Editor’s note: Lindsey Funke is a student at Southwestern High School. Her father passed away when she was only four years old, and in his memory she has submitted the following commentary to help educate readers about the plight of the people of Haiti and ways they can be assisted
By LINDSEY FUNKE
Special to the Commonwealth Journal
While tourists are sipping cocktails in beachfront cabanas, less than sixty miles away mass graves are being filled with the bodies of countless earthquake victims, many of them children. Those who survived the devastating quake are vying for what little supplies are being distributed and savoring each crumb of food and drop of water, yet just a boat ride away sits lavish buffets with gourmet concoctions and a never ending dessert bar. Cruisers relax on sun loungers and wade in pools as thousands search for water in the crumbled remains of Port-au-Prince. The stench of rotting flesh taunts survivors as they frantically search for loved ones. The juxtaposition of such grandiose splendor amid disaster is reflective of the apathy seen in this generation.
Prior to the earthquake that shook the impoverish nation, the CIA reported more than eighty percent of Haiti’s population was living on less than one dollar per day. In a country of over nine million people, only thirteen percent hold formal jobs causing wide spread poverty and economic stagnation which leaves little opportunity for progress. UNICEF, advocates for child’s rights and survival, produced startling data that revealed the lifetime maternal mortality rate in Haiti is one in every forty-four women leaving ,thousands of children orphaned.
In 2007, an estimated 380,000 orphans lived in Haiti 200,000 of which lived in institutions. The remaining 180,000 roamed the streets or stayed either in foster care or with family. No one can begin to estimate the number of newly orphaned children due to the destructive 7.0 magnitude earthquake that devastated the country of Haiti or how long it will take the nation to heal from this disaster. These statistics are more than just mere numbers; they represent the thousands struggling in the fight to overcome poverty. Sadly, these statistics do not account for the numerous lives lost and thousands, if not millions, now homeless due to the recent earthquake.
In 2008, Haiti was ravaged with multiple tropical storms and hurricanes leaving a path of destruction for the Haitian people to clean up. The earthquake hit before prior damages were fully repaired causing even more disparity to set in for the already haggard citizens of Haiti. The destruction left behind from the natural disasters has compounded and is overwhelming the impoverished nation, yet some outsiders have yet to realize the dire state these people are in. Without food, homes, and in some cases family, the citizens of Haiti are in desperate need of help, but apathy shields the eyes of many. However, for others it is not a matter of it they should help, but how can they help?
Many groups and organizations are gathering necessities like bottle water, clothing, and canned food to send to the Haitian earthquake survivors, but with USPS international shipping rates to Haiti starting at about $10 per pound, relief efforts are being hampered. By utilizing the supplies already in Haiti and ensuring the donation and shipment of the most impactful yet lightweight supplies and materials, the survivors will be able to reap the maximum benefits of the global relief efforts.
In times of crisis, some products are more logical than others. For example, the LifeStraw, named by Time as “The Best Invention of 2005,” can filter up to seven hundred liters of water and costs a mere $6.50. Instead of eating out or going to a movie, one can provide a life saving tool that eliminates 99.9% of waterborne bacteria and 98 percent of waterborne viruses to an earthquake survivor.
The LifeStraw is ideal for situations like this because it is light, compact, and easily distributed allowing more to be shipped and to reach the Haitians. On the other hand, if one wanted to ship the same amount of water the LifeStraw filters, it would cost $10.31 cents a pound for shipping alone. Each LifeStraw filters about 700 liters of water, and each liter weighs one kilogram or 2.2 pounds. Thus, to send 700 liters of water would cost $15,877.40. Logistically and logically it is more beneficial to the Haitian people to send small inexpensive filtration devices like the LifeStraw because it utilizes the resources already present in the city and allows aid to reach a larger number of victims.
Instead of approaching this tragedy with an apathetic attitude, one must be proactive. There are opportunities surrounding the American people to assist the victims of this tragedy; these opportunities must be seized in order to promote health among survivors and to counteract the apathy seen as this tragedy unfolded. By using alternative products that provide larger amounts of goods for a lower price, more Haitians can receive aid in this time of tragedy.
Opinion
Amidst the Tragedy
Opinion
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Why not charter schools?
The number of parents choosing to home school their children has risen by 50 percent in the last five years. I believe this is a direct indicator of the frustration parents have in the interference of the federal government in dictating what their children should be taught.
State Representative Brad Montell announced the pre-filing of legislation that, if passed, would establish a charter school initiative in Kentucky. (House Bill BR 117) Kentucky is one of only nine states in the nation that does not have charter schools, helping place Kentucky at number 37 out of 50 states in quality of education.
In charter schools, if educators are performing below standard, they can be terminated, not reassigned or given additional training. Most charter schools are non-union and non-tenured, so an educator knows he/she must perform to a high degree of excellence to retain employment. They can increase their chances of advancement through performance incentives. -
Opinon: Don't Penalize Players for Being Good
Sports are intrinsically amoral.
Not immoral, as in evil. Amoral, as in indifferent to right or wrong.
That is not to say that you can’t do something immoral — something that flies in the face of conventionally accepted ideas of good and bad behavior — while playing sports. Look at Ndamukong Suh, the Detroit Lions defensive tackle who’s expected to be suspended for a game or two for stomping, apparently on purpose, another player during a Thanksgiving game with the Green Bay Packers.
Most Kentucky basketball fans would recall Duke forward Christian Laettner’s infamous stomp on UK’s Aminu Timberlake during the 1992 NCAA College Basketball Tournament, and think he probably deserved a fate similar to Suh’s.
But in and of themselves, there’s nothing morally good or bad about throwing a ball, or kicking a ball, or hitting a puck with a stick, or anything of that nature.
There are only the rules of the game. Break the rules, and the game has a system built in to penalize you for it. -
Road goes back to property owner
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Fool me once...
When putting pen to paper (or fingers to keypad), it is so easy to fall into the trap of wanting to denigrate those with opposing views relating to political beliefs and social issues. I try hard to constantly remind myself that there are two sides to every argument, and each side can be as passionate about their viewpoint as the other. It is tempting to accuse someone of being an idiot if we passionately disagree with them. The term “idiot” is used to describe someone who is weak minded, of low IQ, or incapable of learning. Anyone who reaches the hallowed halls of Congress or the Whitehouse is definitely not an idiot, but they can be misguided. George W. Bush, Yale graduate with a Texas size ego, and Barak Obama, Harvard graduate with a Chicago thug style political background, are two such men. -
What does it maen?
/11. An instantly recognizable reference. One of those references to an event that all United States citizens of a certain age will always recognize. We will always ask, “what were you doing when you heard” and the question will be answered without a second's delay. It was an event that seared itself into our national psyche along with other societal tremors. 9/11 ushered in a new age for the United States and the decade since has brought systemic changes to our society, some for the better, some for the worse. 9/11 revealed in us a willingness to help others at great risk to our own lives and uncovered a fear that we may not be as safe as we thought we were. 9/11 has been used as both reason and excuse for a lot of things, many not very reasonable.
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The day of indelible memories
On a normal day, in my average, everyday, normal life, I would be hard pressed to tell you what I had for dinner the previous day. No, I’m not suffering from dementia or Alzheimer disease. The mind of the average person does not register routine activities as important enough to be a lasting memory. Not so on September 11, 2001. I would venture to say that the majority of the people in America have some indelible memories of what they were doing that day.
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Dana Allen
Dana Michele Allen, age 25, of Somerset, departed this life on Sunday, April 25, 2010 in Lexington, Ky.
- Ruth Morris Ruth Morris, 66, of Somerset, Ky., passed away Friday, April 16, 2010, at Lake Cumberland Regional Hospital in Somerset.
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Betty Lou Payne
Betty Lou Payne, 70, of Somerset, Ky. passed away on Tuesday, March 23, 2010 at her home.
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