jueves, 29 de abril de 2010

Are bar the answer? - Yes, but does it work?

Panel debates the efficacy of the U.S. criminal justice system, which imprisons more than 2.3 million people

By Amelia Rivera

One percent of the U.S. population today is behind bars, more than any other country in the world. Yet there seems to be no proportional reduction in crime rates when compared to the amount of people imprisoned.

“We are still operating a criminal justice regime of random severity, getting just the worst of all possible worlds. Lots of punishment, and lots of crime,” said Mark Kleiman, professor of public policy at UCLA during a presentation at Town Hall on April 22. A public panel discussion followed.

According to Kleiman, crime rates have fallen by 50 percent since 1994, but the population in prison has increased by 400 percent, which means that there is five times more punishment than there was then. And the reason, he explains, is the lack of predictability in the punishment offenders receive when they recommit. Long stays in prison without any follow up, and consequences for reoffending don’t solve the problem most of the time.

“All things to do with criminal justice are a means to an end, and are costly,” Kleiman said. “We want to do as little punishment as possible, not as much as possible.”

Kleiman presented the experience of Hawaii’s Opportunity Probation with Enforcement, a pilot program meant to reduce probation violations and recidivism by drug offenders and others in high risk populations that was launched in 2004. HOPE is still in place today after reducing arrests for new crimes by 50 percent.

The program has a hotline offenders have to call every weekday to check if they are scheduled to take a drug test. If they test positive, don’t show up or violate any other term of the probation, a warrant for their arrest is issued immediately. They generally spend a couple of days in jail until their probation is modified, and if they reoffend, their jail time either increases or they are ordered to residential treatment.

According to Kleiman, severity is the least important of the principles of punishment in this program, and with its emphasis on probation, it allows the offenders an easier reentry into society, and saves the money that otherwise would be spent for incarceration.

After Kleiman’s presentation, King County Deputy Prosecutor Mark Larson and the rest of the panel started the discussion. Larson said that programs similar to the HOPE probation had been used to reduce car theft in King County. Offenders were warned, and punitive measures for car theft increased, lowering the number of car thefts from 18,000 to 7,000 per year, due to prosecuting a couple hundred more cases.

State Department of Corrections Secretary Eldon Vail mentioned the use of GPS on high risk offenders on probation as one of the supervision technologies used in King County to reduce prison populations safely. He said the act of polishing supervision resources like GPS is “the biggest single thing we can do to reduce prison population.”

Drug Policy Director of the American Civil Liberties Union Alyson Holcomb, and a participant in the dicussion, said that programs like HOPE could reduce incarceration rates and crime, “But a really effective way to stop crime is to stop calling everything a crime” — a statement applauded by the audience.

Holcomb mentioned, in support of her belief, the 1.7 million drugs arrests per year nationwide, half of which are marijuana offenses, with 90 percent of those being for possession only. She pointed out that if marijuana were legalized, it would help save money and allow police departments to focus on prosecuting other crimes.

However, Holcomb questioned the rehabilitation and drug testing aspect of HOPE, because she said that not all drug users were criminals or all criminals were drug users.

Kleiman disagreed, explaining that ”HOPE is not about arresting people for drug possession, and then later drug testing. The whole probation is for felony probationers who have done something actually wrong, and wouldn’t stop unless they stop doing drugs.”

viernes, 19 de marzo de 2010

Student crosses out school markers


SCC student Jennie Bannier has had a bad reaction to the dry-erase markers used on white boards.

Chemicals overwhelm her, especially a substance present in most dry-erase markers, called xylene. According to the Canadian Centre for Occupational Health and Safety, most people get throat or nose irritation after a 4-5 minutes of direct exposure to this substance, but Bannier is hypersensitive and can feel the effects from afar.

She starts feeling the effects of xylene in a matter of seconds. “I cannot breath at all," said Bannier. "I get physically ill, all over, just like having the flu."

When Bannier was 17 years old she was in a car accident and suffered internal injuries that eventually led to a chronic pancreatitis. With a lack of enzymes due to this condition, her body does not tolerate most chemicals, she explained.

Bannier is not the only SCC student with this condition. According to Special Services director Kimberley Thompson, there are about 20 students who registered last quarter at this office as being chemically sensitive. However, Bannier is the first one to be sensitive to dry-erase markers, Thompson said.

This past spring quarter Bannier signed up for a math class, and after three days of going to class she suffered a pancreatic attack and had to be hospitalized. It took her a couple of days to get well, but she could not go back to the classroom. Her hypersensitivity had become a disability. Bannier decided to look for solutions and spread awareness about chemical sensitivity.

The teacher let her drop the class and take it online instead. Wanting to get back in the classroom, Bannier started looking for markers that would not give her the same reaction. She finally found some that were made in Australia. The markers, called Auspens, were made from vegetable oil and alcohol by a company called Ecosmart World. She immediately ordered a set of markers to test them during summer quarter.

She explained her situation to the teachers and provided them with her new markers before class. Bannier said that her teachers loved them since the markers not only smelled better, but they are also friendlier to the environment since they are refillable.

They were “successful,” said Bannier. “I can even stay in a classroom the entire hour or three.”

This fall quarter Bannier talked to her new teachers again and provided them with the markers. Once again they liked the new markers. “Mimi Harvey loves them,” said Bannier. “And she gets sick from using the original (with xylene) type.“

Realizing that there were more people on campus with chemical sensitivity, Bannier decided to show her discovery and share her story with other students and departments at SCC. She first introduced herself to the Student Parliament’s student advocate Doris Cheng.

Cheng sent her to speak to the Vice President for Student Success, Tonya Drake and Thompson.

With the appropriate medical documentation, Bannier got signed up as a special needs student at the Services for Students with Disabilities office. Being part of this list means that the school will cover reasonable accommodations to ensure that she will get access to services and facilities offered by SCC.

The school is now looking into buying markers for all of her classes. However, this is not the end of the battle for Bannier. She figured that more people suffer from chemical sensitivity and some do not even realize it is a medical condition that can worsen over time, and that Xylene itself can be harmful to anyone exposed to it.

Bannier envisions a campus with chemical free classrooms, but the price of the marker set is too expensive - $59 for 6 markers with 6 refills - to make the switch all at once.

Thompson said that the Special Services Office is in favor of a universal design, “instead of having specific accommodations, everything (will work) for everyone.” However, for a complete change in markers to happen, “we could start slowly replacing 1-2 sets a year per division ,” said Thompson.
Published in the Ebbtide, Oct 23, 2009

What is Lenin doing in Seattle?


Love it or hate it, or maybe ignore it. That is how Seattleites feel about the Fremont statue of Russian leader Vladimir Ilyich Lenin.
In front of a Taco del Mar in the middle of the Artistic Republic of Fremont, commonly known as the Seattle neighborhood of Fremont, sits a seven-ton bronze sculpture of the former leader of the communist party and the Russian revolution.
You might wonder why in the world a Russian statue of Lenin is in Fremont? Well, American veteran Lewis Carpenter, who was teaching in Slovakia during the fall of the Soviet Union, saw the statue on the ground in the city of Poprad, and decided it was such a great piece of art that it could not be left there to be destroyed.
The sculpture itself is one of the few left of its style, socialist-realism, which is a politically oriented style that represents themes of social concern, and glorifies the roles of the poor and socialist leaders.
However, not all Seattleites think that this sculpture is there for a political purpose. SCC student Janice Belotti-Pace said “I don’t think it’s a political statement at all, it’s just a piece of art and I don’t care why it’s there.”
However, she said it's also an opportunity for learning.
“I think it’s a great icon to let people learn about the revolution,” said Belotti-Pace.
On the other hand, some people think that this is a political move from the city, but not part of the communist agenda.
“Lots of times you get the chamber of commerce, who just wants traffic, people, to come see something,” said SCC librarian Jonathan Betz-Zall. “So the controversy is good for them because there are more people talking.”
Some people do not like the presence of Lenin in a Fremont street, because of some of the things he did during his time as a Russian leader, such as creating the secret police. However, Betz-Zall said that for some Eastern Europeans, “Lenin is not a devil figure...especially to people who remember Russia before the revolution, people who were oppressed by the Tzar and who think Lenin was a hero.”
Some people like SCC student Chez Wizza do not really care about the character represented in the sculpture, after all, it is just the sculpture in front of Taco del Mar, he said. “I think those people who care, are pretty dumb,” Wizza said. “I’m not going to loose sleep over it.”



Published in the Ebbtide, Feb 26 2010

Facebook defines our romantic relationships























It’s complicated.

Defining relationships has never been easy, and the simplicity of Facebook relationship statuses just complicates the issue further.

Photo illustration by Sean Sherman
Whether you are in an open relationship, in a relationship, divorced, married, single or “it’s complicated,” the issue is not only figuring out which status fits you best, but whether or not you’re prepared to confirm it on Facebook.

Once you change your status on Facebook, your coworkers, classmates, cousins, parents, aunts, uncles, teachers, friends and neighbors will know, or at least think they know what you are up to.

Some people take Facebook relationship statuses seriously, some take it so seriously that they will hide it, and some just take advantage of people’s curiosity and have fun with their statuses.

SCC student Jonah McIntosh thinks this is all too complicated.

“While I was dating my first girlfriend my status was single” McIntosh said. “I changed my Facebook status to ‘it's complicated after I broke up with her.’ She had sent me a request to be in a relationship before we broke up, I didn’t accept it, because changing your relationship status early in the relationship can have weird effects.”

McIntosh expressed his discomfort with publicizing a relationship while in the process of figuring out wether it’s going to work or not. “All you friends are like ‘oh my god’, and then you change it a few months later and it can be kinda awkward,” McIntosh said.

So after McIntosh and his ex-girlfriend broke up, he decided to remove the relationship status, not even say he was single, because “it’s too complicated to say ‘it’s too complicated,’” he said.

Other’s don’t bother dealing with it. SCC student Ashton Skelton said “I’m not even sure I know how to change it (the relationship status)... I feel like it’s kind of a pointless thing to do anyway.”

Skelton says she wouldn’t care if the guy she was dating didn’t change his status, because her true friends will already know you are in a relationship, because you would have talked to them about it.

And like McIntosh, Skelton believes that posting your status complicates break-ups.

“Putting it up only makes it harder for you if you break up later, because it basically announces your break-up to the world,” Skelton said. “And break-ups are hard enough without everyone feeling sorry for you.”

Other people think that posting relationship statuses is just something that should happen, because Facebook is a way of showing your life to other people.

SCC student Austin Evans says that if his girlfriend didn’t post her status he would be upset “because more people will try to kid on her... and it would be as if she is hiding our relationship.”

SCC student Armando Alvarado says that some people don’t like publicizing their relationship statuses so that they can keep the doors open. “They are still trying to go out with other people,” Alvarado said.

“Or they are just not ready to show their friends what their boyfriend or girlfriend look like,” Alvarado added. “But others do like to show who they are dating to tell others that they are taken and are not trying to find others on Facebook to have one night stands.”


Photo illustration by Sean Sherman
Published in the Ebbtide, Feb 12, 2010

Political correctness with racial sensitivity might do the trick

Some people believe that choosing the right words and avoiding certain others when talking about human differences will solve the problem of racist; some just speak a certain way to avoid sounding racist; and others simply think that language alone will not solve the problem.

The use of certain words in a classroom or a conversation can make a lot of people feel uncomfortable. Generally, if someone decides to use words like hispanic, oriental or black to describe someone - independently from the context or the intention of the speaker - it gets people tense, because it is not politically correct.

Not only words, but even certain topics are simply not welcomed in everyday conversation, most people are too scared to bring certain topics to the table. People don't want to sound racist or offend people from a different race. But why is that?

According to SCC librarian Jonathan Betz-Zall, it's hard for many people specifically from the mainstream American culture to understand a politically correct approach because they don't understand racial sensitivity and the broader historical context of racism.

"It's easy to think you're not offending anyone because of the way the education system is set," Betz-Zall said. Generally an American history class will not recognize and analyze the problem of racism from the perspective of groups that have been discriminated against, and "you'll never be able to understand other groups because they're all mad with each other," he said.

Multicultural studies instructor Betsey Barnett, on the other hand, sees political correctness as "feeling compelled to represent a point of view that you don't understand."

According to Betz-Zall political correctness is a way of reducing racial offense, however it does not eliminate racism. "It just helps (interaction) by showing people a more positive way," he said.

Cecilia Martinez, program coordinator of the SCC multicultural center agrees with Betz-Zall in that political correctness by itself won't solve the problem. For example, someone may think "I can't call you a nigger, but I still have a negative feeling about you", or "I have a stereotype that impedes my perception of who you really are."

"It's empty as opposed to empathetic" Martinez said.

SCC student Mina Emperador thinks that political correctness has its pros and cons.

"I think it is good that there are values and morals so that there is no chaos," said Emperador. "But I think it's too censored. Things are being kept in silence"

Emperador says that racism still exists and that nothing is being done about it, because political correctness keeps it quiet. She mentioned gang fights and racial profiling by the police as examples of racism that are still present nowadays.

Political correctness can help interactions among people from different races, but "people are oversensitive," Emperador said.

For example "Dave Chapelle can make remarks of white people and everyone laughs, but if a white comedian was to make fun of a black person he would be shunned," Emperador said.

SCC student Shaun McGrath said that "the problem with political correctness is that as much as it does to lessen discrimination, it hampers free speech."

"Take religion for example," McGrath said. "When they banned the pledge of allegiance being said at my school in Oregon, it took away our freedom of speech to say the pledge of allegiance, it also took the other person's freedom of choice to participate in it or not."

"Being politically correct means keeping away from mentioning religious origins, ethnicity, etc... I think it's just a big mess and it should be thrown out," McGrath said.

SCC bookstore employee Ruth Young believes that people should follow their common sense and question their values and culture.

"I think that common values for one group are not necessarily the same for the other," Young said.

"If what is said is politically correct and it divides people, then that's not correct. So you have to question, not just accept something. It has to be as thoughtful process" Young said. "Sometimes I think it's carried a little too far, i think that basic decency, respect and common sense go a lot further than supposed political correctness."
Published in The Ebbtide January 18, 2010

Red cap mushrooms invade SCC


Underground mushroom networks have invaded SCC campus grounds and have started to show on the surface.
The presence of mushrooms is more obvious around the 2600 and 2800 buildings where a species of red cap mushrooms with white stems called Amanita muscaria is showing up in big groups, lab assistant Amy Easton reported to The Ebbtide on Nov. 23.
The presence of this mushroom is special, said Jim Reddin, VCT professor and member of the Puget Sound Mycological Society. "I've never seen so many of these in one area," he said.
A large group of about 15 to 20 Amanitas stands behind the big rock between the 2600 and 2800 building underneath a hemlock, one of the trees under which they like to hang around. "They love to grow under Evergreens," Reddin said.
Amanitas and hemlocks have a long story of symbiotic interactions. They exchange nutrients, helping to keep each other alive.
Amanitas are "the archetypical mushroom," explained Reddin. The bright red caps with white flakes on top make people look down at them, but their looks can't be trusted. They are poisonous and can kill people. Amanitas "can destroy the liver," Reddin said. "And by the time you get the symptoms, it's already happened."
However, if people don't eat them, Amanitas won't harm anyone. Killing people is not part of their agenda. These Amanitas have made SCC's campus their home because of the evergreens and humidity that allow them to expand their underground networks, best known as mycelium in the science world. They're all about growing as a group, expanding their resources for their kind.
These mushrooms are not the only ones that have set their stems on SCC grounds, about eight other species have been classified by Reddin and many others remain unclassified. Reddin calls these unclassified species Little Brown Mushrooms (LBMs).
The second largest mushroom community on SCC campus is the Boletas. This kinda likes to spread around birch trees, but has been found under other types of trees near the VCT building, the 800 building, and in the parking areas. They don't stand out like Amanitas, but they're almost everywhere.
Boletus are fomey, slimey, flat mud colored mushrooms that look like giant slugs on the ground. However, this species is usually edible. Students love to kick Boletus around, a specimen that had been used as a soccer ball was found lying stem-up in front of the VCT building main entrance on Nov. 24.
"Everybody likes to kick mushrooms," Reddin said.
Another species find throughout SCC is the Suilus which according to Reddin is edible, but not necessarily tasty. This species has a brown top and white stem, and has no gills, but a spongy bottom which keeps lots of moisture inside.
One of the weirdest species present at SCC is the Helevela which looks like some lost piece of Art noveau. They are harder to spot, however if you are looking at them from ground level you'll see them as the black and white stems stand out. This particular species is edible, but the fumes when you cook it can make humans really sick.
The presence of mushrooms on campus can be harmless and even profitable, as some of these species invading our green areas could make good meals when fried with some olive oil and garlic. Still, people must remember "the rule of thumbs is, if you don't know it, you don't eat it," Reddin said.
"If you're not 100 percent sure what it is, don't even think about it."

Published in The Ebbtide, 2009

lunes, 15 de marzo de 2010

Jack-of-all-trades artist creates gallery and music combo


Photo by: Kimmy Coyne
Serial killers are feared by most Americans, but are nevertheless studied and loved by a few like SCC student Clayton Ballard and his grandmother.
They call each other at night when serial killer stories appear, they enjoy talking about serial killers, and Ballard likes to draw portraits of them.
Ballard is now showing a collection of 15 charcoal serial killer portraits at a local café. He inaugurated the show with a concert about failed relationships and some serial killer related songs on the eve of Valentine’s day.
Ballard is not glorifying the acts of serial killers, he is simply intrigued by what they do and people’s reactions to them.
“It’s an intriguing thing because most of us can’t do what they do: kill someone,” Ballard said.
The serial killer collection started out as a school project Ballard had this past fall quarter. He since drew 15 serial killers, and 15 family members with different expressions and elements around them. “I tried to manipulate what people think with the way I draw them” Ballard said.
In the first show of these works Ballard printed ballots, and had the viewers go around and vote on which portrait was that of a killer, or his family. He wasn't just showing art, he was creating controversy.
According to Ballard "good art always challenges people's emotions. They can get upset...it makes them react."
“The whole point was to get people to talk about it," Ballard said. “If I would have chosen a normal topic then people would have forgotten.”
Ballard, a "creator" as he calls himself, is a multi-talented artist. He does more than just draw serial killer portraits, he writes poems, writes dark folk songs, plays accordeon, harmonica, guitar and piano, plus he sings and dreams about writing "that novel" someday.
Ballard started exploring the arts when he was a little kid, drawing and playing piano, which he learned from his grandmother. Later, when he was 16 years old, he abandoned the visual arts for 15 years while he learned music theory and experimented with different instruments.
Ballard always found pop music forgettable, and decided to write puppy love lyrics to metal rock tunes, and apocalyptic lyrics to mellow folk music.
Throughout his 15 years of musical exploration Ballard recorded two solo albums, and is currently working on his third solo album. On the upcoming album, he sings, and plays most of the instruments to a folk style of music, with stories about shotguns, among other topics.
He also started a band with his brother and some friends called "the wRIGHT BROTHERS". And no, this is not a typo, the band name is actually spelled with a small caps "W", because according to Ballard they are the right Wright brothers, and for him capitalization is just a way of showing importance and respect.
"the wRIGHT BROTHERS" makes allusion to the Wright brothers who invented the first successful airplane, and perform shows with flight suits, goggles and white contact lenses; they are supposed to be dead fighter pilots from WWI.
But music is not just music, and art is not just art. For Ballard these are all creations, and after 15 years of being a full time musician Ballard decided to come to SCC to study visual arts and create. Working on his solo album, and taking painting and drawing classes Ballard started to realize that he could put those worlds together.
Ballard has dedicated each of his two album covers to two of his favorite visual artists, Salvador Dalí, and Francisco Goya. Recently he even picked covers and wrote music to match his serial killer subject. He's starting to mix art forms, in a way that they all compliment each other to enrich the audience's experience.

If you're interested in Ballard's serial killer show, go to the Laughing Ladies café on 17551 15th Avenue Northeast, and to check out his music tracks and follow his artistic track try his solo and band myspace sites. http://www.myspace.com/claytonballard
http://www.myspace.com/rightbrothers

jueves, 14 de enero de 2010

Haiti: ways to help


Photo by: United Nations Development Programme

The 7.0 magnitude earthquake that hit Haiti in Jan 12, left a death toll estimated to exceed 100,000, leaving more than two million Haitians homeless.
Rescue teams from different countries are arriving to Port-au-Prince, but the access to the city and the affected areas is too difficult. However certain organizations based in other areas of Haiti have been mobilizing victims to treat them in their hospitals and field hospitals.
Many organizations already have websites to make money donations, however we better be careful, because some people are taking advantage of the situation and scamming people. The safest is to donate to well known organizations listed in CNN impact, like the one I personally have been following and supporting for a couple of years, Partners in Health (PIH).
Partners in Health (PIH) was co founded by Doctor Paul Farmer and Ophelia Dahl 25 years ago, and has been providing health services to poor Haitians in the Central plateau and other areas.
With more than 100 doctors and 600 nurses and auxiliaries Haiti, PIH is currently trying to set field hospitals in Port-au-Prince and mobilizing people from Port-au-Prince to safe areas where they can receive healthcare.

Though the decades the programs of PIH have successful decreased chronic diseases like AIDS and tuberculosis in the areas where they work, with community-based care that relies on village health workers who are part of their local partner Zamni Lasante (Partners in Health in creole).
This model has been reproduced in other countries like Russia, Peru and Guatemala after its success in Haiti. To learn more about Paul Farmer, Ophelia Dahl and their mission with Partner in Health, check http://www.pih.org/home.html
.

As for material donations, hospitals do not have supplies. Not even basic things like band-aids or aspirins, said co-founder of the American NGO Partners in Health (PIH) Ophelia Dahl to NPR. So any type of donations could help Haitians, however because of accessibility issues, monetary donations could be more efficient since Haiti based NGOs know the channels to get aid to the country.

Other organizations you can donate to (CNN impact list):

Providing Basic Needs:
• American Red Cross
• CARE
• United Nations Foundation/CERF
• World Vision
• UNICEF USA
• International Relief Teams
• Save the Children
• Catholic Relief Services
• Samaritan's Purse
• American Jewish World Services
• Clinton Foundation
• Yéle Haiti
• World Concern
• Mercy Corps
• Operation Blessing International
• Mercy & Sharing
• Oxfam America
• International Rescue Committee
• United Way Worldwide
• Episcopal Relief & Development
• Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
• Love a Child
• Project Hope
Providing Shelter:
• Shelterbox
• Habitat for Humanity International

Providing Medical Aid:
• Direct Relief International
• International Medical Corps
• Medical Teams International
• Doctors Without Borders
• Operation USA
• MAP International
• World Health Organization
• Americares
• Project Medishare
• Partners in Health

Providing Food:
• World Food Programme
• The Salvation Army
• Compassion International
• Food for the Poor
• World Water Relief
Organizations accepting international currencies:
• The International Committee of the Red Cross
• UK: The Disasters Emergency Committee
• Oxfam Great Britain
• British Red Cross
• The French Red Cross

Haiti, so what?


It's a mix of depression and rage.
I sat down at my school's lobby and started reading the Seattle Times. I tried to start a conversation with someone about the front page story on Haiti's earthquake, and all I got was a: ¿What happened?
¿What happened? ¿Seriously? Tens of thousands are dying, and there aren't enough resources and technology to save their lives. CNN stopped transmitting news and began transmitting Haiti news during the whole night on Tuesday and Wednesday. Most newspapers had pictures of children dying on their front pages and they still didn't not know what had happen.
But why would they care?
Because human beings are dying, human beings are loosing their entire families, human beings are suffering and not getting help on time. But the question might be, how would we know about this?
If you could at least take a few minutes everyday to open a newspaper and check the headlines you would know that there is more people in the world. Being informed is just a compassionate act, acknowledging that there is suffering in the world and understanding the situations that lead to the catastrophes that happen is just the least we can do.
Could you imagine being trapped in a country were thousands of people are dying, needing help, needing food and water, and your parents are trapped a couple of feet under your house roof? You will hope with all your heart that someone in another country will care and do something about it.
I personally have decided to be that person, and take some responsibility by reading and writing, because awareness leads to action.

Haiti, oportunidad de abrir los ojos y actuar


Aqui estoy yo sentada viendo como un grupo de Haitianos tratan de sacar a una adolescente que grita de dolor debajo de los escombros y después de horas de empujar con palas y empujar entre varios de ellos la logran sacar viva. Su tía y abuela murieron debajo de ella.
Un jóven que no puede ser mayor que yo llora en la pantalla porque ha perdido a toda su familia, todos abuelos, padres, h
ermanos. Todos aplastados por su propia casa y sin equipos de rescates que los puediera tratar de sacar a tiempo. Y yo estoy acá frente a un televisor. Qué no daría yo por poder ver esto con la tranquilidad que la película se va a acabar, pero lastimosamente no es una película y los cadáveres son reales. Los niños, los bebés todo estan muriendo a lado de más niños, padres desesperados, madres adoloridas. Quisiera poderla ver como veo una película y saber que todo es ficción, pero no. Eso esta pasando mientras escribo esto.
El cielo esta claro y azul, pero el futuro para estos seres humanos no s ve tan claro. Después de dos siglos de explotación y genocidios el país más pobre de América sufre uno de los peores terremotos en la historia reciente de nuestro hemisferio, pero sólo asi logran tener cubrimiento internacional.
Si, si existe, ese país del que hemos oído en cuentos de vodooh, pobreza y sangre. La antigua colonia francesa del Caribe, y é
l segundo país independiente del continente ignorado y descuidado por todos su vecinos logra subir la voz y gritar por ayuda.


Pero sinceramente, ¿tenía que pasar algo de esta magnitud para que oyeramos de Haiti?
Espero ahora más que nunca que todos re evaluemos nuestras vidas, logremos aprender algo de esta crisis, pero especialment
e que nunca más se pasen por alto todo el sufrimiento por el que pasa Haiti y todo lo que cada uno de nosotros podría hacer. No por los cientos de miles que han muerto en estos dos días, sino por toda la cantidad de sobrevi
vientes que necesitarán reconstruir su país y tratar de vivir como que si sus vidas enteras no se hubieran derrumbado.