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The Stingy US
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moonraven



Joined: 24 Mar 2004
Posts: 3094

PostPosted: Wed Jan 12, 2005 5:35 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I also know the phone numbers of my friends--including those of their cellulars (plural in the case of Ch�vez).

I do not publish information of that intimacy to strangers on Internet forums.
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marblez



Joined: 24 Oct 2004
Posts: 248
Location: Canada

PostPosted: Wed Jan 12, 2005 5:44 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

On the internet, you never know who knows who. My babysitter was Michael J Fox's sister. My dad went to high school with him at Burnaby North in Vancouver. Apparently, he held me a few times(I think I only cared about milk and diapers then).

So there you go, you never know.
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moonraven



Joined: 24 Mar 2004
Posts: 3094

PostPosted: Wed Jan 12, 2005 5:51 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

For a rundown on the plots to kill Fidel Castro, this link includes the CIA Inspector General's Report on Plots to Assassinate Fidel Castro:

http://www.parascope.com/mx/articles/castroplots.htm

Fascinating reading. It's long--will take you awhile.

Hundreds of books have also been written about theplots--many by the agents who were involved in them. Do a Google and surprise yourself with some historical information.
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moonraven



Joined: 24 Mar 2004
Posts: 3094

PostPosted: Wed Jan 12, 2005 10:23 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Well worth reading and thinking about before the competition between countries simmers down and the reality of needs sets in:

Published on Wednesday, January 12, 2005 by Foreign Policy In Focus
U.S. Aid for Tsunami-Hit Nations Falls Short
by David Bryden

As the full extent of the destruction and death the tsunami wrought in South Asia becomes clear, significant aid pledges are finally pouring in. While the U.S. is beginning to respond, little attention is being paid in the public debate to the need for effective development assistance for South Asia in the medium to long term. Comparisons of what the U.S. is doing for disaster relief relative to other nations are obscuring the need for a sober assessment of how well U.S. aid measures up compared to the actual need. The White House is drafting its 2006 budget this month, so this is an important opportunity to expose how the U.S. falls short when it comes to providing aid commensurate with its wealth.

A good place to begin is with malaria, which, according to UNICEF, is a serious threat in many of the tsunami-affected areas. In 2000 alone there were 18.8 million cases of malaria in Indonesia, Thailand, Sri Lanka, and India, according to World Health Organization (WHO) data. Despite the U.S. pledge of full and immediate assistance to the region, the U.S. is providing only about 6 percent of what experts say is needed to control malaria globally. Only about $600 million worldwide is being spent to fight malaria, while the WHO and its partners in the Roll Back Malaria campaign have estimated that $3 billion is needed each year to counter a disease that annually kills 1 million people. The U.S. will spend about $200 million on malaria control in the current fiscal year, unless this is increased via emergency spending. Advocates are urging the Bush administration to increase spending to fight malaria to $1 billion in the 2006 foreign aid budget. The Global Fund

The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria, an innovative health program financing mechanism based in Geneva, is an essential tool for the long-term battle against infectious diseases, and its support for malaria programs in tsunami-affected countries is now doubly important. The Fund spends nearly one-third of its money fighting malaria. The remainder goes to AIDS and tuberculosis programs.

While it�s true that the Fund is not a disaster-response mechanism, the Fund�s flexibility allows for redirecting malaria services to disaster areas and can allow reprogramming of funds toward the reconstruction of health centers. Yet a few weeks before the tsunami hit, the U.S. cut its 2005 contribution to the Global Fund. This jeopardizes not only malaria programs but AIDS and tuberculosis programs as well in the worst-hit countries including India and Indonesia.

Sri Lanka is the most dramatic example, since the wave wrought such destruction there. This devastated country�s malaria grant from the Global Fund will expire and be up for renewal in 2005. Since 2002, the Fund has disbursed $3.6 million to the program, financing mobile malaria clinics and distributing insecticide-treated bed nets. However, the Fund is short about $200 million of the total it expects to need to finance renewals in 2005. Sri Lanka�s program, therefore, is at risk of lower funding or even cancellation.

The U.S. often claims to be a strong supporter of the Fund, when in fact, President George W. Bush has tried repeatedly to cut the U.S. contribution. If he proposes the same contribution to the Global Fund for 2006 as for 2005 ($200 million), this will equal just 13 percent of what the Fund has requested and just 5.8 percent of what the Fund says it needs from all sources. Even if Congress doubles this spending, it will still be a fraction of a U.S. fair share, which aid experts define as one-third of the total need, given that the U.S. economy is about a third of the world economy. Europe will remain the Fund�s largest contributor. The Fund has requested $1.5 billion from the U.S., but President Bush may propose, as he did for 2005, a massive cut in the U.S. contribution.

Such a cut will be a terrible blow to hopes for the Fund, a uniquely participatory and cost-effective mechanism. The Fund supports essential malaria and other healthcare programs in all tsunami-affected countries. Funding already approved for four of these countries totals over $250 million: $10.2 million for Sri Lanka, $67.9 million for Indonesia, $114.1 million for India, and $61.1 million for Thailand. India hopes to use Fund resources to distribute 12 million mosquito nets. So that outside assistance can be effectively absorbed, a third of its funds go toward improvement of physical infrastructure as well as human resources and training.

Countries affected by the tsunami will undoubtedly seek to renew existing grants for malaria control, and they may put forward large, new grant requests to the Fund in response to the disaster. The Fund will need to maintain and even increase its support for vital AIDS and tuberculosis programs in the region, as the affected countries may find their own health budgets tapped out by this crisis. But, the Fund may not have the resources required to renew existing grants or finance these new requests unless donors do their fair share.

Japan, Italy, Australia, and other donors will also have to end their shortsighted approach to the Fund. Japan, while pledging up to $500 million for tsunami relief, has yet to pledge any contribution whatsoever to the Global Fund for 2005. Australia is providing $6.4 million per year to the Fund. In 2005, this will meet just 0.18% of the Fund�s needs.

The U.S. has put little muscle behind efforts to convince these and other laggards to provide their fair share, preferring to fund its own programs that it can control and get credit for. If the U.S. wants to be a real leader in assisting with long term recovery, it must help the Fund reach its promised $7 billion a year level of grantmaking to effective health programs.

Undermining the Fund is symptomatic of a broader failure of U.S. leadership. When it comes to overall development assistance, the U.S. ranks near the bottom of donor countries when measured as a percentage of GDP. The Center for Global Development�s �Commitment to Development Index� ranks the U.S. 19th out of 21 wealthy countries in terms of the overall quality of its foreign aid with respect to promoting development (although the U.S. scores better in other areas, such as openness to migration and to developing country exports). Less than half of U.S. aid goes to the poorest countries where people earn less than $2 a day on average and large portions of U.S. aid are reserved for Egypt, Israel, Iraq, and Russia.

Even on AIDS relief, the U.S. is hardly exercising global leadership. Bush�s budget for global AIDS programs, if it remains on the current track, will provide just 12 percent of what the UN says is needed from all sources beginning in 2007, that is $20 billion. The world is falling dangerously short of the amount of financing needed to halt the epidemic�s expansion, which grows at the rate of 13,000 new infections per day. The daily death toll from AIDS is 9,000 people. That�s the equivalent of the tsunami body count every two weeks.

Funds for global health programs come out of the U.S. foreign assistance budget, which could be squeezed by the push for tsunami relief. It is deeply troubling that the Bush administration has so far rejected the use of an Emergency Supplemental to the 2005 Budget to provide funds needed for tsunami relief. Unless emergency funding is provided on this basis, the tsunami relief effort risks reducing the overall amount of funds available for global AIDS programs and long term development assistance.

Will countries get what they need to rebuild? Only if the U.S. provides its fair share of what�s required to tackle the problem, addressing not only the tsunami emergency but longer-term development challenges, including the lack of access to healthcare. Once the U.S. uses its clout to get all donor nations to do their fair share, it will be able to claim leadership in global assistance.

David Bryden is the Communications Director of Global AIDS Alliance (www.globalaidsalliance.org) and a contributor to Foreign Policy In Focus (online at www.fpif.org).
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leeroy



Joined: 30 Jan 2003
Posts: 777
Location: London UK

PostPosted: Wed Jan 12, 2005 10:30 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

OK. America=bad. We get it! Smile
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moonraven



Joined: 24 Mar 2004
Posts: 3094

PostPosted: Wed Jan 12, 2005 10:32 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

With your callous attitude, I doubt it very much....
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leeroy



Joined: 30 Jan 2003
Posts: 777
Location: London UK

PostPosted: Wed Jan 12, 2005 10:56 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Callous?

In real life, in fact, I am callous - but I'm amazed that you could figure that out just from my postings here! It's taken most of my ex-girlfriends weeks, and they knew me in person. Smile
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Nagoyaguy



Joined: 15 May 2003
Posts: 425
Location: Aichi, Japan

PostPosted: Thu Jan 13, 2005 12:53 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Again, Moonie, you forget that in the US, charity is seen as a private function and not a government one. Americans contribute privately to various charitable organizations at a far greater rate than most other countries. Europeans pay higher taxes, and relief money comes from government revenue. Americans pay lower taxes, and relief money comes from private giving.

Also, with good reason, the US is suspicious of large 'international' organizations that claim to do good. Given the United Nations' long history of p!ssing money away like it was water, there is some justification to this position. Private organizations tend to be more streamlined and offer more 'bang for the buck'.
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kev7161



Joined: 06 Feb 2004
Posts: 5880
Location: Suzhou, China

PostPosted: Thu Jan 13, 2005 1:32 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Why should the US (and other countries) help Southeast Asia? Well, the obvious answer is because it's the right thing to do. America (and other countries) has stepped up it's help and support extensively in the last couple weeks, as well it should. There's a long way to go to clean up the mess wrought by the tsunami. Hopefully, it won't fade away into a background story by the end of next week (although, I see signs that it is doing just that - Iraq is leading news broadcasts again).

However, the bottom line is this: whether it is one person donating $10 or a wealthy nation donating millions upon millions - it is a DONATION. It is not a must do but a should do (I try to teach my English students the difference: "If you have a cold, you must go to bed." "If you have a cold, you should go to bed and get some rest."). I'm no longer embarrassed by the US's contribution (as I was with that 15 mil they first pledged). I did become a little chagrined when different countries were "bragging" about how much they are donating - - hopefully, all of it will get to the areas that need it!
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Roger



Joined: 19 Jan 2003
Posts: 9138

PostPosted: Thu Jan 13, 2005 4:27 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Nagoyaguy wrote:
Again, Moonie, you forget that in the US, charity is seen as a private function and not a government one. Americans contribute privately to various charitable organizations at a far greater rate than most other countries. Europeans pay higher taxes, and relief money comes from government revenue. Americans pay lower taxes, and relief money comes from private giving.

Also, with good reason, the US is suspicious of large 'international' organizations that claim to do good. Given the United Nations' long history of p!ssing money away like it was water, there is some justification to this position. Private organizations tend to be more streamlined and offer more 'bang for the buck'.


You can stuff it now, Nagoyasomething; you don't know European charities, and I for one contend they are contributing at least as much as American ones to any international relief work. COntrary to the U.S.A., the tax rebate sugar is not openly highlighted there, still people do donate: Medecins sans frontieres, Oxfam, Red Cross, churches - to mention but few. These donations come on top of government spending, as you so eloquently pointed out.l Unlike the U.S.A., European governments are far less choosy and cooperate with virtually all of Africa, Asia and elsewhere. Your favourite country only discovered Rwanda and the former Belgian Congo towardss the end of last century!

And, as for "suspicion with justification...", we all have that towards not only the UNO but also the U.S.A.!
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moonraven



Joined: 24 Mar 2004
Posts: 3094

PostPosted: Thu Jan 13, 2005 5:49 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Clarification for those very young folks on this forum who have a less than complete grasp of history:

In the US, the concept of "charity" (nice manipulation of something to make it sound completely periferal instead of being an integral part of the social contract, BTW) being a private rather than a public function came in as government policy in 1981 with Reagan. Before then, what Reagan called "charity" had been called "entitlement programs".
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