About

We believe IC is not just a charity, but a group of people choosing to live differently. This blog highlights what we're up to as an organization, what inspires us, challenges us, and makes us laugh. It's our collective mind written down. We invite you to read, think critically, and speak openly.

INVISIBLE CHILDREN INC.

Invisible Children uses film, creativity and social action to end the use of child soldiers in Joseph Kony's rebel war and restore LRA-affected communities in central Africa to peace and prosperity.

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Archive for 2009

September 30, 2009
Category: Homepage Contributor: Invisible Children

BBC Audio on LRA attacks in Central African Republic

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Listen to the Story:

The Ugandan Lord’s Resistance Army, the LRA, has been making its presence felt outside Ugandan territory in recent months.

The LRA’s activities in Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo have already triggered the mass displacement of civilians.

The LRA has also been in the Central African Republic, targeting villages in the country’s isolated south-east, where it made its first attacks in early 2008.

Uganda has responded by sending it’s army in hot pursuit but the situation is still far from stable.

Our correspondent, Chris Simpson, travelled with the International Committee of the Red Cross, the ICRC to Obo in the south-east to look at the difficulties facing civilians caught up in the recent conflict. He sent us this report.

- BBC News

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September 30, 2009
Category: Homepage, Inspiration Contributor: Invisible Children

Wendell Berry has something to say

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“It is clear to anyone who looks carefully at any crowd that we are wasting our bodies exactly as we are wasting our land. Our bodies are fat, weak, joyless, sickly, ugly, the virtual prey of the manufacturers of medicine and cosmetics. Our bodies have become marginal; they are growing useless like our ‘marginal land’ because we have less and less use for them. After the games and idle flourishes of modern youth, we use them only as shipping cartons to transport our brains and our few employable muscles back and forth to work.”

Wendell Berry, The Unsettling of America

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September 30, 2009
Category: Homepage Contributor: Invisible Children

Justice for humans… but kill the critters!

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Getting Real About the High Price of Cheap Food

By Bryan Walsh, TIME Magazine

Somewhere in Iowa, a pig is being raised in a confined pen, packed in so tightly with other swine that their curly tails have been chopped off so they won’t bite one another. To prevent him from getting sick in such close quarters, he is dosed with antibiotics. The waste produced by the pig and his thousands of pen mates on the factory farm where they live goes into manure lagoons that blanket neighboring communities with air pollution and a stomach-churning stench. He’s fed on American corn that was grown with the help of government subsidies and millions of tons of chemical fertilizer. When the pig is slaughtered, at about 5 months of age, he’ll become sausage or bacon that will sell cheap, feeding an American addiction to meat that has contributed to an obesity epidemic currently afflicting more than two-thirds of the population. And when the rains come, the excess fertilizer that coaxed so much corn from the ground will be washed into the Mississippi River and down into the Gulf of Mexico, where it will help kill fish for miles and miles around. That’s the state of your bacon — circa 2009. (See TIME’s photo-essay “From Farm to Fork.”)

Horror stories about the food industry have long been with us — ever since 1906, when Upton Sinclair’s landmark novel The Jungle told some ugly truths about how America produces its meat. In the century that followed, things got much better, and in some ways much worse. The U.S. agricultural industry can now produce unlimited quantities of meat and grains at remarkably cheap prices. But it does so at a high cost to the environment, animals and humans. Those hidden prices are the creeping erosion of our fertile farmland, cages for egg-laying chickens so packed that the birds can’t even raise their wings and the scary rise of antibiotic-resistant bacteria among farm animals. Add to the price tag the acceleration of global warming — our energy-intensive food system uses 19% of U.S. fossil fuels, more than any other sector of the economy.

And perhaps worst of all, our food is increasingly bad for us, even dangerous. A series of recalls involving contaminated foods this year — including an outbreak of salmonella from tainted peanuts that killed at least eight people and sickened 600 — has consumers rightly worried about the safety of their meals. A food system — from seed to 7‑Eleven — that generates cheap, filling food at the literal expense of healthier produce is also a principal cause of America’s obesity epidemic. At a time when the nation is close to a civil war over health-care reform, obesity adds $147 billion a year to our doctor bills. “The way we farm now is destructive of the soil, the environment and us,” says Doug Gurian-Sherman, a senior scientist with the food and environment program at the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS). (See pictures of what the world eats.)

(more…)

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September 30, 2009
Category: Homepage, News and Updates Contributor: Invisible Children

Obama’s mention of Sudan a step in the right direction

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In his first speech before the United Nations General Assembly on Sept 24, President Obama mentioned both conflict prevention and the situation in Sudan. The speech, entitled “Responsibility for Our Common Future,” stressed that countries have both rights and responsibilities and that – especially today – interests among nations align, including the need for peace:

“That is why we will strengthen our support for effective peacekeeping, while energizing our efforts to prevent conflicts before they take hold. We will pursue a lasting peace in Sudan through support for the people of Darfur, and the implementation of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement, so that we secure the peace that the Sudanese people deserve. And in countries ravaged by violence – from Haiti to Congo to East Timor – we will work with the UN and other partners to support an enduring peace.”

The mention of conflict prevention and of Sudan specifically is a victory, particularly given the magnitude of top foreign policy priorities facing the United States (everything from nuclear non-proliferation, to conflict in the Middle East, to the situation in Afghanistan, to global efforts for climate change). In an interview with Voice of America, Lawrence Woocher at the United States Institute of Peace took Obama’s specific mention of Sudan to mean “that it is a real policy priority and that they’ve heard the advocacy groups who have been really pressing to take the opportunity of the speech at the General Assembly to say something about Sudan.”

(more…)

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September 30, 2009
Category: Homepage, Music Contributor: Invisible Children

La Blogotheque: Frenchies are cool

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If you like good music and appreciate spontaneity… then you should know about La Blogotheque.  Invisible Children and La Blogotheque have become good friends thanks to our very own music guru Kenny Laubbacher. He’s always on a phone call to Paris, discussing music and big ideas. This website is the brainchild of music lovers Chryde and Vincent Moon, and features something they call Take Away Shows.

“Every week, we invite an artist or a band to play in the streets, in a bar, a park, or even in a flat or in an elevator, and we film the whole session. Of course, what makes the beauty of it is all the little incidents, hesitations, and crazy stuff happening unexpectingly. Besides, we do not edit the videos so they look perfectly flawless, instead we keep the raw sound of the surroundings. Our goal is to try and capture instants, film the music just like it happens, without preparation, without tricks. Spontaneity is the keyword.”

If you like Yeasayer, Architecture in Helsinki, Arcade Fire, or Andrew Bird… check out their Take Away Shows.

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September 29, 2009
Category: Schools for Schools Contributor: Invisible Children

Pizza, Posho and President Clinton

I had the opportunity to travel to Uganda to visit our partner schools just before going on tour.  The trip revealed to me how important this tour really is.  It’s more than just an exciting and powerful experience; this tour is necessary.  I have a new understanding of the urgency of the situation after meeting and spending time with students at our partner schools.

Vicky, Leah, Prossy and Alice between classes at Gulu Senior Secondary

Vicky, Leah, Prossy and Alice between classes at Gulu Senior Secondary

Since my return to the U.S., I’m noticing things differently.  It amazes me how students with oceans between them, of all ages and cultures, have so much in common.  For starters, my jokes don’t make people in Uganda or Middle America laugh.  I am awkwardly laughed at for my goofy nature in both places.  In high schools (and colleges, for that matter), the opposite sex is still obsessively gossiped about, and groups of friends congregate together at lunch, whether you are eating pizza or posho.  More so, inspirational stories consistently appear.  The story could be about a student who has lived in suburbia for the majority of her life and suddenly becomes enthralled with fundraising for schools half way across the world.  Or, perhaps the story is about a head teacher who has seen horror after horror in her life time, yet continues to hope for the future of her students at Gulu Senior Secondary.

Team Middle America stopped by Hot Springs in hopes of convincing the former President's wife to end a war for us. We're still awaiting her response.

Team Middle America stopped by Hot Springs in hopes of convincing the former President's wife to end a war for us. We're still awaiting her response.

If the past two weeks are any indication of what the next eight weeks hold, I can’t help but be excited and energized.  To know the students we are assisting by name and face make our efforts in Schools for Schools completely real, and that much more necessary. Getting to visit the boyhood hometowns of all of the presidents would be the cherry on top of it all.

Leah Garrard
Middle America Roadie

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September 29, 2009
Category: Homepage, We Recommend Contributor: Invisible Children

SoulPancake, I’m pickin up what you’re layin down

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SoulPancake is a blog/website that is dedicated to talking about the ‘big questions’ of life and death in a refreshing way.  Humor, sass, sincerity, and thoughtfulness all somehow rolled into one.

Check it out, and be enlightened, or at least start talking.  If you are too shy to discuss religion and politics with your friends and family, at least discuss it with randoms across the world via the blessed internet.  ;)

And if you need any more encouragement, here is what Rainn Wilson has to say about it.

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September 29, 2009
Category: Homepage Contributor: Invisible Children

A dose of Annie Dillard

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We could, you know. We can live any way we want. People take vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience–even of silence–by choice. The thing is to stalk your calling in a certain skilled and supple way, to locate the most tender and live spot and plug into that pulse. This is yielding, not fighting.

I think it would be well, and proper, and obedient, and pure, to grasp your one necessity and not let it go, to dangle from it limp wherever it takes you… Seize it and let it seize you up aloft even, till your eyes burn out and drop; let your musky flesh fall off in shreds, and let your very bones unhinge and scatter, loosened over fields, over fields and woods, lightly, thoughtless, from any height at all, from as high as eagles.   – Annie Dillard, essayist and author.

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September 29, 2009
Category: Schools for Schools Contributor: Invisible Children

Mountain West is in the Building

One of the best things about being a Roadie is seeing and experiencing the great diversity of America.  We’ve seen some peculiar things in our short time on tour, like a gas station with a Laundromat and a casino attached to it and a convenience store you can follow on twitter.  Parts of the land are so expansive and undeveloped that they don’t always mark where one state ends and another begins.  This place is called the great Mountain West.  My name is Andrew, and the states of Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, Utah, Wyoming and Montana will be my home for the next eight weeks.  Our team has driven hours and hours through some of the most beautiful areas in the country and met some wonderfully concerned global citizens along the way.

Mandi, Dale, Lauren and Andrew are obviously very comfortable with each other

Mandi, Dale, Lauren and Andrew are obviously very comfortable with each other

Our first week of tour brought us to the small town of Dillon, Montana, home of the University of Montana Western Bulldogs.  It was here in Dillon where we made a new friend, Beth Davis, a tall and cheery UMW student.  Beth put the screening together at UMW, a school IC had never been to.  At the end of the screening, I couldn’t help but notice the attendees’ eyes.  They were hurt by the tragedy the children in northern Uganda have lived through.  They were also inspired to know they could do something right now to change it.  Many people came up to our merchandise table to meet and talk with us.  One group of students bought all six bracelet DVD’s in order to get together later and watch them as a club.  Others flipped through IC’s new activist journal to brainstorm ways to use this amazing new resource and spread the word of Invisible Children. Everyone we met at UMW lifted our spirits and encouraged us in our work, but Beth Davis made a lasting impression.

Once we packed everything up Beth brought us to a local “taco bus.”  If you make it to Dillon, find the school bus that sells tacos.  Trust me.  It was here where Beth shared her desire to revolutionize her town and help Dillon become both socially, and globally conscious.  I could feel Beth’s determination to get her community involved. We crashed at Beth’s place that night.  We left the next morning equipped with homemade banana and zucchini bread, free coffee from Beth’s work, and tons of hope for Dillon, MT.  I have confidence the UMW Schools for Schools club will be in good hands with Beth’s leadership at the forefront.  While the delicious bread lasted a few days, Beth’s determination to transform her community will stick with me for the rest of this adventure. Thank you to everyone who has put so much work into helping these children receive the education they deserve.  You are a voice for the voiceless.  You are doing incredible things for your neighbors both here and abroad.

Andrew Billion                                                                                                                                                                                                  Mountain West Roadie

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September 29, 2009
Category: Homepage, The Office Contributor: Invisible Children

Did you know 4.0

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A great video showing the transitional period we’re all in, from conventional forms of media to now.  IC loves pushing into this future.  It’s exciting stuff.

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