Archive for May 16, 2015

What a Difference a Font Makes

Use 30% less ink when printing by using the Century Gothic font.  Of course, if using that font causes you to use extra sheets of paper, the Green benefits are questionable. If there’s only a line or two on the second page, though, often a little adjusting of margins on all four sides pulls them up onto the first page.

Leaf 6

[For more easy, money-saving, earth-friendly tips, download a FREE copy of Green Riches: Help the Earth & Your Budget. Go to www.Smashwords.com/books/view/7000, choose a format, and download to your computer or e-book device. Or download a free copy from your favorite e-book seller.]

Hope for Pregnant Workers

There’s hope for pregnant women.  They’re often fired from their jobs because of “unreasonable demands,” like taking bathroom breaks, needing to keep a bottle of water nearby, or having to get help with lifting heavy loads.  (These are actual cases.)

Today, Senators Bob Casey and Jeanne Shaheen are introducing their Pregnant Workers Fairness Act in the U.S. Senate.  It isn’t proposing that employers make major concessions, just the same reasonable ones afforded to people with disabilities.  It would be illegal to fire a pregnant woman for needing such small accommodations.

Since May, when Rep. Jerrold Nadler brought this bill to the House, it has gained 100+ co-sponsors, plus support from a variety of organizations– public health, business, women, workers, and religious.

Sounds like a no-brainer to me.

 

 

Mother’s Day: Not a Hallmark Occasion

Mother’s Day, contrary to popular belief, wasn’t invented by the greeting card industry but by a single woman who, after awhile, fought for the years until her death to abolish it.

Watch this short video and learn about the actual history of the day we’ll be celebrating this coming Sunday.

http://www.history.com/videos/history-of-mothers-day#history-of-mothers-day

The Royalty of Children

As we greet the new royal child, let’s think about how we can protect ALL the children of the world.  This little potential future queen—as well as our two American princesses—will never face hunger, homelessness, exploitation, or death by diseases that are virtually unknown in most of the world.  They won’t have to work long hours in the field before even their tenth birthday to help support their families.  For a certainty, they will have the opportunity for a first-rate education and be able to pass on their good fortune to their own children.

Not all babies are born into that world.  Many, many face abject poverty, malnutrition, and illiteracy.  Those who do survive to have families of their own will pass those conditions on to their children as their only possible legacy.

Those of us who are in a position to do something about the futures of these children must actually do something.  If we have the means, we can donate funds to organizations, here and abroad, that fight poverty, feed the hungry, and educate all the children.  We can volunteer as baby-rockers in at-risk hospital nurseries; aides for teachers of limited-English-speaking classes; tutors for underachieving students or those locked away at Juvenile Hall.  We can visit a museum, art gallery, zoo, tech museum, or the like, taking with us a child of parents struggling to find jobs or working several jobs to meet the bills.  We can invite a latch-key child to help make a double batch of cookies or casserole, and send half of it home with the young cook to show off to the family.  We can do…a million little things that will make a difference in a young life, things that will make a lasting impression, build his or her self-esteem, teach a concept or a skill, and, therefore, provide a step toward a better life than the child might have had.

After all, isn’t each child a royal child?

 

Helping Nepal Sensibly

Before you donate money to help the people of Napal, be sure the organization you’ll give your money to can–and will–actually do the job.  Some are well-meaning but don’t have the resources or experience to handle such a large task.  And some are out-and-out scams, preying on the vulnerable and our emotions.

Here’s a list of ones that have been vetted and are already helping in Nepal.  You can read a little about each and get a link to each at http://www.pri.org/stories/2015-04-25/how-help-nepal-7-vetted-charities-doing-relief-work-following-earthquake.

The organizations are (in alpha order) AmeriCares, CARE, Catholic Relief Services, Direct Relief, GlobalGiving, International Relief Teams, Operation USA, Save the Children, Seva Foundation, and World Help.  Two others currently working over there are UNICEF and Oxfam, also described on that webpage.

The people of Napal need every cent they can get to find their lost loved ones, recover, and rebuild.  Make sure that every penny you give actually helps them.

 

 

Auto Care Math

It pays to love your car.  Properly inflated tires adds 3% to your mileage, and a clean oil filter adds 4%.  Maintenance + driving under 60 mph = 20% less carbon dioxide per gallon of  gas you didn’t use.  End result: with a little care, you and the earth both come out ahead.

Leaf 6

[For more easy, money-saving, earth-friendly tips, download a FREE copy of Green Riches: Help the Earth & Your Budget. Go to www.Smashwords.com/books/view/7000, choose a format, and download to your computer or e-book device. Or download a free copy from your favorite E-book seller.]

Burger Boy

All of us come in daily contact with the “little guys,” a low-paid workers among a sea of low-paid workers.  I’d like to honor those people today, on International Worker’s Day.  Let me introduce you to one of these people.  Let’s call him Sonny.

I wish they wouldn’t treat me like that.  I know I’m just a kid.  And my English ain’t too good.  But I try.  I don’t like how people look at me, like I ain’t worth much.  I don’t wanna be here. Nobody else will hire a kid who don’t know much yet.  I see my parents struggle.  I can’t ask them to give me no money for fun or school or nothin’ and I see how sometimes they don’t eat unless I bring some burgers home that woulda gone into the garbage anyways.  They say don’t take no handouts unless you at death’s door.  We been there twice I remember.  I’m gonna finish school.  Go to college.  Get a real job.  Make it so they don’t have to worry no more.  Then, when I go to Hamburger House, I’ll tip the guy and give him a high-five, ‘cuz I know why he’s there.

 

Next time you meet a “Sonny,” honor the work he does for you and the fellow human being that he is.