Showing posts with label action. Show all posts
Showing posts with label action. Show all posts

Monday, May 5, 2008

The Water Is Ours


Seen in the Strip District, April 18, 2008, This stopped me in my tracks. It was one of our first warm days of Spring and the streets were alive with people on their lunch breaks. Everyone was walking or eating or smoking and generally enjoying the weather. People kept walking around me when I stopped to read this and take the picture. It was especially poignant because of the water damage, the text streaked by rain, when the topic was the right to WATER. This is what it says:
"The water is ours damnit!" In 1999, under pressure from the World Bank, the Bolivian government, sold off the water system of its 3rd largest city Cochabamba behind closed doors to multi-national investors including the Bechtel Corporation. Over night people were asked to pay 25% of their income for water including collected rainfall and backyard wells. Months of protese ensued. The country was declared under martial law but thousands took to the streets. This, combined with international activist pressure forced Bechtel to flee the country. Despite subsequent attempts to sue Bolivia for $25M in loss of "potential profit," the people of Cochabamba succeeded in defeating a corporate giant and reclaiming control of one of life's most neccessary resources.

Thursday, February 7, 2008

The Power to Change


I've been thinking a lot about Rev. Dr. Johnnie Monroe's sermon at the MLK, Jr. Day event at the Union Project. I'm going to recap some of what I took from that talk in the hopes it will move you as much as it did me.

Monroe quoted the Bible, James 1:23 Be not hearers of the word only, but doers.

The challenge he brought forth was moving from hearing to doing-- WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO TOMORROW MORNING TO BRING ABOUT THE CHANGE THAT IS NEEDED IN PITTSBURGH?

He assured us that "The power to change is in this room tonight." He said that change could be brought about by people of all races who are not afraid to stand up and call out for justice.

Monroe offered some direction of how to accomplish this:

  1. Utilize the power that we have and not be afraid to talk about power and use power
  2. Tell about the God who is able to turn things around and rely on the same.
  3. Go back to the mosques, to the temples, to the churches, and carry the message for change.
He brought the challenge directly to Pittsburgh: PITTSBURGH, IF YOU ARE GOING TO BE THE MOST LIVABLE CITY, MAKE YOURSELF THE MOST LIVABLE CITY FOR BLACK AND WHITE AND BROWN

So, let's be the change this city needs.

Thursday, January 24, 2008

The Most Durable Power in the World


I think I have discovered the highest good. It is love. Love is the most durable power in the world.
- Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

CHANGE