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Tag: March

  • NSA Washington March Calls for Reducing Spying

    Reuters and CNN reported today on an anti-NSA march that took place in front of the Capitol in Washington, D.C.

    Hundreds of protesters turned out for the march, many carrying signs that bore slogans like “Thank You, Edward Snowden,” “Stop Mass Spying” and “Unplug Big Brother.” Although the Capitol Police were asked, they declined to give an estimate on attendance; the protest organizers said over 2000 protesters were there.

    A statement from Snowden, which was provided to American Civil Liberties Union, was read: “We’ve learned that the U.S. intelligence community secretly built a system of pervasive surveillance. Today, no telephone in America makes a call without leaving a record with the NSA. Today, no internet transaction enters or leaves America without passing through the NSA’s hands. Our representatives in Congress tell us this is not surveillance. They’re wrong.”

    The protest was a bipartisan effort, of sorts: Tea Party members showed up alongside left-wing privacy advocates, with everyone in agreement that the government is unlawfully spying on both American citizens and the rest of the world.

    Rep. Justin Amash (R-MI) had introduced a bill of his own attempting to limit the NSA’s info-grabbing programs, but his effort was defeated by a seven-vote margin. “We’re going to keep fighting and we’re going to pass something to rein in the NSA,” he said of the defeat.

    The rally was scheduled to happen on the 12th anniversary of the PATRIOT Act, which expanded the United States’ capacity to wage a war on terrorism. Additionally, the recent Snowden leak involving German Chancellor Angela Merkel seems to be adding to the growing wildfire.

    “This isn’t a partisan issue. This is for Republicans, Democrats, Libertarians, conservatives and liberals, everyone in between,” Amash added. A new bill, the U.S.A. Freedom Act authored by Rep. Jim Sensenbrenner (R-WI) and supported by Amash, may stand a better chance on the floor.

    [Image via ThankYouSnowden.org]

  • KickStarter Projects To Support In March 2012

    KickStarter is here, and aslong as creative and ambitious entrepreneurs continue to look for funding it’s here to stay. Like any services, there’s all sorts of wonderful projects to support and help fund, and some you can look to avoid. Every month, I’ll be providing a list of projects I’ve seen which look to be worth your time and hard earned coin.

    Combat Paper Program

    Category: Art
    Amount Pledged (as of March 1st): $10,457 of $15,000
    Days to Go (as of March 1st): 19
    Pledge Range: $10 – $1,000

    This KickStarter project will definitely pull on the heart strings, and it’s a creative idea to boot. Started by a gentleman named Dave Keefe, he developed a local area (Branchburg, NJ) project which allows veterans to take army fatigues and recycle them into paper. They can then take this paper and create their own pieces of art.

    Combat Paper is a veteran-led program that uses art as a tool to heal. First and foremost, Combat Paper provides a safe and comfortable place where veterans can come together to talk every Sunday. This weekly drop-in session held at a local arts center, uses the ancient art of handmade papermaking to help veterans heal from the physical, psychological and emotional effects of war. Participation is free to all veterans and no registration is necessary. The handmade paper is made out of old combat fatigues. Some vets use their own fatigues and others use uniforms donated by community members. The uniforms are cut into small pieces and beaten into pulp using the art center’s papermaking equipment.

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    The Abaddon

    Category: Comics
    Amount Pledged (as of March 1st): $1,662 of $3,000
    Days to Go (as of March 1st): 19
    Pledge Range: $5 – $500

    As a comic book fan, I’m pretty tough on new projects. There’s only so many “awesome vampire vs. werewolf stories” ideas you can sift through on KickStarter. This project really caught my attention. It looks to be a mind-bending mystery with a very interesting art style, and the project head looks to provide some worthwhile rewards for higher-end backers.

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    LowLine: An Underground Park on NYC’s Lower East Side

    Category: Design
    Amount Pledged (as of March 1st): $68,167 of $100,000
    Days to Go (as of March 1st): 36
    Pledge Range: $5 – $10,000

    In NYC there isn’t a whole lot of green to enjoy. Tall buildings and beautiful lights, yes, but you really have to know where to go to catch a glimpse of nature. Which makes this project worth looking into. They’re utilizing solar technology to turn an abandoned underground trolley line into a park.

    Ever wonder why there’s so little green space in New York? There aren’t a lot of empty plots of land just waiting to be turned into new parks. New Yorkers have had to be a little more creative, and must look in unusual places – the High Line, a park built on an old elevated rail trestle, is a great example.

    A few years ago, we learned about a massive unused former trolley terminal in our neighborhood, the Lower East Side. We got to thinking: what if we could build a park– underground– even if the space lacked natural sunlight? So we explored using fiber optic cables to transfer sunlight below ground– to support the growth of plants and trees. As we shared this idea with others, people got excited. “An underground High Line for the Lower East Side,” they’d say. “Kind of like… a LowLine.” The nickname stuck.

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    The Placebo Chocolate Project

    Category: Food
    Amount Pledged (as of March 1st): $3,698 of $12,000
    Days to Go (as of March 1st): 31
    Pledge Range: $1 – $5,000

    The simple ideas are generally the best, and what could be more simply than taking chocolate, something we all love and using it to spread messages of love and joy around the world. All the while using natural ingredients…

    The Placebo Chocolate Project was originally imagined by a little man who travelled the world in search of a cure to the sadness he felt. When he had all but given up, he ran into a little old woman in Scotland who gave him a “prescription” for love (really it was just words scribbled on a piece of paper). The next day he didn’t feel happy – but he felt love – and he found the strength he needed to keep searching. Almost a year later – after meditating in Spain, volunteering at an orphanage in Guatemala, building a sustainable farm in Argentina, and writing beside painters in Chile – he realized he was so full of love, peace, and happiness that he couldn’t possibly keep it all to himself. He needed to share the ingredients.

    On that day, the little man left his little apartment in Peru (he’d fallen in love with a little woman who kept him there while they awaited a fiance Visa to the US), walked down the street, and saw chocolate everywhere – in shops, in restaurants, and on street corners. And he realized that it would be so easy to use chocolate – which everyone in the world loves – to share love, joy, courage, wisdom, and so many other foundational experiences.

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