Archive for October 15, 2016

A Lunch to Chew On

A simple sandwich takes about 172 gals. of water to make a loaf of bread and lots more for the meat and veggies to go into it.  Save water by using organic lettuce and tomatoes from a sustainable, water-wise garden and make the sandwich open-faced.

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 or your favorite e-book seller and download to your computer or e-book device. Totally free, with no strings attached.]

Chocolate that is NOT So Sweet

Hershey, Mars, Nestle, ADM Cocoa, Godiva, Fowler’s Chocolate, Kraft……Do they make your favorite candy?  Are you thinking of buying some for Halloween?  Before you do, read “Beware of These 7 Popular Chocolate Brands that Exploit Child Slaves.”  

Read about the $1 billion+ spent on this holiday on chocolate, plus the lawsuit, and the children who are enslaved and beaten.

Then decide what candy to buy.

 

Diet Water?!

I didn’t believe it–until I saw it.  Apparently, regular water has too much fat or too many calories (?!).  Anyway, I thought I’d pass on this valuable product to you.

 

Grow Kids and Veggies

Today is National Children’s’ Day (learn about it HERE).   Celebrate your kids, your family, and the day by spending time together planting a winter garden   of carrots, onions, broccoli, peas, potatoes, and other yummy veggies.  Watch as your crops grow.  Then cook them together and enjoy a family meal that you grew yourselves.

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 or your favorite e-book seller and download to your computer or e-book device. Totally free, with no strings attached.]

How NOT to Help

There are tragedies and suffering from catastrophes in various parts of the world, including floods in our own country.  You probably want to help somehow. For most of us, all we can do is to donate to charities that are on the scene helping the victims.  Go ahead.  But be sure those donations do some real good for real people rather than enriching scam artists or CEOs.  Clark Howard offers some tips:

  • Don’t give cash. Legitimate charities will take a check.
  • Don’t give out your credit card, bank account or personal information to telemarketers. If you want to donate, initiate the call yourself.
  • Don’t fall for Internet appeals if the cause does not look legitimate and doesn’t check out. Make sure to do your research!
  • Expect specific information. Ask what kind of relief this organization is going to provide. Don’t accept vague explanations.
  • Check out the charity with national, state, and local authorities. Established charities register with the Internal Revenue Service. You can search for specific non-profit organizations on the IRS website: irs.gov.
  • Beware of newly formed organizations. If the charity is new, you may have to rely on your relationship with the company or sponsor of the organization to determine whether you trust the group.
  • Report abuses to the nearest Better Business Bureau and the State Attorney General’s office. Both are listed in local telephone directories. You can also report abuses to the National Fraud Information Center at (800) 876-7060. NFIC also has a web-based complaint form at www.fraud.org.

And here’s one of my own:  Check to see how much of your donation will go to charitable work as compared to administrative costs (including CEOs) and fundraising costs.  Look them up at www.CharityNavigator.org or the Better Business Bureau site www.BBB.give.org.

For more tips on donating, check out Clark’s Donation Guide.

Could You Live Like This?

Ever wonder how a farm worker lives? It’s hard, because their wages are low, despite back-breaking work. They make do, although life is far from lavish.

These pictures show the life of farm workers in California: Carlos in Salinas, Lucio in Monterey, Betsy in Oxnard, and Vivaldo in Madera.

It seems to me that these people who are so important to our families’ nutrition should not have to live like this.

 

Four Tours and He’s Weak?

My friend, age late 40s, is just a weakling.  Sure, he survived 4 tours in the hot spots of the Mid-East.  And he has served in the Marines for 18 years while raising a family.  But he’s weak because he has PTSD.

That’s what Donald Trump would call him.  That’s what he intimated to a group of veterans at the Retired American Warriors PAC–that many (not all) in the group could handle the horrors of war but others weren’t strong and couldn’t handle it.  In other words, anyone with PTSD is the opposite of strong, that is, weak.

Here’s what he said:  ““When people come back from war and combat and they see maybe what the people in this room have seen many times over, and you’re strong and you can handle it, but a lot of people can’t handle it.”

Read more details and see a video clip at this Huffington Post article.  Or if you don’t trust that paper, search the words “Trump PTSD veterans weak” to find a multitude of other sources.

Do I sound upset?  No, I’m mad!  My friend and countless others who serve our country have to be strong to do their jobs.  Seeing man’s inhumanity to man on a daily basis does NOT make them weak.  In fact, I think they can just not hold back their morality any longer.

 

Walking through 40 Countries

October is International Walk to School Month.  40 countries are encouraging kids and their parents to walk to school. Get out of your car, put a little neighborhood group together, and get the kids to school under their own foot-power.  It’s healthy–for you AND for the earth.

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 or your favorite e-book seller and download to your computer or e-book device. Totally free, with no strings attached.]