12/16/03 01:21 - ID#22092
family album
Permalink: family_album.html
Words: 43
Location: Buffalo, NY
12/13/03 11:37 - ID#22091
parallax
Permalink: parallax.html
Words: 12
Location: Buffalo, NY
12/13/03 11:18 - ID#22090
i never promised you a rose garden
i promise you
i know they don't sound the way i plan them to be
Permalink: i_never_promised_you_a_rose_garden.html
Words: 27
Location: Buffalo, NY
12/13/03 09:34 - ID#22089
contrary to what mike says
just don't feed stuff to the dog that might kill her
Permalink: contrary_to_what_mike_says.html
Words: 19
Location: Buffalo, NY
12/12/03 08:14 - ID#22088
so i didnt win a barbie cam.
I've been waiting to go home for a short period of time but as the time draws nearer for me to leave i am finding excuses to stay.
time to do some homework.
Permalink: so_i_didnt_win_a_barbie_cam_.html
Words: 33
Location: Buffalo, NY
12/09/03 10:11 - ID#22087
win a barbie cam
Annual Dysfunctional Holiday Open Screening & Members Holiday Party & Chinese Auction
It's THE end of year gathering. Great people, great food, great drinks. Don't miss it! Maybe you'll be forced to eat too many holiday sweets. Maybe you'll be forced to watch films and videos our members made just for the takeover. Whatever dysfunctional holiday conjures-whether it's 'All in the Family' reruns multiplied by watered down eggnog, or viscous parking lot shopping rituals, or snow season horror, send it in, and come to our holiday party! Don't forget to bring extra cash for the amazingly cool stuff available at our 2nd annual Chinese Auction.
Permalink: win_a_barbie_cam.html
Words: 108
Location: Buffalo, NY
12/09/03 08:13 - ID#22086
maybe its obvious
[ side comment...this makes me so mad, when things like health care are equated with money. i remember learning more about health care and medical research, hearing that the types of illnesses and diseases that are heavily researched usually have to do with which populations they affect. when you think of how much research there is on heart disease (and who does that affect, mostly?) and the history of aids research. institutional discrimination..its whats for dinner]
[Today, in response to the CAFTA talks]
(Washington, D.C.) Chanting “Bush’s CAFTA is a disaster for people with AIDS,” wearing hospital gowns reading “Another AIDS Death from CAFTA/Break the Patents, Treat the People”. 9 activists blocked mid-day traffic in front of the hotel where U.S. and Central American trade negotiators are meeting after a year of talks to finalize the Central America Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA).
The activists locked to each other and to traffic signals using chains and handcuffs. Four additional activists stormed the hotel carrying a banner reading “Bush’s CAFTA = DEATH for People with AIDS”. They entered the hotel and attempted to enter the negotiations. They were seized and forcibly ejected by Secret Service.
CAFTA’s provisions to protect and expand the patent monopolies of U.S. pharmaceutical companies in Central America will undermine access to affordable generic AIDS drugs and increase the price of medicines, according to the activists. Thousands of HIV positive Central Americans are in immediate need of treatment or else they will die.
The Bush Administration, along with all other WTO members, signed the Doha Declaration on TRIPS and Public Health (Doha Declaration) in November 2001, under extreme pressure from developing countries and civil society. The Doha Declaration reaffirms WTO member countries’ right to break drug company patent monopolies in order to promote access to medicines for all. Bush is disregarding this pledge in the CAFTA by establishing new rules that are tougher than what the WTO requires.
The CAFTA is just one of many trade agreements in Latin America and the Caribbean, as well as Africa and Asia, the U.S. is negotiating in poor regions. Winning new, higher levels of patent protection and new means to obstruct the market entry of generic medicines is an objective of each of these deals, according to activists.
“Bush plans to trade away access to medicines in order to maximize the profits of pharmaceutical companies—even if millions are left to die as a result,” said Eustacia Smith of ACT UP, a protester. “CAFTA’s false promises of so-called free trade won’t work for the dead.”
Generic competition is the most powerful mechanism for reducing drug prices; recent negotiations brokered by the Clinton Foundation between poor country governments and generic companies resulted in prices as low as $135 per person per year for a triple combination of HIV medicines. Under the CAFTA, similar negotiations with newer medicines would be impossible.
Permalink: maybe_its_obvious.html
Words: 561
Location: Buffalo, NY
12/09/03 05:35 - ID#22085
sad eyes
i made kevino take her to the vet today and they gave us some stuff and told us to monitor her for the next two days.
its kinda sad bc she's usually spry and youthful. she's over ten years, but often gets mistaken for a puppy. plus, some food fell to the ground during dinner last night and she didn't even go for it. you know its pretty bad if sammy wont go for fallen foodstuffs.
Permalink: sad_eyes.html
Words: 117
Location: Buffalo, NY
12/08/03 06:37 - ID#22084
its a light yre after light moves faster
and it's not what I think it's what you say, hey
and it works great for you to have your way, hey
but if the west can be a desperate place
you search all day for just a taste
of the cold, cold water, cold, cold water
and if you think I've gone too long
listen the sky will sing this song
as it burns up all the memories
that flow like water out of me
"
Permalink: its_a_light_yre_after_light_moves_faster.html
Words: 76
Location: Buffalo, NY
12/08/03 04:07 - ID#22083
(middle of the night ramblings)
well here's a focus on an example of what's happening in our own community, from the guardian uk. (http://www.guardian.co.uk/usa/story/0,12271,1089065,00.html)
earlier this year, ibm was 'discussing' moving millions of white collar jobs to southeast asia. if you bank with hsbc, you might notice many of your customer service calls being handled by people in india. it used to be manufacturing jobs leaving, now it's white collar jobs, and who knows what else. that's the race to the bottom that global justice activists talk about, where there is no end in sight to how low the standards go. the kind of shell of a community that's produced as a result is the sad thing... low wage jobs, no health care coverage, and no leverage for people to fight back from these kinds of conditions.
more and more there is a focus on the world water grab, the privatization of water. water covers most of the earth but only a small amount is available, and then mostly it's available to people who can afford it. we already pay so much for water-- we pay more for bottled water than we pay for gasoline. it takes a few cents for these companies to make bottled water, and the mark-up is so high, it's a billion dollar industry.
as much as i believe that our world is not for sale, companies are already displacing water in several ways and profiting from it. football field sized bags are filled with water that is moved from its natural sources to other locations. companies like bechtel and suez and vivendi and rwe have a strong hold on this industry. the wto, the ftaa, and other such institutions and trade agreements all enable these companies to take water out of bodies of water and make profit from it. the water fights are not just a phenomenon in africa either, there are groups in michigan fighting companies like nestle for taking water for profit.
for more on water privatization and the water for all campaign, check out (http://www.citizen.org/cmep/Water/)
Health care is also a huge part of these discussions, and may be more relevant than the water grab. hardly anyone i know who's around my age has health insurance, especially working folks. with the plans that people do get, one-third of the costs that you pay to your insurance company goes to administrative fees. that's a lot.. there's so much more i could talk on and on about health care but i'll save the diatribe. but one thing i'll mention is that i was just reading that the biggest reason why many employers aren't hiring people or have to lay people off is often health care-related. prices are skyrocketing and it's hard to keep up. i just hate to see what happens when we all get older, with the sad state of affairs that exist right now.
Permalink: _middle_of_the_night_ramblings_.html
Words: 555
Location: Buffalo, NY
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