Tag Archive for Super Bowl

Human Trafficking Actions Too Narrow

It’s a good thing that, during the Super Bowl, 7 teenagers (under age 18) were rescued from prostitution and over a dozen pimps and 85 people soliciting sex were arrested.

However, human trafficking is a much larger problem.  Employees in stores, restaurants, and nail salons are treated as virtual slaves.  So are domestic workers, farm workers, and hotel/motel staff.  They are men and women, adults and children, foreign-born and, yes, even U.S. citizens.

For details and statistics, including the number of cases reported in your state, go to https://traffickingresourcecenter.org/states.

I was pleased to see that sex traffickers were targeted during the Super Bowl.  I want to know, though, why nothing was done to protect and rescue all those others.

 

 

Ad that to My Bowl of Super Logic

I USED TO pride myself on my logic.  No more.  Not since yesterday.

You see, I’m one of those people who isn’t fond of football, even the Super Bowl, not even the half-time show.  But I like to watch the commercials–mainly to see how, if I had $5 million, I could fill 30 seconds.  What I did this year was record the game for later viewing (and for skipping through to catch the ads).

Before that, though, I recorded Super Bowl’s Greatest Commercials 2016.  That’s what I watched yesterday.  Sounds logical so far, right?  I thought it was.  Until I realized something: I was zipping through the program’s commercials to watch what?  Commercials!

Sigh……

 

 

Shame: San Francisco and the Super Bowl

The good news:  San Francisco is spending $5 million on the homeless.  The bad news: they’re spending the money not on services or housing to help the homeless make better lives for themselves and their families but to move them out of sight in time for the Super Bowl.  S.F. has the 8th largest homeless  population in the U.S., yet the city is moving them to a small spot under a highway overpass–far away from Super Bowl Fan City.

My question is, Will the city and businesses then take a good chunk of the tourist money the Super Bowl will bring in and apply it in ways to get the homeless out of the ghetto the city has created and into needed healthcare (physical and mental), jobs, and housing so that these people never need to be hidden away again?

I doubt it.  And there’s the shame.

For details, go to http://www.bloomberg.com/politics/articles/2016-01-22/san-francisco-nudges-homeless-away-from-super-bowl-fan-village.

 

 

Doritos Video is Food for Thought

This Doritos ad, submitted for Super Bowl consideration  ends with some cheesy, crumby facts.

http://action.sumofus.org/a/doritos-video/?akid=8939.6446539.ccJyaD&modal=false&rd=1&t=2