TIGblogs TIG | TIGblogs GROUP TIGBLOGS LOGIN SIGNUP
CaityB's Blog
Caitlin's Friends


tasnim   tasnim tasnim's TIGblog
tasnim's profile

OFFER OF TREASURE
About this category: Peace, Conflict & Governance


I am surprised to receive mail through mytig which offered treasures .The nature of offer is very clear with a concocted story to deceive the members of tig.
TIG is a forum of young peoples who want to inspire and involve others in the development of youth.If grredy peoples make entry and pollute this forum youths will be discouraged to come and involve here.
So,I request the administrators to take stern measures to stop the intruders with malicious designs.

November 18, 2008 | 11:39 AM Comments  1 comments

Tags:


Fi   Fi Fiona McKenzie's TIGblog
Fiona McKenzie's profile

Debate stirring

I like this post and I think it makes some very valid points and is also very funny - so much so that I'm posting it here to spark some thought and maybe discussion.

Behind the 8 bawl
Monday, 10 November 2008

I am not gay. In fact, most times, I’m not even remotely happy. So, it irks this married, quasi-grumpy, heterosexual California male when a Mulligan’s Stew of religion, intolerance, fear and politics is plopped on my table like a steaming pile of sanctimoniousness and dubbed “The Defense of Marriage Act.” I’m talking about Proposition 8, a nifty little exercise in backwards thinking that would amend the California State constitution to define marriage as something that can occur only between a man and a woman.

Am I missing something here? With this country coming apart at the seams on a myriad of levels, gay marriage is seen as a major issue? The standard line is that gay marriage threatens “the sanctity of marriage,” because - as we all know - divorce, cheating, incest and domestic violence don’t.

I believe the only threat gay marriage poses is that it may change the content of country music forever.

Now, the pro-Proposition 8 cheerleaders are your usual group of loveable misanthropes (Come on down, Focus on the Family!) but with a couple of notable exceptions. Members of the Mormon Church, their magic underwear in a twist, have funneled over $17 million into the anti-gay marriage treasure chest. The Catholic Knights of Columbus, an all-male group known for wearing funny outfits while calling themselves “Grand Knight,” “Chief Squire” and “Friar” as well as doing some amazing charitable work, has kicked in over $1 million for reasons that elude me.

The folks supporting Proposition 8 have come up with a myriad of reasons for pushing the “man-woman marriage” effort. They say that if same-sex marriage continues to be recognized in California, gay marriage will be taught in public schools. I assume that class will come before Gay Math, Gay English and Gay Geography but after the infamous Gay Recess.

Churches will be sued if they don’t perform gay marriage ceremonies. Religious adoption agencies will go broke if they only continue to grant traditional moms and dads the right to adopt. Ministers and priests who preach against same-sex marriage will be sued for hate crimes. Photographers will be sued if they refuse to take photos of gay marriage ceremonies. Doctors will be sued if they deny artificial insemination to gays. Hordes of pixies will re-arrange the sock drawers of heterosexual men, substituting sheer silk socks for those thick cotton ones you wear on the job. (I made that last one up. Could you tell?)

The proponents of Prop. 8 simply want traditional marriage to be declared the law of the land. (I can’t wait for the return of arranged marriages and dowries, can you?)

No matter how much legal and political reasoning is spewed, however, it’s pretty clear that the definition of marriage being between a man and a woman is a religious one. Period. Gay marriage threatens people’s religious beliefs…even more than pixies in the sock drawer.

That’s saying a lot.

There are a lot of folks who believe the Bible word for word…when it suits them. People who aren’t keen on gay marriage, or just gays, usually preach Leviticus 18:22, “You shall not lie with a male as one lies with a female; it is an abomination.” If you mention that, way back when, an “abomination” referred to a ritual offense (Goat herders were an abomination to the Egyptians. Pork chops were abominations to the Hebrews.), they come up with Leviticus 20:13. “If there is a man who lies with a male as those who lie with a woman, both of them have committed a detestable act; they surely will be put to death.”

So, let’s say that the Bible is true. Word for word. It’s all true. It has to be obeyed. Period. No wiggle room. If that is the case, about half of the American population will be dead from public stonings in, ohhhhh, about three or four days.

Ya, see. The Old Testament wasn’t really big on mitigating circumstances when it came to crime or, as it was known then, sin. Just a casual look at the Ten Commandments could bring down American society post haste. No lying? No adultery? No swearing? No pining for someone else’s wife or big screen TV? There goes the fabric of our nation!

In Mosaic Law, such offenses were punishable by public stoning. This has nothing to do with “The Summer of Love,” my fellow Boomers. This entails a bunch of righteous folks picking up rocks and slamming them into sinners until their sorry skulls are scrambled.

Some of the sins punishable by death were beauts. If a kid sasses his parent, he’s dead meat. Striking a parent? Ditto. A fellow marrying his mother-in-law is also doomed, although that seems redundant. If a betrothed woman is sexually assaulted and doesn’t scream, she’s up for stoning. (However, if a man rapes a virgin, his only punishment is a wedding. Hmmmm.) If a lass isn’t a virgin when married, she’s also boulder-ized. If you don’t worship the God of the Old Testament, your life gets real rocky real fast. If you work on the Sabbath? R.I.P., overtime notwithstanding.

Justice in the Old Testament was meted out with, er, gay abandon. Kids who made fun of a bald guy were eaten by bears. Promiscuous women had their noses and ears cut off, their children taken away, were stripped and burned. If a single woman had a boy out of wedlock, she might merely be shunned but the kid and his descendents were condemned to Hell.

Oh, yeah. All you country club devotees? Divorce, by implication (“What God has joined together, let no man put asunder.”), means you’re destined for a stoning before happy hour.

People who are Bible literalists, aside from the fact that they consider “The Flintstones” a docu-drama, tend to pick and choose their moral instruction from the Book as if they were at a salad bar. If they didn’t, most of them would be walking gravel pits. (Those who are anti-gay ANYthing, for instance, might be interested to know that the world “homosexual” didn’t appear in the Bible until about one hundred years ago. What? Did God come down with White-Out?)

What constitutes “sin” is also up for interpretation. It wasn’t a bleeding-heart liberal, for instance, who changed the Biblical commandment translation from “Thou shalt not kill” to “Thou shalt not murder.” It was someone who realized that, Holy Crap!, that “kill” stuff includes religious-fueled warfare!

When I was a kid, growing up Catholic, a mortal sin was the Big Kahuna of “no-nos.” Unless you confessed to a priest pronto, you were damned to Hell.

It was a mortal sin to eat meat on Friday. Seriously. It was also a mortal sin to take an ax and give your family forty whacks. So, when Fridays rolled around, this chubby little kid was faced with a decision. If you go the sin route, which one do you choose? I always opted for the sin that included a side of fries. It was just as damning as mass murder but much tastier.

California, for some reason, has always led the nation when it comes to quirky trends, from the sublime to the sub-moronic. We elect washed-up actors as Republican governors in a state derided as being uber-liberal by… Republicans. We promote meditation in-between Bo-tox injections. Only some of us see the irony in all that.

Proposition 8 is mean-spirited irony stoked by fear of…whatever it is we’re not. By invoking the specter of “traditional marriage” and making it the law of the land, we’re dangling one foot over the abyss of traditional inequality.

It wasn’t too long ago that inter-racial marriages were illegal. Segregation was the law of the land. Blacks weren’t considered fully human. Women weren’t allowed to vote.

All of those facets of our society also had their roots in the Bible. Not too many thinking Americans would defend them, now.

I’ve written a lot of fantasy fiction in my lifetime but, for the life of me, I can’t see how a man marrying a man or a woman marrying a woman threatens my marriage…unless they move next door and play loud music at 2 AM, or let their dogs poop on my front lawn or get drunk and beat the crap out of each other and toss beer bottles around at all hours. You know, stuff that gay couples might do that heterosexual couples would never dream of.

I mean, look at all those gay couples on “Cops” week after week. Uh. Oh. Never mind.

So, Californians, vote “no” on Proposition 8. The rest of America? Be on alert should a similar proposition pop up in your neck of the woods. It’s about religion. It’s about denying people equal rights. It has nothing to do with government. It has nothing to do with law.

And, to all those sanctimonious saviors of traditional values out there who feel condemnation is the cure-all for everything you see that you don’t agree with?

Here’s a Biblical quote for you. Mark 9:47. “And if thine eye offend thee, pluck it out.”

There’s no quote to advise you on what to do after you’ve run out of eyes.

I’m just sayin’.


November 11, 2008 | 4:11 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


Bitsy   Bitsy Bitsy's TIGblog
Bitsy's profile

Coverage of U.S. Presidential Elections 2008 in Pictures
About this category: Peace, Conflict & Governance


I stayed up until 6 in the morning this morning putting together these pictures from the election coverage in Times Square, New York City, and a very short account of my personal experience of the election. They say it was an historic election, so I had to be in Times Square :).

http://www.newsflavor.com/Politics/US-Politics/Election-Night-2008-at-Times-Square-in-Pictures.330673

November 5, 2008 | 12:58 PM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


Fi   Fi Fiona McKenzie's TIGblog
Fiona McKenzie's profile

Octobrrrrrr

Snow fell in London last night for the first time in October since 1934.

October snowfall: London had its first October snowfall since 1934

Snow and sleet also fell in northern Scotland and south-east England as temperatures plunged to -4C in parts of Britain.

Football matches were either postponed or abandoned at Luton, Northampton, Walsall and Wycombe because of the weather conditions.

Sky weather presenter Denise Nurse said: "It's highly unusual to have snow in October - we haven't seen October snowfall in London since 1934.

"But today will be cold, bright and frosty. Snow this afternoon will mainly affect Northern Ireland, Wales and the north of England. It'll also be breezy, feeling almost blizzard-like.

Cheers for that Sky News :o)


October 29, 2008 | 4:10 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


Bitsy   Bitsy Bitsy's TIGblog
Bitsy's profile

America - Teacher and Student of War
About this category: Peace, Conflict & Governance


I've had another article published at this link:
http://www.newsflavor.com/Opinions/America-Teacher-and-Student-of-War.314349

It came to me to write this when I learned how American soldiers were returning from Iraq with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) from serving in the war in Iraq. The question had also occured to me prior to that as well, as we hear things about how American war veterans are haunted for the rest of their lives from their war experiences, why is there this understanding and compassion for the psychological effects of war on the soldiers, the soldiers of the aggressing country, no less, but there is no compassion or understanding for the actual people living in the country that the soldiers invade and bomb?

This was upsetting to me and seemed like a very unfair and Ameri-centric attitude, so I wrote about it.

October 26, 2008 | 7:59 PM Comments  1 comments

Tags:


Fi   Fi Fiona McKenzie's TIGblog
Fiona McKenzie's profile

Speaking Out

In 2003, a close friend of mine killed himself. This post is dedicated not to him but to us - his friends and family who continue to grieve.



I grew up in Palmerston North, home to a fair few suicides during my high school years and I watched as people all around me were affected as friends committed suicide. At the time New Zealand had something like the second highest youth suicide rate in the world and no one I knew was left unscathed. Many of us from that group can tell you of someone we know and loved who died.



We set up support groups and networks. We gathered together. And we watched as the country went into lockdown. To talk about it too much was to encourage it.



That was a time when New Zealand's suicides accounted for more death than road accidents.



We're back at that time and we're now looking at 80% of those dying over the age of 24.



I'm sick of this. 511 killed themselves between July 07 and June 08 in New Zealand. That's 511 bereaved families and friends and people who need love. That's 511 people who didn't feel the love. What are we doing wrong New Zealand? How did we get to this point?



To BR - I hate what you did that day. I hate that you felt you couldn't carry on and couldn't rely on us to carry you. A lot of people loved you and we're still hurting and missing your presence. I didn't go to your funeral - I was too scared about saying goodbye, I didn't know how to make it better and I'm not sure, five years on, I've gained any greater clarity. I really wish I had gone. I could have said goodbye. I hate that you forced us to say goodbye to you. I hate that I still cry over your death.



I've never quite worked out how to solve the problem. It's the reason I love so passionately and need people to know that I care about them. It's the reason I have a habit of wearing my heart on my sleeve. I don't want you to die and not know how much you mean to me.



If you're reading this and you don't know me - then *know* that there is someone out there that feels like this about you too.



If you feel like the world is closing in and you feel like you've lost all faith, hope and love there are people you can talk to. People who won't judge. And a God who loves unconditionally - no matter what you do, who you are, how unloved you feel.



Lifeline - 0800 543 354

Depression - 0800 111 757

Youthline - 0800 376 633; text free on 234; email talk@youthline.co.nz

Samaritans - 0800 726 666 (North Island only)



For more information take a look at the SPINZ website or Lowdown (for youth people about depression).



[Organisations listed are NZ based]



So this is me - speaking out against suicide and depression. I know this is just a blog post but for anyone who has talked to me about this you know that it's so much more than a one post topic to me.



I hate that I'm writing these words knowing that they'll make little impact and the person I cared about that  needed to read them most left this world 5 years ago. We miss you.

October 24, 2008 | 7:10 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


Bitsy   Bitsy Bitsy's TIGblog
Bitsy's profile

McCain's "Joe the Plumber" and Santa Claus
About this category: Peace, Conflict & Governance


I recently just found a more official forum for posting my articles. My first article was recently published on the website at the link below. Unless you are an American following the presidential election, you will probably not know what it is about.

http://www.newsflavor.com/Politics/US-Politics/What-Do-Joe-the-Plumber-and-Santa-Claus-Have-in-Common.305461

October 22, 2008 | 1:53 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


Fi   Fi Fiona McKenzie's TIGblog
Fiona McKenzie's profile

Changing the World One Blog at a Time

Today has been Blog Action Day - bloggers all over the world devoting their posts to the issue of poverty.


I'm going to cheat on this one and re-post an article I posted after the last New Zealand General Election in 2005. We're now three weeks away from the next election my Kiwi friends and it's time to think seriously about who you're going to vote for. Please make educated votes and think about others at this election.  So here goes my lobbying attempt:



[Written in October 2005] 



I have been wanted to write this since the election and finally now seems right.



But before I do, I want you to take one minute of your time to say a prayer to whoever you believe in, for the familes and friends of the thousands of people that died in Pakistan and Guatemala in the past couple of days. While you're at it, consider the families of those that didn't make it out of New Orleans, those who will never forget July 7, and those who died in the Asian Tsunami last December. Finally spare one thought for those 20,000 people that die from the effects of living in extreme poverty (7,500 young adults die of AIDS, up to 8,000 children perish from malaria, 5,000 parents die of tuberculosis, and thousands more are killed by diseases that attack bodies weakened by chronic hunger and malnutrition). It's a fragile world.



Now I'm going to use this to fuel an angry rant, and I'm sorry if using this as a springboard offends anyone but it's important . . . so important that peoples lives depend on it.



So we just had an election here in New Zealand, and 80% of the country voted. I know a whole heap of people who voted specific parties for great reasons, they truly believed in a party's vision or they offered a range of policies that these people saw as important. Unfortunately, I've also met many more people who voted one party for a terrible reason. So you wanted to change the government and you thought 'National's the only way to do that and taxcuts would be good too', so you ticked that box and went on your merry way. Or you voted Labour just 'cause they'll cut interest on student loans". If you voted for a party for some pathetic reason like this, then I'm sorry but you suck!! This rant is for you:



Today, we emptied our disaster relief budget, it's all gone now because there's been quite a few disasters lately (have you bothered to notice?) and it wasn't the biggest budget either. Every year 0.26ish% of our Gross National Income is given to ALL aid. A very small part of that goes on giving some assistance to countries who are recovering from a natural disaster, like Pakistan and Guatemala currently. The Government pledged to give 0.7% to aid, 0.26% isn't even half of that. We've run out of money to give to help countries that need help in disasters. Is this not more important than the interest on your student loan? A number of parties pledged to keep pushing the government to increase its aid volume, Greens and United Future were just two of those. But instead of thinking about what the world needs, you thought about you on election day. Maybe you considered your family for a brief second, and then went with what suited you best. Think silly people! Actually know who you are voting for, and consider making up your mind on something other than a bribe. New Zealand plays a crucial role internationally, and even though it's a world away from here to there, they're just as important as you.



For those voters who actually thought unselfishly this election - you are truly fantastic people. We need more of you.



If a typhoon hit a Pacific island tomorrow, there'd be no more aid to give them. How much would their lives mean to you?



For more information on the 2008 Election and international development, go to Oxfam NZ's website.






October 15, 2008 | 5:10 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


Bitsy   Bitsy Bitsy's TIGblog
Bitsy's profile

McCain Incites Hatred for Obama
Related to country: United States
About this category: Peace, Conflict & Governance


In my opinion, it was the beginning of the end of John McCain's campaign the moment he chose Sarah Palin as his running mate. I can't even begin to recap all of the certifiable insanity that they have indulged in since then and time is short, so I have to fast-forward to today.

This week John McCain, after failing miserably in the second debate with Obama, decided it was time to abandon all wisdom and substance and start inciting hatred and fear in his supporters against Obama by making links between Obama and terrorists. At John McCain's rallies this week, McCain supporters began shouting out things about Obama such as "Kill him!" and "Terrorist!"

This is a most unsettling development, especially after Hillary Clinton, who ran against Obama in the primaries, implied that she would not concede defeat because Obama might get assassinated, as Robert F. Kennedy did.

Today, John McCain was forced to correct his deluded, rabid supporters concerning Obama. He explained to a man, who sincerely seemed to fear that Obama would appoint terrorists to positions of power in the government, that he had nothing to fear of an America led by Obama. He then corrected the ignorance of an elderly woman, who couldn't seem to muster any words other than "He's Arab..." McCain shook his head saying "He is not an Arab." [As if it's a sin and a crime to be an Arab; don't worry, ignorant lady, he's not an Arab].

So, first John McCain incites and invites fear and hatred against Obama in his supporters, now he has to quel it. Regardless of how he succeeds, I fear that when Obama becomes president, an assassination attempt will be made on his life.

[The source of my information is MSNBC.]

October 10, 2008 | 8:12 PM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


Bitsy   Bitsy Bitsy's TIGblog
Bitsy's profile

Subjective Mirror

When I was a little girl, maybe 6 years old, I would often look at myself in the mirror and wonder about who I saw. As I would stand staring at my face, I used to think to myself “Is that what other people see when they look at me? Do I have red hair in their eyes? Is my skin this pale white? Or do I have brown hair when they look at me? They might see me as a black person. If they see me as a black person, does that mean I am black, even though when I look in the mirror I see that I have red hair and pale white skin? If I don’t see what they see, does that mean I’m wrong?"

October 10, 2008 | 4:55 PM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


Bitsy   Bitsy Bitsy's TIGblog
Bitsy's profile

My Blog Page has MPD

I know I have been away from TIG for a very long time, but even given that fact, I don't think that my Blog page should have a different appearance every time I click to it. Every time I go back to my blog page, it looks totally different, the appearance settings have changed, and every time, I change them back to my own personal settings, over, and over, and over again. My blog page has multiple personality disorder. Why? Was it so bereaved by my absence that it disassociated from itselves?

October 7, 2008 | 8:53 AM Comments  3 comments

Tags:


Bitsy   Bitsy Bitsy's TIGblog
Bitsy's profile

Can I Weave My Dream with Dreamweaver CS3?

Well, as I mentioned in my previous post, I am trying to make a website. I have been thinking about it for over a year and I had imagined it was underway back in May already, but, I was wrong. Since I don't know the first thing about web design, I had managed to find one...and after him a second person, who volunteered to build my site for me. Now, five months later, all I have is a handful of empty promises and a very messed up (because it was all left to me) WordPress site which is not going to be any part of my site.

I realized yesterday that I have to learn how to make my own website, or I will never have one. I began trying to figure out how to make a page with Dreamweaver last night and all day today. Progress is slow and I am told I am trying to do difficult things (dynamic pages). Any help from anyone who knows how to use Dreamweaver and can give me instruction on how to do certain things within a page would be very appreciated :).

October 6, 2008 | 11:43 PM Comments  5 comments

Tags:


IYPF   IYPF IYPF's TIGblog
IYPF's profile

Gifts for you on IYPF's 7th Birthday
About this event: International Young Professionals Summit 2008


4th October 2008 is the IYPF’s 7th Birthday.

To celebrate our 7th Birthday, we’ve put together 7 ‘gifts’ for you.

1. IYPS 2008 portal - http://scenta.interwise.com/etechb/Portal/IYPS

2. IYPS 2008 Declaration & Communique - http://www.iypf.org/files/iyps2008/IYPS2008_Public_Communique.pdf

3. Monthly virtual meetings on the MDGs for young professionals - http://scenta.interwise.com/etechb/Portal/IYPS

4. Stand Up Against Poverty - http://www.iypf.org/?q=content/events

5. Mdgpledge.org - http://www.mdgpledge.org

6. Onedoes.org - http://www.onedoes.org

7. New IYPF.ORG - http://www.iypf.org

Click through to enjoy each gift and share these gifts with your friends and colleagues.

Cameron, Greg and the IYPF team

October 4, 2008 | 5:45 PM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


Fi   Fi Fiona McKenzie's TIGblog
Fiona McKenzie's profile

Roald Dahl

Important thing to remember #1:



I loved Roald Dahl books as a kid.





(This is part of a series of important things I have forgotten over time but which I must remember for the future)

October 4, 2008 | 5:10 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


Fi   Fi Fiona McKenzie's TIGblog
Fiona McKenzie's profile

Ode to Technology

I heart technology - I'm making a hobby out of exploring the future of communication and networking and thoroughly enjoying the benefits of dragging the Church Commissioners Pastoral and Closed Churches Department kicking and screaming into the 21st Century. Not that they've mastered youtube fully yet but I am determined that I will leave them with a much better idea of how they can use the internet *for good* (a brilliant phrase).


Because of my lappie and the tinternet I am able to watch You've Got Mail, while typing this blog post, and listening to Kanye West Stronger on Last.FM (which is my life saver and I love it) all at once. In one click, I can get the latest news from NZ or the UK. In other click I can watch C-SPAN. I use Skype to talk to my family and Facebook and email to keep up with distant friends. My life has been irrevocably changed by the possibilities that technology has provided. And I am very very grateful.



I also get Tweets from Zimbabwe and listen to mashups from Norwegian Recycling. I've begun to use Google Maps mashups too . . . Sokwanele being one example of this.



And I'm writing this because I am listening to one of the characters on You've Got Mail talk about how evil technology is. He has two typewriters in front of him. I know it's not flawless and I know it causes problems but look at the possibilities it provides...it's amazing how much has changed in 10 years.


October 4, 2008 | 5:10 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:




Caitlin's Profile


Latest Posts
Friends
The Beginning

Monthly Archive
December 2006
February 2007

Change Language


Friends
Zainul Abedin
*~Magda~*
ABHIPRAYA
Akka Owl
Amelia!
Bitsy
Fiona McKenzie
hekatea
IYPF
Lewis Best
Matt Trotter
Nguyen Thanh Huyen
Olesya Gook
Sadha
salam
Schrodinger
sopiemay
Steve Smith
tasnim
Zimbe Moses
¥ªsï® ßûTT

Links
Jubilee
Oaktree
World Vision STIR


2495 views
Important Disclaimer