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Black Friday Numbers – Good News for Charities? World Vision Gift Giving Up 30 Percent

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2chicks-boy-world-vision.jpgThe faltering U.S. economy is again forcing many U.S. adults to cut back on holiday gift spending this year, but one leading U.S. charity reports 2009 gift giving from their holiday catalog is up dramatically compared to last year. World Vision, an international relief and development organization, says 2009 revenue from its gift catalog is running 28% ahead of 2008. Since October 1st, the charity has raised more than $4.7 million toward its goal of $25 million this holiday season.

These numbers seem to confirm findings from a new study on charitable giving conducted on World Vision’s behalf by Harris Interactive. According to the study, three out of four U.S. adults (76%) would prefer to receive a meaningful gift that would help someone else instead of a traditional holiday gift like clothing or electronics. And an overwhelming majority (95%) agrees it is especially important to help children during the holiday season. Most Americans also say, once the economy improves, they’ll increase their donations to charities.

But these new revenue numbers indicate charities like World Vision may not have to wait until the recession is over.

Swine Flu Receding, Vaccine Supply Growing

nurse photo by Robert Wood Johnson Foundation

health-care-robert-wood-johnson.jpgThe number of H1N1 swine flu cases in the United States has dropped steadily for four weeks as vaccine stockpiles continue to grow, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported Monday afternoon.

“Visits to doctors for influenza-like illness nationally decreased sharply this week over last week with all regions showing declines,” announced the Atlanta-based CDC on its website, referring to a preliminary analysis of the week ending on November 21.

“This is the fourth consecutive week of national decreases.” According to the update, the number of states reporting undefined “widespread influenza activity” also dropped by 11 during that week; from 43 to 32.

(Read more at Pediatric SuperSite)

We May Be Born With an Urge to Help

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toddler-retrieves.jpgWhat is the essence of human nature? Flawed, say many theologians. Vicious and addicted to warfare, wrote Hobbes. Selfish and in need of considerable improvement, think many parents.

But biologists are beginning to form a sunnier view of humankind. Their conclusions are derived in part from testing very young children.

Biologists discovered that human babies are innately sociable with a natural willingness to help.

(Continue reading in the New York Times)

Good News on AIDS Front, New Infections Down by 100,000

vaccine-jars.jpgIndia had reassuring news on the HIV/AIDS front on World AIDS Day Tuesday. The number of HIV positive people in the country had declined by 400,000 over the last five years and new infections were down by at least 100,000 per year.

“AIDS is not spreading like earlier. It is stable now.”

(Continue reading at India eNews)

Used Shoes Take Giant Steps in Poor Countries

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share-our-soles-founder.jpgFrom shoe drop-off centers across the U.S., hiking boots, sneakers, sandals and baby shoes are delivered by bags and boxes to a 400,000-square-foot warehouse in Illinois, opened by a mom with a mission.

Collecting and distributing 900,000 pairs of used shoes over the past decade has changed Mona Purdy’s life. She is now the executive director of Share Your Soles,
a charity which has no religious or government affiliation but has helped the needy in at least 29 countries and several U.S. states.

Snow boots go to American Indian reservations in South Dakota, rubber boots are destined for people scavenging garbage dumps in Haiti and slip-on water shoes are headed for the Amazon.

(Continue reading Reuters story at MSNBC )

New Yorkers Answer Letters to Santa

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santa-letters-program.jpgThe United States Postal Service has kicked off its annual “Letters to Santa”, inviting people to respond to a child’s letter to Santa and give a gift off their wishlist.

Whether naughty or nice, the program gives kids hope, when they need it the most. For almost 100 years, the Postal Service has been opening the letters addressed to the North Pole, and determining if there is a real need. Volunteers can sort through the letters and choose one that touches their heart.

In 1912, Postmaster General Frank Hitchcock authorized local postmasters to allow postal employees and citizens to respond to the letters, dubbing it, Operation Santa. In the 1940s, mail volume for Santa increased so much that the Postal Service invited charitable organizations and corporations to participate by providing written responses and gifts. (The video below features New York volunteers)

Iran Frees Five British Sailors Detained At Sea

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schooner-yorktown.jpgIran freed five British sailors detained last week when their racing yacht drifted accidentally into Iranian waters in the Persian Gulf. Britain said it was delighted with Wednesday’s release and praised Tehran’s handling of the incident.

The 60-foot yacht was in the Persian Gulf on its way from Bahrain to Dubai last Wednesday for the start of its first offshore race when it ran into a problem with its propeller, said Andrew Pindar, whose Team Pindar owns the yacht. It drifted into Iranian waters and was seized by the elite Revolutionary Guard’s navy

“After carrying out an investigation and interrogation of the five British sailors, it became clear that their illegal entry was a mistake,” the Revolutionary Guard said in a statement.

(Continue reading at NPR.org)

A Lift for NY Spirits: Stray-bullet Victim Making Miraculous Recovery

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black-boy-jumping-wildly.jpgA gift for a grateful city, a reason to rejoice. Vada Vasquez – the 15-year-old Bronx girl felled a stray bullet – is making a miraculous recovery.

She can already write and comprehend what is said to her.  Doctors say she will make a “full functional recovery” and could be back in school in a matter of months.

US to Lift Ban on HIV-Positive Travelers

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world-aids-day-hawaii-dot-org.jpgToday is World AIDS Day, and I just found this good news item about the US dropping its travel ban on people with HIV coming into the United States. The full removal of the ban takes effect on January 4, 2010.

Ambassador Eric Goosby, the Global AIDS Coordinator said the entry ban was originally placed into effect in 1987 when there was little information on how HIV is spread, and was then codified by Congress. 

“Even after scientists had long proved that HIV/AIDS was not spread through casual contact with a person living with HIV, the entry ban remained in place. Only a handful of countries worldwide prohibit HIV-positive travelers from crossing their borders, and the United States has been the only Western country to uphold this discriminatory policy. Last year, Congress finally repealed the law mandating the travel ban, and the Obama Administration was able to remove the remaining regulatory barriers.”

Egypt Slum Recycles Waste to Create Energy (Video)

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engineer-cairo-slum.jpgCairo’s overflowing public garbage has been a plague on the Egyptian capital, but an American engineer is helping locals to see their waste as wealth. Food scraps are now moved outside to the bio-container which processes the rubbish to create ‘biogas’, a fuel for cooking and heating homes.

Watch the AFP video below…

Nursing Moses: Moms Step In After Infant’s Mother Dies

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baby-in-diapers.jpgWhat evolved in the days and months following his wife’s death this January in childbirth still touches widower Robbie Goodrich. More than 20 mothers in Marquette, a city of 20,000 in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, volunteered to nurse his baby Moses.

All these months later, they’re still at it, giving the the kind of sustenance Goodrich knew his wife wanted for the boy.

“It’s been such an incredible outpouring of community love for this child of mine,” said Goodrich, a 44-year-old history professor at Northern Michigan University.

(Continue reading at CNN)

Thanks to Lois C. for submitting the link!

Innovative IPO Raises Million for Homeless

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warrenbuffett_nonprofit-ipo.jpgA new homeless shelter in San Francisco is using an innovative IPO program to raise money. Homeward Bound of Marin raised one million dollars by creating the world’s first nonprofit IPO (Immediate Public Offering) at $32.00 per share. The offering has attracted over 31,000 shareholders including Warren Buffet, who bought the first share.

The ROI (Return on Investment) for each share includes:

• 32 units of affordable housing and job training programs.

• A legacy of self-sufficiency.

• Invitations to Annual Events at their fabulous facility.

• A shareholder certificate.

• 10% discount off their homeless-run catering service.

• A letter confirming the IPO is tax-deductible.

Mr. Buffett gave his personal endorsement to the IPO, stating that it is “a good investment” for everyone.

The shelter can house up to 350 homeless per night, has a culinary school to help train and certify homeless in food services, and provides a variety of other services to homeless families and adults.

(Read more from Deborah Price at Belief.net)

White Rhino Comeback- a Success Story That Gives Hope

white rhino photo by Enaud Fulconis - IRF.org

white_rhino-by-renaud-fulconis-rhinos-irf-org.jpg(Highlighting the best news of the decade with this video from 2008)

Africa’s white rhinos were driven to the brink of extinction in the early 20th century as poachers hunted the animal for its horn. A breeding program launched in Botswana over 10 years ago has been successful in bringing the white rhino back to Botswana’s bush, and lifting it off the endangered species list.

From 100 rhinos a century ago to more than 15,000 roaming Africa today, the success story offers hope that black rhinos, which are still seriously endangered, may also survive. (Photo by Renaud Fulconis, rhinos-irf.org)

Watch the video from AFP below…

The Wizards’ Wizard: A Tribute to Generosity

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kids-round-earth.jpgIn the last few years, Washington’s great sports impresario and philanthropist suffered from a rare brain disease that robbed him of everything but his burning love of life and sports and his burning desire to help sick children and the poor in Washington and around the world.

After giving everyone in his company, from part-time ushers to top executives, a Thanksgiving bonus; after making sure that the Wizards staff was going to get out early for the holiday; after sending his wife, Irene, a bouquet of yellow roses to thank her for their 64 years together, the 85-year-old Pollin died Tuesday at his home in Bethesda, Md.

When he saw children in need, his generosity was boundless. After reading an article in The Washington Post in 1984 about 40,000 children dying daily from malnutrition in Africa, he called UNICEF and said, “I will do anything.”

(Read Maureen Dowd’s tribute in the New York Times)

Good News from SEC: $2 Billion Paid to Injured Investors

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gavel.jpgThe SEC’s image has certainly taken a beating recently, what with the discovery that the Madoff scandal festered under the agency’s nose for years and a general feeling by the investing public that the SEC has failed to look out for its interests.

But, the US Securities and Exchange Commission offered a bit of bright news last week when it announced that, for the first time, it has distributed more than $2 billion in a calendar year to injured investors as a result of its enforcement actions and proceedings.

“There is no substitute for returning money to defrauded investors,” said Robert Khuzami, Director of the SEC’s Division of Enforcement.

British Soldier who Smuggled Himself into Auschwitz

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old-men-embrace.jpgWhen millions would have done anything to get out, one remarkable British soldier smuggled himself into Auschwitz to witness the horror so he could tell others the truth and help at least one person to stay alive. He smuggled in cigarettes, which were worth more than gold, and helped his new friend earn extra favors, in exchange, that helped save his life.

The soldier has only now told his story for the first time.

(Read the story, or watch an interview at BBC )

Thanks to Claudia B. for submitting the link!

Climate Change Policies Will Improve Health, Say Doctors

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cars-driving-at-sunset.jpgSenior doctors and health professionals from around the world say major health improvements would result if world leaders tackle climate change. They’ve formed the International Climate and Health Council to present their case for going green.

The health dimension in the climate change negotiations is conspicuous by its absence say international doctors and health professionals — and it’s their duty to speak out.

Members say while politicians may fear to push for radical changes in greenhouse gas emissions, doctors are under no such constraints. The council includes colleagues from Africa, Australia, Asia, Europe and the Americas and was formed in advance of next month’s major climate change conference in Copenhagen, called COP 15.

Healthy Earth, Healthy Inhabitants

Professor Mike Gill, co-chair of the British Climate and Health Council and spokesman for the new group, outlines why it was formed.

“The first reason is that the health dimension in the climate change negotiations is conspicuous by its absence. And yet, it is one of the very few good news stories….  It’s good news because everything we should be doing to mitigate climate change is good for health,” he says.

He says many people, including health professionals and politicians, don’t realize that connection between climate change and health.

“The second reason is much of the climate change debate was initially 20 years ago framed very much in environmental terms.  And then it’s moved increasingly to economic terms, but actually economics is not the bottom line here. It’s health,” he says.

Stethoscope2.jpgGill likens the new group to the alliance formed by doctors during the 1980s to campaign against nuclear weapons.  In 1985, the Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War.

“Faced with the reality of climate change, we feel that we really would be failing in our professional duty if we didn’t step forward and show some leadership,” he says.

Effects on Health   

“Most of the problems caused by climate change are through the indirect effect of huge effects on food security, water security and population movement,” he says.

“It’s these indirect effects making those already very vulnerable even more vulnerable, which are the most sinister.”

There are also direct effects from climate change, he says, such as redistribution of disease patterns, including malaria and tick-borne diseases and “of course all the major events, such a heat waves and cyclones.”

Gill believes the International Climate and Health Council can get past the economics of the climate change debate by looking at the four “domains” that are affected.

“Electricity generation, transport, agriculture and domestic energy.  In all of those, the very things that we know we need to do to mitigate climate change are going to produce huge health benefits not just in high income countries, but in low income countries, as well,” he says.

For example, the group recommends a reversal in the rising trend of meat consumption.  Large amounts of methane gas are produced by livestock.  He says meat consumption worldwide has “gone up five times in the last 50 years,” a growth rate far surpassing the world’s population increase.

“We know full well that reducing meat consumption actually is going to be extremely good for health because cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death,’ he says.

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$20 stove burns rice waste

However, it’s not just the food, but how it’s cooked.

“The provision, say, of 150 million clean cooking stoves in India will produce dramatic effects over the next 10 years on the amount of CO2 emission, as well as saving very many, many lives from respiratory disease and many other childhood illnesses that are a direct result of people not living in a very polluted environment inside their own homes,” he says. (Related: Rice-Powered Stoves Ignite Hope for Poor)

As for transport, he says, the very act of more people walking or riding bicycles in many cities reduces pollution and improves health, such as reducing the obesity epidemic.

“The point about them all is that actually these effects will be immediate and local.  They won’t be distant,” he says.

Gill says the council has very prominent and senior professional members from all over the world.

In addition, he says it recently started a pledge campaign “inviting health professionals to say we as individuals will do what we can to try and persuade our governments to sign a meaningful deal in Copenhagen.  And we’ve got sign-ups from health professionals in 120 countries.” (VOA News)

Thanks to Andrew Norris for alerting GNN to this story!

MS Breakthrough Exactly as Albert Einstein Would Have Done It

brain.jpgHaving worked with Multiple Sclerosis patients for many years, the recent MS Breakthrough story grabbed my attention. With family and friends suffering from MS, I started reading all I could about this possible “cure”, since first coming across the news item last week. One courageous physician started it all by thinking like Albert Einstein, and he did it for the love of his, then 37 year-old, wife — a woman newly diagnosed with the horrible disease. Here are some highlights:

Dr. Zamboni’s studies began when his beloved wife developed MS in 1995 at the age of 37. He undertook a massive in-depth review of the literature, and modern imaging techniques such as ultrasound and MRI. His findings led him to believe that Multiple Sclerosis is not an autoimmune issue, but a vascular disease, a radical departure from current thinking.

Convinced that he was right, he performed experimental MS Breakthrough surgery on his wife. He insisted, “I am confident that this could be a revolution for the research and diagnosis of multiple sclerosis.”

Girl and her Great-grandfather Share Bond of Thanks That Runs Both Ways

Photo by Sun Star

holding-hands-mom-daugher.jpgKeke, a wiry girl of 11, and her great-grandfather, Tony Bruce have been together since she was two months old. At the time, people told him he was too old to take care of the girl, whose mother, then 16, was not able to raise her. Today, they ride buses every day together for more than 3 hours, traveling to her school and to his job helping people at a non-profit group.

For him, the holiday has become a high point, a time when he revels in the logistics of getting turkeys to the same people who rely on him the rest of the year when their cupboards are bare. “They make it all worthwhile,” Bruce said. “They trust me, and they depend on me.”

It turns out that people are inspired by him, too — coworkers, friends and more than a few strangers, one of whom was so impressed to hear his story at a recent awards ceremony that she shook his hand, looked at Keke and said, “She is lucky to have you.”

(Read the story in the Washington Post) Thanks to Daniel in Sweden for submitting the story!

File photo by Sun Star

 

What I’m Thankful for in 2009

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lake-in-fall-osprey.jpgIt is the first year of twelve, as the founder and editor of the Good News Network, that I was able to pay myself a small salary. For that, my husband is exceedingly grateful, after shouldering the burden of paying the mortgage and supporting our family with three children — and funding my vocation as a good news town-cryer all these years! So, I am very thankful, as I am making a difference in the lives of thousands of people, that they value my service enough to reward me for it.

– I am grateful for my family’s good health. So many are challenged by disease and diagnosis, and they often become heroes in their own lives, overcoming and coping with sickness in their families. May they find new paths to healing, or, at least, the blessings of eventual peace and acceptance.

– I’m always thankful for my home and its beautiful surroundings outside of Washington. I always appreciate the fresh air, flowers, and gorgeous natural world around me (and always say, “No wonder I can be so optimistic!” (See photo.)

– I’m grateful that the United States has a president who has displayed so much grace in the face of so much adversity and challenge.

– I’m thankful that I have the awareness that I need to exercise more and return to yoga. I’m happy in the assurance that it will manifest as action soon.

– I’m thankful for my sisters, who provided many hours of laughs and conversation over the telephone from hundreds of miles away, at a time when my friends are busy with their own lives and not as available as they once were.

– I’m delighted by all the advancements my teen-agers and husband have made in their own lives this year. By following their intuition, and with determination and insight (sometimes beyond their years), they have brought joy to our family and success to their own paths. They call all be proud of their accomplishments.

– I’m thankful for Brian Williams and the people at NBC Nightly News who brought more good news to light than any other media outlet this year. Their inspiring reporting on the good things happening in the midst of economic hard times has been a great resource for me, and their free videos an endless well of stories for Good News Network viewers.

– I was thrilled with the invitation to talk with NPR’s All Things Considered in March to speak about the need for good news, and  grateful to the Washington Post reporter, Dan Zak, for his feature article on me, and Katie Couric who talked about me and the Good News Network on the CBS News, saying it was “Nice to know that good news is only a mouse-click away”

– With the recession and misery in the world this year, I am uniquely aware of all the inspiring people helping to ease the pain in so many people’s lives. I am most grateful for their stories — and the hope they give to so many.

Happy Thanksgiving to all my American readers!