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Highway Of Tears

I believe people are very uneducated about all the Highway 16 killings, otherwise known as the Highway of Tears. Women traveling along this road have been abducted and killed. This absurdity started in 1969, continuing throughout the decades. The women’s families are really the only people trying to involve the media. What could be done? Informing more and more people about these spontaneous murders. If more people knew, then more people would want to make a difference.

GOAT CANUCKS GOAT

When Joel Nagtegaal was a small fry whipping around the neighborhood with a hockey stick, his dad taught him an important lesson that really stuck.

Always ask the other kids to play and if they don’t have a stick, we’ll get them one.

It was through that generosity that Nagtegaal developed a pay it forward attitude towards life, an attitude that is now benefiting people who suffer from poverty, hunger, disaster, and injustice.

Nagtegaal, a student at the University of the Frasier Valley, and a few buddies from his roller-hockey team were sitting around a few weeks ago mulling over who would grow the meanest playoff beard.

That led to playoff goatees, which led to playoff goats and Goat Canucks Goat was born.

“It started with 10 of us vowing to celebrate each Canucks playoff win by buying a goat for a family in Africa,” said Nagtegaal, 24, who hails from Langley. “Now it’s getting out of hand, which is great.”

Working with The Christian Reformed World Relief Committee (CRWRC), Nagtegaal and company pledged $25 a win to purchase a goat for a family in need. If all went according to plan, there would be 16 goats bought by the time Vancouver was in possession of the Stanley Cup at the end of the post-season.

The plan for a championship hasn’t changed, but the amount of goats certainly has as the initiative has grown horns, so to speak.

Nagtegaal formed a Facebook group that had just the 10 original members in the beginning, as of Wednesday afternoon there were 425 people taking part.

Goat Canucks Goat, the project’s official website, was built free of charge by the kind folks at 1981.ca, and the site has already had more than 8,500 page views.
Yes, they’re on Twitter and 32 people are following them after only a few days.

All these numbers are impressive, yet they pale in comparison to the Goat-o-meter, the goat gauge keeping track of how many hollow-horned mammals have been bought.

Tuesday afternoon when I spoke with Nagtegaal, the Goat-o-meter was at 78. Following Alex Burrows’ heroic overtime winner that thrusted the Canucks into the second round, the Goat-o-meter exploded and now sits at 125.

“It’s been so overwhelming,” said Nagtegaal. “This just goes to show that people really want to hold on to something and they like giving; Canucks fans are the best fans in the world.”

It wasn’t just the play off playoff beards that led to goats, they’re actually one of the most important animals for families in need.

According to the CRWRC, an organization that works in communities around the world to help families suffering from poverty or natural disasters, goats are life-altering animals.

“Goats are great animals for poor farmers. They’re easy to care for and will eat almost anything. They can be kept in a small yard, and are strong and hardy. In addition, goats breed after just a few years, providing additional goats for the family and community.”

Goats can also be sold for income, their milk is a great source of protein and calcium and when all is said and done, they can be eaten.

“They mean so much to these families,” Nagtegaal said, “and at only $25 a goat, we couldn’t not afford to help out.
“Even though there are some tough economic times right now, we still come from a position of privilege compared to most people in the world and it feels good to make a difference.”

Nagtegaal isn’t too sure where Goat Canucks Goat will go from here with the Canucks heading to the second round of the NHL playoffs, but perhaps it’s time to up the ante?

“We were thinking that we might buy an elephant, but I think that’s actually illegal so we won’t be doing that,” he joked.

“I think the biggest thing you can buy from the website is digging the community a well for $250, so the goal now might be doing that so they have water.”

Children’s Rights

I find the law of child’s rights extremely important. What some people don’t realize is that children have opinions too. I believe they should have the right to speak up when they think something is not as it should be. Without the advocation of children’s rights, parents would be allowed to do anything they wish fair to their child. Weather it be physical abuse, or neglection, this could lead a child to believe that that is how to deal with complications. Many adults think that children should not have a say in anything because they’re too young to understand. In some cases, that may be true, but in many situations, the voice of a child could make all the difference.

My Beliefs And Values

I think that my beliefs and values can have a large impact on many people. The actions I take and the things I believe in are all influenced in some way. I look up to a lot of people, and the way they act can also influence me. I like to be around positive people who don’t put down others who are beneath them in any way. The negativeness of one’s words can affect someone self esteem, and how they view themselves. This is why I would let someone know that I don’t appreciate what they are saying if I believe it could affect a person in a negative way. The way I act can also affect people, including friends, family and otherwise. I choose my words carefully and take into consideration what other people have to say.

‘Indians in Uruguay Square’ Article from La Nacion (Paraguay), 13 September 2007

 In Uruguay Square, under the tolerant eye of the government and city hall, Indians have set up camp, showing the citizens of Asuncion how to go about destroying a beautiful, expensive area and how to live as people did in Neolithic times.

According to Asuncion’s mayor, these Indians have decided to stay there, no matter what. They’ve emerged from history’s catacombs, encouraged by the most irresponsible NGOs in a country crawling with irresponsible NGOs, to test the patience of Asuncion’s citizens who pay their taxes and don’t want to live like the Indians live, in no way whatsoever, even though there are some Catholic priests who receive money from foreign donors, for purposes of ‘aid’, precisely to make this kind of absurdity happen.

A Neolithic, Indian camp right in the city centre is unthinkable, but there it is, like a dangerous cancer, spreading bad smells, destruction and contamination. The city’s being punished, for no reason, and it shouldn’t have to pay for it. The Indians have to learn to live like people, or get back to the jungle.

 If things carry on like this, if this leftist climate that makes people stupid continues, then soon one of the Indian leaders will declare himself a direct descendant of Arambaré and, with NGO money, move into the Lopez Palace and turn it into a pig-sty. It wouldn’t be too over-the-top to say that if the Indians can take over a public square which belongs to all of Asuncion’s citizens, and which was designed, built and is now maintained by its citizens, then they can do anything.

The Indians need to become civilized, to become Paraguayans, to forget this stupid idea of trying to preserve their backward, withered culture, and in so doing live like people who pay their taxes. Either that, or return to the depths of the jungle and carry on living with the animals. There’s no alternative. Paraguayans shouldn’t have to pay taxes to maintain an out-of-date way of living that can’t support itself.

I haven’t met a single Paraguayan who wants to live in an Indian village, even though there are some very nearby, nor study their filthy habits. But I do know Indians who want to live in Asuncion in order to be educated, to escape the jungle mentality, and to turn themselves into human beings with access to everything civilization has to offer.

I think it’s time to stop all this European nonsense which gets sillier by the day and wants to bring the dinosaurs back to life in order to see how, not just in the movies, a T-Rex devours people, and then defends them because they are its diet and it is its right to eat them.

The anthropologists want to have the Indians close-at-hand so they can study them like animals – with foreign money that goes more to personal enrichment than research. It’s time to tell them that, instead, they should dig up the remains of savage Vikings to see how they lived, or suggest to the King of Sweden that he installs a Viking tribe in Stockholm’s main square, or suggest to the ‘sensible’ people on the political left in the USA that they should bring Sioux tribes, Blackfeet, Pawnees and Dakotas to the Dupont Circle in Washington – an impossible idea because they killed all of them.

Why should we Paraguayans have to suffer a Neolithic camp in Uruguay Square? Because we are South Americans and we don’t know how to defend our rights and we believe in all kinds of silly things, especially those printed on European or American paper.

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