Monday, January 25, 2010

British 7-year-old Raises Over 100,000 Pounds for Haiti

LONDON — A young British schoolboy has raised more than 100,000 pounds ($160,000) Monday for Haiti's relief effort by cycling round his local park.



Seven-year-old Charlie Simpson was so upset by the images of Haiti's deadly earthquake that he asked his mother if she could help him set up a sponsored bicycle ride around a west London park.
Charlie originally hoped to raise 500 pounds (for UNICEF's Haiti appeal with Sunday's 5-mile (8-kilometer) bike ride, but his Internet page was flooded with donations.
He raised nearly 50,000 pounds in a single day. Charlie's story was splashed on the front page of Britain's Daily Mirror newspaper on Monday, and money is still flooding in.
"I want to make some money to buy food, water and tents for everyone in Haiti," he said on his fundraising Web site.
The effort drew the attention of Prime Minister Gordon Brown, with his office Downing Street posting on Twitter: "Amazed by response to the great fundraising efforts of 7 yr old."
The boy's mother Leonora Simpson said she was amazed by the response. "We put it on the Web and that was it, it suddenly took off and we can't believe it," she said.

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

The Evolution of Revolution Foods


To me, Revolution Foods is a company which has a noble goal: to bring fresh healthy meals to “as many students as possible”. Their first customers were schools in low income neighborhoods where, before Revolution Foods arrived, school lunches consisted of cheap meal made from simple carbohydrates, salt, fat and processed sugar. In other words, they weren’t very healthy.

The meals served by Revolution Foods are made almost entirely from organic ingredients. They include fresh vegetables, whole grains and meat raised in natural settings. They also use ingredients from local, sustainable sources.



Organic food is pesticide free. It is also free of hormones, antibiotics and isn’t genetically engineered.

Locally grown means the food hasn’t been transported 1000’s of miles to get here, which saves fuel and helps slow global warming.



I’ve always been impressed with what Revolution Foods is trying to do, which is nothing less than change the way all of us eat. By starting with school kids, they are hoping that good eating habits will filter up through each kid’s family at home.

There was only one problem. The food they made wasn’t very good. When Revolution Foods first started providing Park School with hot lunches, the food was more likely to end up in the trash than in a kid’s stomach.

Revolution Foods then did another remarkable thing. They listened to you. They sent representatives to all of the schools they served and took surveys. They offered taste tests. As a result, their meals got a lot better.

Today, I’m happy to say, the food is much improved. I personally enjoy the Chicken Teriyaki, Baked Ziti and Cheese Lasagna (the pizza still tastes like cardboard).

The kids seem to agree. The Green Team is no longer swamped with uneaten Revolution Foods meals.

When they first started, Revolution Foods provided lunches to schools in the San Francisco Bay Area. Today they provide lunches to schools all over Northern and Southern California, Colorado and Washington D.C.. They’ve truly begun a school lunch revolution.

In order to gain a better understanding of why organic food from local sustainable sources is better for you, to understand why the least healthy food which is also the least expensive and why this is the real cause of the nation’s obesity epidemic, try reading “Fast Food Nation” by Eric Schlosser,


“The Omnivore’s Dilemma” by Michael Pollan


or see “Food, Inc.”


You'll never take your food for granted again.

Friday, January 8, 2010

Lost and Found? The Curious Case of the Missing Pinnipeds

pin⋅ni⋅ped [pin-uh-ped] Noun:  a suborder of carnivores with limbs adapted to an aquatic life, including the seals and walruses.

Ever been to Pier 39 in San Francisco? If you have, you’ve probably seen the sea lions.



Those sea lions first appeared in 1989. Nobody knows why.

At first, people tried to shoo them away, but they kept coming back. Soon there were so many, that the docks couldn’t be used for their original purpose, which was to park boats.

At first, the boat owners and the merchants who owned businesses at Pier 39 were upset. The sea lions were loud and smelly. But, all of the locals soon changed their minds. That’s because tourists began to flock to Pier 39 just to see the sea lions.

The sea lions became big business. Many of the sea lions have names. Signs point sightseers in the right direction.



There is a Sea Lion Café. There is even as sea lion web cam (http://master.livetrac.com/cgi-bin/pier39marina/live?pset=pier39marina&template=restaurant).

On October 23rd, 2009, there were 1701 sea lions at Pier 39. On November 29th, there were 20. Nobody knew where they went, or why they left.



Until now, that is. It appears that the sea lions have gone to a place called Sea Lion Caves.



Sea Lion Caves is in Oregon, about 500 north of San Francisco. Recently, about 2000 sea lions just kind of showed up there.

"We've seen these huge pods out on the ocean - 200, 300 yards across - altogether a couple thousand sea lions," said Steve Saubert, co-owner of Sea Lion Caves, a private preserve near the town of Florence. "They were just here all of a sudden."

So why the sudden move from San Francisco to Oregon?

One of the sea lion’s favorite foods is herring.



Normally, large numbers of herring show up in San Francisco Bay during January and February. This year, very few herring appeared. It is believed that this lack of herring is the result of a warm ocean current in the central Pacific Ocean called El Nino.



Last summer’s El Nino’s was warmer than normal (the large orange band above is El Nino). As a result, many creatures who like colder water, such as anchovies, smelt, squid and herring, moved north, away from El Nino. The sea lions, apparently, are simply following their food supply.

Friday, January 1, 2010

Backlash

back⋅lash [bak-lash] Noun: a strong or violent reaction, as to some social or political change: “a backlash of angry feeling among Southern conservatives within the party.”

In previous posts, I described what it means to be Machiavellian and how Russell Hantz used such a strategy in his attempt to win the TV show “Survivor, Samoa”.



I also wrote that machinations could only be effective to a certain point; the point to which all other participants were willing to play along.

Russell’s machinations included lying, cheating, and stealing. He lied about his personal background to win sympathy from his tribemates and he lied by creating false alliances with almost every other player in the game. A true alliance is meant to make all allies stronger. Russell’s “alliances” were really only designed to make Russell’s position stronger, for he never helped anyone and if any of his “allies” did something he didn’t like, he’s make up a story about how they weren’t trustworthy and should be voted out. The rest of the group usually went along with him.

As the game unfolded it was clear that Russell was the most dominant player in the game. From the merge to the final three, Russell controlled every aspect of the game. His Machiavellian strategy had enabled him to achieve and keep his power position.

Now here’s the trick: while a Machiavellian strategy will work to put one in power and will help one maintain a power, it creates a lot of ill will. People who use such strategy often become hated. Once they become hated others look for ways to take away their power. This is backlash.

Julius Caesar was the commander of Rome’s most powerful army. He used it to start a Roman civil war, which he won. After winning, he declared himself dictator for life, meaning that he controlled the Roman government. The previous roman government, a group of men called the Senate, lost almost all of their power. They wanted it back. In an effort to get it they struck back at Caesar by murdering him. It was an extreme case of backlash.

On his way to becoming the most powerful player in Survivor, Russell made lots of enemies. He didn’t care though, because he managed to get every one of his enemies voted out of the game. But, in Survivor, there is a catch.

Survivor has a built in power equalizer. It is the jury. The jury is comprised of the last 10 players voted out of the game. At the end of the game, the jury votes to choose the winner of the game. The jury can’t win the game, but they can decide who does. This is something that all finalists must consider while playing the game. Russell failed to do so.

As a result, despite being what Jeff Probst, the host of the show, called the “most dominant player in the history of the show”, Russell didn’t win. A player named Natalie did.

Natalie never really did anything special to make the final three other not make enemies. Everybody liked her. Russell chose to take her to the final three with him because he felt that she was least likely to win.



In the end, the jury voted for Natalie, not because she played a great game, but because she wasn’t Russell. She was the beneficiary of backlash against Russell.



So it’s important to remember to, in your quest to achieve your goals, treat others respectfully along the way.

If you don’t, sooner or later, your failure to do so will come back to haunt you.