anything I've seen in Canada in a long time.

I don't like the coalition idea because it will make Stephane Dion Prime Minister, it will give the Bloc a lot of power to decide which coalition legislation goes through and which doesn't, and it will be unstable in a period where stability would be good.

So it's more like choosing the lesser evil. The stability of knowing you have a sneaky grinch as your Prime Minister. Or the potential of having five bickering 'Prime Ministers' (Dion, Ignatieff, Rae, Layton and Duceppe) and then a swift return to the grinch.

December 1, 2008 | 3:34 PM Comments  0 comments

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World AIDS Day
About this event: World Aids Day


Support World AIDS Day

December 1, 2008 | 8:00 AM Comments  0 comments

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STOP AIDS

STOP AIDS

December 1, 2008 | 1:15 AM Comments  0 comments

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jbanerjee   jbanerjee Joya Banerjee's TIGblog
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AIDS Sutra: Untold Stories from India
Related to country: India
About this category: Health & Wellness


(Written for SAWNET, http://sawnet.org/books/reviews.php?Aids+Sutra)



Today there are approximately 3 million Indians living with HIV and AIDS, a number that masks the human faces behind a disease that has been reviled and misunderstood as the worst plague in human history. A disease often considered to afflict only those regarded as the dredges of society, AIDS has the potential both to expose the dark underbelly of society, and also to inspire triumphs of human compassion and perseverance.
AIDS Sutra, funded by the Gates Foundation, is a compilation of 16 vibrant essays about Indians living with HIV by some of South Asia’s most gifted authors, including Salman Rushdie, Vikram Seth, and Kiran Desai. Several of the essays are narrated directly from the authors’ home communities; others are the fruition of their travels to the vastly different regions of India.

Siddharth Deb’s poignant account, “The Lost Generation of Manipur,” brings him to a remote corner of India bereft of employment opportunities and constantly on edge due to communal violence. Uncontrolled injecting drug use in the region puts young people of working age especially at risk for HIV infection.

Salman Rushdie’s piece on the politics and culture of the hijra (intersexed and/or transgender) community is a concise account of a population that defies society´s common [mis]perceptions around gender and HIV risk. Rushdie interviews a transgender AIDS activist named Laxmi, who lives in a constant duality of gender- going as a man by day and living with her parents, and transforming into a woman at night and on the weekends. Her advocacy on behalf of this distinct community in India has helped to distinguish hijras as a third gender- with different needs and challenges than men who have sex with men.

Other stories included in the book examine the lives of truck drivers, sex workers, and devadasis, women traditionally given to god, and nowadays women who choose or are forced into sex work as a means of income generation. In Sunil Gangopadhyay’s essay, “Return to Sonagacchi,” the author returns home to Kolkata to compose a compelling account of the lives of sex workers in Sonagachhi, narrating both the deprivation they face and also their power as an organized movement fighting for their rights as sex workers to safety, health services, education for their children, freedom from police persecution, and dignity.

Bill and Melinda Gates give the anthology’s introduction, and its insightful forward is written by the Nobel Prize-winning economist and author of Development as Freedom, Amartya Sen. Sen revolutionized the traditional economic paradigm by asserting that development is not simply about increasing per capita income, but rather “a process of expanding the real freedoms that people enjoy.” His examination of the economic effects of AIDS in India is nuanced in its consideration of both the beneficial impact of Indian pharmaceuticals in producing affordable antiretroviral drugs for much of the world, and the irony that income disparity in India prevents the majority of Indians living with HIV from accessing treatment, quality medical facilities, shelter, employment opportunities, and community support.

Sen argues that stigma is the primary fuel of the epidemic in India, where widespread ignorance pervades about how HIV is—and is not—transmitted. Among young Indians just reaching working age, knowledge how HIV is spread is dismally low at 25% of the population according to UNAIDS (20% comprehensive knowledge among women and 36% among men). Because many Indians still believe that HIV can be transmitted through touch, sharing food, or through aerosol transmission, Indians living with HIV face discrimination in schools and workplaces, ostracization, rejection from their families, and in many cases, violence and even death.

India’s uncomfortable and often times paradoxical relationship with sex and sexuality is often at the root of ignorance and discrimination against HIV, with 87% of new infections in India occurring through unprotected sexual intercourse each year according to India’s National AIDS Control Organization. Despite an ancient culture rich in celebration of natural human sexuality, imperial-era taboos surrounding sex continue to create a stifling conservatism that limits access to scientific information about sexually transmitted infections, reproductive health, and the rights of women and sexual minorities.

In Amit Chaudhuri’s essay, “Healing,” he remarks that “The troubling ambiguity of sex through history— the fact that it bestows life and pleasure, and also, in a way that can’t be entirely explained by morality, confuses and shames— have converged in a new way upon this disease.” His interviews with Alka Desphpande, an AIDS researcher and physician in India’s first AIDS ward, reveal the challenges faced even by the medical community in becoming educated about HIV. Large numbers of Indian health care workers still believe that HIV is transmitted by touch, and widespread denial of treatment and discrimination against people living with HIV is common.

The first essay “Mister X Versus Hospital Y” by Nikita Lalwani tells the story of a Dr. Tokugha who is infected with HIV and becomes an important activist when his results are disclosed to his family (and bride-to-be’s family) before he himself is made aware of his status, just days before the wedding. His lawsuit against the hospital’s breach of his privacy sparked controversial debate and the release of his name in newspapers all across India. The court ruled against him, “decreeing that the hospital’s release of the information to the minister without his consent had ‘saved the life’ of Toku’s proposed fiancée. The essay forces us to consider the complexities behind forced disclosure of one’s HIV status. Not only was Dr. “Toku”’s right to self-disclose taken away from him, the judge tacked on a devastating addition to the ruling, that suspended the right of HIV positive people to marry. The laudable human rights organization, The Lawyers’ Collective, fought for years to restore this basic human right to people living with HIV, succeeding in 2002. Since then, Dr. Toku has become a prominent physician in the field, and goes above and beyond by arranging matches between people living with HIV.

Discrimination and national legislation intersect most brutally in India with the penal code provision 377 that makes homosexuality a criminal offense. Drafted in 1860 during British Rule, the anachronistic law fines and imprisons Indians caught in the act of sodomy and even oral sex for between ten years and a lifetime in jail. The law has served to drive homosexuality “underground” where men having unprotected sex with men cannot be reached for HIV awareness raising, sexual health services, STI screening, or recourse for police persecution and demanding of bribes.

One story included in the collection was strikingly disappointing— to the point of giving offense. Shobhaa De’s “When AIDS Came Home” reveals the author’s ignorant, discriminatory and classist lack of understanding of HIV and AIDS. Her account of how her driver becomes infected with HIV and gradually dies from AIDS is peppered with comments about her “repulsion” that he had spent so much time with her children, speculations about his involvement with sex workers and his sexuality, and self-congratulatory accolades when she provided occasional money for a doctor or medicine.

De’s piece examines her misconceptions about AIDS and vaguely suggests that she has seen the error in her was (perhaps simply because it would not be politically correct to admit otherwise), but still fails to include what lessons she has learned. Indeed, to conclude her story Shobhaa marvels that “Although they are such an intimate part of our lives, how little we really know about the people who work for us… it took Shankar’s death to see him as a human.” She concludes by lying to her children and telling them that the driver was infected through a blood transfusion because the reality that many men purchase sex is too shocking to bear.

By far the most thought-provoking inclusion in the anthology, Siddharth Dhanvant Shanghvi’s “Hello, Darling,” diverges from the book’s overall focus on more “marginalized” populations of sex workers, drug users and truckers, to recount the life experiences with HIV of an upper-class homosexual film director whose pseudonym is given as “Murad.” Openly flamboyant, driven to success, and yet still slow to “come out” about his homosexuality, and later, HIV status, Murad escapes the confines of Bombay and moves to New York City. He is unable to move in the local film circuit and returns to Bombay years later, where he eventually succumbs to AIDS.

Shanghvi’s piece is particularly well-researched and deeply-felt; his account considers early chronicles of the impact of AIDS on art and artists in Edmund White’s “Esthetics and Loss,” and the strange phenomenon of how AIDS “got noticed,” as explained in Urvashi Vaid’s “Virtual Equality,” in which she observes “how the passing of an entire generation from AIDS helped give rise to the modern idea of homosexuality: thousands of men had to die, in fact, to have to be seen as alive in the first place.” Shanghvi’s inclusion was particularly important and contrasted sharply with De’s story. “Hello, Darling” should serve as a wake-up call to elites believing in their infallibility, since the risk behaviors that propel the spread of HIV in India are by no means limited to lower socioeconomic echelons of society.

Overall, the anthology is an important, moving, and transformative read. Each story is relatively brief and gives a taste of the authors’ diverse and prolific literary talents. Some tales, such as De’s, are clearly geared toward upper class Indians who are beginning to understand the complexities of the AIDS epidemic in India. Still others delve into economic, political and human rights aspects of the disease. Till now, literature and artistic works on AIDS in India have been limited and relatively unknown. AIDS Sutra gives voice to communities and individuals that have been destroyed, silenced, affected and transformed by AIDS in a jarring and yet deeply meaningful manner.

November 28, 2008 | 2:42 PM Comments  0 comments

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damianprofeta   damianprofeta Damian Profeta's TIGblog
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Web 2.0 y participación juvenil en el III Taller TUNZA-GEO Juvenil Cono Sur :D
About this category: Technology & Innovation


El viernes facilité un taller de TakingITGlobal sobre "Web 2.0 para la participación juvenil" en el III Taller Subregional TUNZA-GEO Juvenil para el Cono Sur.

Mi taller tuvo lugar en la Universidad Abierta Interamericana (gracias Daniel, Román y área de Extensión!) y participaron jóvenes de Argentina, Brasil, Chile, Paraguay, Uruguay, Colombia, Cuba, México y Panamá.

Durante más de tres horas charlamos sobre el rol que ocupa internet en la vida diaria de las organizaciones, el ciberactivsimo, blogs, fotologs, social bookmarking, rss, wikis, celulares, mapping, etc, etc... y vimos distintas herramientas online, incluyendo, claro, muchas de las herramientas que brinda TIG para jóvenes y organizaciones.


Como hubo tanta buena onda me quedé el resto del día (y de la noche) con l@s chic@s de TUNZA y GEO Juvenil participando del resto de talleres y charlas del encuentro.

Además, en un momento libre, hice un videíto sobre el taller en el que participaron tres delegados de Paraguay, México y Cuba (gracias Jorge, Paulina y Handy!!!). Cuentan qué hacen y su opinión acerca de las TICs en su participación social. El video lo grabé y lo edité íntegramente en mi celular N95.



En definitiva, muy rico todo :D

Todo mi agradecimiento a Cecilia Iglesias, Eugenia Massone y Elizabeth Osorio por la invitación (y su amistad, claro)!!!! :D

November 24, 2008 | 1:55 AM Comments  0 comments

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child right day
Related to country: Pakistan


participate online event

November 20, 2008 | 4:23 AM Comments  0 comments

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damianprofeta   damianprofeta Damian Profeta's TIGblog
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Premiaron a mi mamá por su compromiso solidario :)
About this category: Human Rights & Equity


Hace unas semanas mi mamá, Adriana Molinuevo, recibió el "Premio Padre Daniel de la Sierra" por su compromiso solidario en la Villa 21-24 del bajo Barracas :D

Mi mamá, que es mucho más participaholic que yo, creó hace siete años un centro comunitario en la villa, conocido como La Casita de los Niños Augusto Conte, en homenaje a ese militante de derechos humanos.


El reconocimiento se lo entregó el "Padre Pepe", José María Di Paola, párroco de Nuestra Señora de Caacupé.


El premio recuerda al fallecido sacerdote Daniel de la Sierra, que se desempeñó en la parroquia de la villa 21-24, entre Barracas, Pompeya y Parque Patricios.

Todos los fines de semana van muchos chicos a La Casita de los Niños para jugar, tomar la leche, comer, hacer los deberes, etc, etc. Mi mamá siempre me pregunta en qué ando para ver si los chicos de La Casita pueden participar en alguno de los proyectos que coordino.

En 2002 di clases de matemática y lengua todos los sábados a la mañana. Después, de 2003 en adelante, trabajamos en varios talleres con los chicos, sobre diversos temas: la diversidad cultural, el cambio climático, la identidad, la violencia, etc.

A muchos los conocí chiquitos y ya son adolescentes y siguen yendo a La Casita. El otro día mi mamá me contó que varios están terminando la secundaria y se están anotando en terciarios y en la universidad. Eso no tiene precio...

Como dijo el padre Pepe mientras entregaba el premio: "Chiche Gelblung tendría que venir a mostrar a estas personas solidarias y a estos chicos que están estudiando".

Lo de siempre: lo malo se muestra y lo bueno no. Menos mal que hay blogs para contarlo :)

November 17, 2008 | 8:37 PM Comments  1 comments

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Climate Change campaign
Related to country: Pakistan



November 16, 2008 | 3:00 AM Comments  0 comments

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Child Rights Day
Related to country: Pakistan


envolven the child right day and take action

November 14, 2008 | 9:37 AM Comments  3 comments

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damianprofeta   damianprofeta Damian Profeta's TIGblog
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Jimmy Wales, el creador de la Wikipedia, en Argentina!
About this category: Technology & Innovation


Por si no alcanzaba con Richard Stallman, fundador del movimiento del software libre, también Jimmy Wales, el creador de la archiconocida Wikipedia, visitió la Argentina! Y lo mejor: pude estar cerca de los dos! :D

Wales participó en la Academia de Wikipedia, organizada por sus representantes locales, la Asociación Wikimedia Argentina.

"Jimbo" explicó las razones del éxito de su creación: “La gente participa como un hobby y se divierte haciéndolo”, afirmó. Y destacó: “Que una comunidad se reúna para hacer algo útil es una idea interesante”. También adelantó lo que se viene: la competencia con Google.

Seguí leyendo sobre la visita de Jimmy Wales en el artículo que escribí para ElArgentino.com

Y en exclusiva para el blog, posteo un videíto que grabé y edité íntegramente desde mi N95 :)



November 9, 2008 | 10:29 PM Comments  0 comments

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arq   arq عطاءالرحمن قریشی's TIGblog
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Dear Chiara Camponeschi
Related to country: Pakistan


Thanks for removing me from Community Connector Internship project .
once again thanks .

November 9, 2008 | 2:45 AM Comments  0 comments

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Admission open in Farz Computer Academy
Related to country: Pakistan


Admission open in Farz Computer Academy for more information and detail

visit wesite

http://www.farzcomputeracademy.4t.com/

www.farz.8m.com

online courses also started

more information email us

arqureashi@yahoo.com , info.farz@yahoo.com

November 8, 2008 | 3:34 AM Comments  0 comments

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Urdu Adab
Related to country: Pakistan


Urdu Adab Group members Photo

November 5, 2008 | 2:54 AM Comments  0 comments

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damianprofeta   damianprofeta Damian Profeta's TIGblog
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Richard Stallman en Buenos Aires! :D
About this category: Technology & Innovation


Richard Stallman, fundador del movimiento de software libre, ofreció ayer una conferencia en la Cámara de Diputados de la Nación. Invitado por la Fundación Vía Libre, estuvo acompañado por legisladores que están trabajando en proyectos que regulan el uso de programas informáticos en el Estado.

Lo bueno de ser periodista es que pude estar entre los primeros en ingresar a la sala y acomodarme cerca de Stallman. Saqué un montón de fotos con mi flamante N95 y grabé un videíto que publico más abajo.

El auditorio estuvo compuesto predominantemente por gran cantidad de estudiantes universitarios y jóvenes interesados en la temática.

Stallman, notoriamente cansado, ofreció una disertación de más de dos horas, en un buen castellano y con un sorprendente sentido del humor, especialmente al referirse a Microsoft y al presidente estadounidense George W. Bush. Habló de libertades, desarrollo, economía y voto electrónico, entre otros temas.


Seguir leyendo mi artículo sobre la conferencia de Richard Stallman en ElArgentino.com

Mi videíto en el que Stallman hace una introducción al software libre:


November 4, 2008 | 8:41 PM Comments  0 comments

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laurakenyon   laurakenyon LauraK's TIGblog
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Ciao, Auf Wiedersehen, Adieu ... Bye.

Soon-to-be no longer President of the United States of America. You know you'll miss him.

November 4, 2008 | 1:03 PM Comments  5 comments

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