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 2010

April 30, 2010
Category: Homepage, Inspiration, News and Updates, We Recommend Contributor: Invisible Children

The End :: of our Manchester Orchester/Thrice Tour

Over the last 7 weeks, we’ve had the privilege of traveling the country with a few of our favorite bands in the bus to the left, taking the story of Invisible Children along for the ride. The friendships that were made during these last 2 months are some that I’m certain will last for quite a while.

If any of you were able to venture out to a show, you were able to witness a very genuine concern and sense of urgency from the guys on stage about what’s been happening in northern Uganda and now East Africa. If not, take a look at this video of our friends Andy and Chris from Manchester Orchestra from an in-studio radio performance. **Note their IC plug at around the 9 MINUTE mark.

Manchester Orchestra

So here’s to you boys in The Features, Biffy Clyro, O Brother, Thrice, and Manchester Orchestra. That was truly something special. It really is sad that it was cut short…

(As most of you have probably heard, the tour was cancelled early due to a family emergency. Our thoughts and prayers are with Dustin and Chase Kensrue, their family, Riley, Eddie, and Teppei. To stay updated with them through this time, visit their website here).

-alex

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April 29, 2010
Category: Homepage, The Office | Tags: , , , , | Contributor: Invisible Children

Dance dance revolution… for Jolly

Channel Islands High School in Oxnard, CA, put on an incredible dance performance in honor of Jolly Okot coming to their school.

I’m just going to say, Jon Chu need look no farther than CI4IC if he ever wants to make “Step Up 4 What You Believe.”

Truly, this performance is enthralling. We’re told it’s also an homage to IC’s A Musical You can Believe In, from back in 2006. Watch it and love it.

-Azy

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April 29, 2010

Another Victory: House Foreign Affairs Committee passes LRA Bill

From RESOLVE Uganda in Washington, D.C.

By Lisa Dougan:

We are thrilled to bring you news that this morning, the House Committee on Foreign Affairs unanimously passed the LRA Disarmament and Northern Uganda Recovery Act.

Debates between some Committee members over details in the bill had initially threatened to stall its consideration for months, until robust efforts from activists and the bill’s champions in Congress succeeded in convincing leaders of the Foreign Affairs Committee to swiftly pass the Senate version of the bill. In a very rare move, the Committee added the bill to today’s agenda just yesterday afternoon—less than 24 hours before the hearing was to take place.

Consequently, during today’s meeting the Committee members agreed unanimously to support the passage of the Senate version of the bill without amendment. From here, the bill will go to the floor of the House for a full vote, most likely in the next week or two.

Once the bill passes in the House, it will go straight to the President’s desk to be signed into law and implemented. At that point, it will be up to activists to convince President Obama to fully utilize this public mandate for action.

“I’m very pleased that this important, bipartisan legislation will be moving to the House floor,” Rep. Jim McGovern (D-MA), an original cosponsor of the bill, said. “It is crucial that the United States commit to a proactive strategy to help bring this conflict to an end and to strengthen humanitarian assistance.”

The unanimous decision by the Foreign Affairs Committee to pass the the bill was a major victory and another step toward an end to LRA atrocities and toward lasting peace in northern Uganda.  As emphasized by Rep. Ed Royce (R-CA), former Africa subcommittee chairman and an original cosponsor of the bill, “LRA leader Joseph Kony is driving this crisis.  Ensuring United States leadership in ending his reign of terror is the goal of this legislation, and the many Americans who have backed it. Kony must be stopped.”

Checklist

Today’s victory reflects a consensus within Congress and amongst hundreds of thousands of Americans that forging a more effective response to LRA violence necessitates increased US engagement and leadership. As we look forward to the bill’s passage in the House and it’s movement to the President’s desk, we will continue to strongly reiterated that message and amplify the voices of those whose lives have been devastated by Joseph Kony’s campaign of violence.

Our deepest thanks to the thousands of you who have called, written, and met with your Representatives over the past few months and to the 5,500 people who signed the petition to Foreign Affairs Committee leaders over the course of just four days.

Today is further evidence of what our committed voices can accomplish together—and there is certainly much more to accomplish!

Well done, everyone.

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April 29, 2010
Category: Homepage, Other Important Stuff, The Office | Tags: , , , , | Contributor: Invisible Children

Facebook creeps on you

The NYT article below explains Facebook’s Privacy Changes well, even if it gives Facebook more credit than it prob deserves. This site tells you which switches you need to flip in order to keep your personal info as private as possible, aside from deleting your Facebook account altogether.

-Azy

From The New York Times:

This week, Facebook introduced the “open graph,” a giant expansion of the “social graph” concept on which Facebook is built. The word “open” alone should be a tip-off that there are significant new privacy issues to weigh.

In the open graph, Facebook sees us as connected not just to other people – our friends — on Facebook, but to myriad things all over the Web. These things could be favorite bands, news outlets or restaurants.

It is a potentially powerful idea – Facebook wants to uncover all these interests and predilections and let us share them with our friends, whether we are at Facebook or somewhere else, in ways that could deepen personal connections and help us discover cool and interesting information.

But there is a price paid in privacy. Facebook deems these “connections” to interests and businesses and content to be public information — along with your name, profile picture, gender and friend list. And it intends to make them very public through new “social plugins” and “instant personalization.

If you like the idea of broadcasting which articles, bands and restaurants you like, you are in luck. But if you would rather keep your personal preferences private, beware. The instructions on how to reverse it are below, after the jump.

Soon, Facebook users will be invited to declare “connections” while on other Web sites by using several new Facebook buttons and features, all identified by the Facebook icon, including opportunities to write comments about content on these sites. (Site developers will add them using Facebook’s new social plug-ins.)

If you click a Like button or make a comment, know that you are authorizing Facebook to publish it on your Facebook profile and in your friends’ news feeds. (more…)

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April 28, 2010
Category: Homepage, Inspiration | Tags: , , , | Contributor: Invisible Children

Arundhati Roy is Reminds Us About Life.

“To love. To be loved. To never forget your own insignificance. To never get used to the unspeakable violence and the vulgar disparity of life around you. To seek joy in the saddest places. To pursue beauty to its lair. To never simplify what is complicated or complicate what is simple. To respect strength, never power. Above all, to watch. To try and understand. To never look away. And never, never, to forget.” – Arundhati Roy

<3 Kenny

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April 28, 2010
Category: Homepage, Interesting Contributor: Invisible Children

Does money buy happiness?

At lunch today, Ben asked for sake of argument: ’should our culture establish an economic norm where anyone in excess of that norm should be looked down upon?’ i.e. should we look down on the opulent and super rich as a society instead of idolizing them? (we love getting into the philosophical questions at work)

And ensued a conversation about money and it’s relationship to happiness.  I found the article below, from Newsweek, and wanted to post it.  Enjoy.   – JJ

All in all, it was probably a mistake to look for the answer to the eternal question—”Does money buy happiness?”—from people who practice what’s called the dismal science. For when economists tackled the question, they started from the observation that when people put something up for sale they try to get as much for it as they can, and when people buy something they try to pay as little for it as they can. Both sides in the transaction, the economists noticed, are therefore behaving as if they would be more satisfied (happier, dare we say) if they wound up receiving more money (the seller) or holding on to more money (the buyer). Hence, more money must be better than less, and the only way more of something can be better than less of it is if it brings you greater contentment. The economists’ conclusion: the more money you have, the happier you must be.

Depressed debutantes, suicidal CEOs, miserable magnates and other unhappy rich folks aren’t the only ones giving the lie to this. “Psychologists have spent decades studying the relation between wealth and happiness,” writes Harvard University psychologist Daniel Gilbert in his best-selling “Stumbling on Happiness,” “and they have generally concluded that wealth increases human happiness when it lifts people out of abject poverty and into the middle class but that it does little to increase happiness thereafter.”

That flies in the face of intuition, not to mention economic theory. According to standard economics, the most important commodity you can buy with additional wealth is choice. If you have $20 in your pocket, you can decide between steak and peanut butter for dinner, but if you have only $1 you’d better hope you already have a jar of jelly at home. Additional wealth also lets you satisfy additional needs and wants, and the more of those you satisfy the happier you are supposed to be.

The trouble is, choice is not all it’s cracked up to be. Studies show that people like selecting from among maybe half a dozen kinds of pasta at the grocery store but find 27 choices overwhelming, leaving them chronically on edge that they could have chosen a better one than they did. And wants, which are nice to be able to afford, have a bad habit of becoming needs (iPod, anyone?), of which an advertising- and media-saturated culture create endless numbers. Satisfying needs brings less emotional well-being than satisfying wants.

The nonlinear nature of how much happiness money can buy—lots more happiness when it moves you out of penury and into middle-class comfort, hardly any more when it lifts you from millionaire to decamillionaire—comes through clearly in global surveys that ask people how content they feel with their lives. In a typical survey people are asked to rank their sense of well-being or happiness on a scale of 1 to 7, where 1 means “not at all satisfied with my life” and 7 means “completely satisfied.” Of the American multimillionaires who responded, the average happiness score was 5.8. Homeless people in Calcutta came in at 2.9. But before you assume that money does buy happiness after all, consider who else rated themselves around 5.8: the Inuit of northern Greenland, who do not exactly lead a life of luxury, and the cattle-herding Masai of Kenya, whose dung huts have no electricity or running water. And proving Gilbert’s point about money buying happiness only when it lifts you out of abject poverty, slum dwellers in Calcutta—one economic rung above the homeless—rate themselves at 4.6.

Studies tracking changes in a population’s reported level of happiness over time have also dealt a death blow to the money-buys-happiness claim. Since World War II the gross domestic product per capita has tripled in the United States. But people’s sense of well-being, as measured by surveys asking some variation of “Overall, how satisfied are you with your life?,” has barely budged. Japan has had an even more meteoric rise in GDP per capita since its postwar misery, but measures of national happiness have been flat, as they have also been in Western Europe during its long postwar boom, according to social psychologist Ruut Veenhoven of Erasmus University in Rotterdam. A 2004 analysis of more than 150 studies on wealth and happiness concluded that “economic indicators have glaring shortcomings” as approximations of well-being across nations, wrote Ed Diener of the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, and Martin E. P. Seligman of the University of Pennsylvania. “Although economic output has risen steeply over the past decades, there has been no rise in life satisfaction … and there has been a substantial increase in depression and distrust.”

That’s partly because in an expanding economy, in which former luxuries such as washing machines become necessities, the newly affluent don’t feel the same joy in having a machine do the laundry that their grandparents, suddenly freed from washboards, did. They just take the Maytag for granted. “Americans who earn $50,000 per year are much happier than those who earn $10,000 per year,” writes Gilbert, “but Americans who earn $5 million per year are not much happier than those who earn $100,000 per year.” Another reason is that an expanding paycheck, especially in an expanding economy, produces expanding aspirations and a sense that there is always one more cool thing out there that you absolutely have to have. “Economic success falls short as a measure of well-being, in part because materialism can negatively influence well-being,” Diener and Seligman conclude.

If money doesn’t buy happiness, what does? Grandma was right when she told you to value health and friends, not money and stuff. Or as Diener and Seligman put it, once your basic needs are met “differences in well-being are less frequently due to income, and are more frequently due to factors such as social relationships and enjoyment at work.” Other researchers add fulfillment, a sense that life has meaning, belonging to civic and other groups, and living in a democracy that respects individual rights and the rule of law. If a nation wants to increase its population’s sense of well-being, says Veenhoven, it should make “less investment in economic growth and more in policies that promote good governance, liberties, democracy, trust and public safety.”

(Curiously, although money doesn’t buy happiness, happiness can buy money. Young people who describe themselves as happy typically earn higher incomes, years later, than those who said they were unhappy. It seems that a sense of well-being can make you more productive and more likely to show initiative and other traits that lead to a higher income. Contented people are also more likely to marry and stay married, as well as to be healthy, both of which increase happiness.)

If more money doesn’t buy more happiness, then the behavior of most Americans looks downright insane, as we work harder and longer, decade after decade, to fatten our W-2s. But what is insane for an individual is crucial for a national economy—that is, ever more growth and consumption. Gilbert again: “Economies can blossom and grow only if people are deluded into believing that the production of wealth will make them happy … Economies thrive when individuals strive, but because individuals will strive only for their own happiness, it is essential that they mistakenly believe that producing and consuming are routes to personal well-being.” In other words, if you want to do your part for your country’s economy, forget all of the above about money not buying happiness.

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April 28, 2010

Foreign Policy: Where sustainable food and ending global hunger conflict

This article takes an angle that isn’t often heard these days. It argues that the organic, local food revolution is not everything that it is cracked up to be. It also argues that the trend might be hindering the West’s response to global hunger.

Definitely read this article. Even if you don’t agree with its conclusions, it will challenge your assumptions. For a real brawl, read the comments on the article at FP’s site. Apparently some people feel strongly about the issue.

-Azy

From Foreign Policy, Robert Paalberg:

Stop obsessing about arugula. Your “sustainable” mantra — organic, local, and slow — is no recipe for saving the world’s hungry millions.

From Whole Foods recyclable cloth bags to Michelle Obama’s organic White House garden, modern eco-foodies are full of good intentions. We want to save the planet. Help local farmers. Fight climate change — and childhood obesity, too. But though it’s certainly a good thing to be thinking about global welfare while chopping our certified organic onions, the hope that we can help others by changing our shopping and eating habits is being wildly oversold to Western consumers. Food has become an elite preoccupation in the West, ironically, just as the most effective ways to address hunger in poor countries have fallen out of fashion.

Helping the world’s poor feed themselves is no longer the rallying cry it once was. Food may be today’s cause célèbre, but in the pampered West, that means trendy causes like making food “sustainable” — in other words, organic, local, and slow. Appealing as that might sound, it is the wrong recipe for helping those who need it the most. Even our understanding of the global food problem is wrong these days, driven too much by the single issue of international prices. In April 2008, when the cost of rice for export had tripled in just six months and wheat reached its highest price in 28 years, a New York Times editorial branded this a “World Food Crisis.” World Bank President Robert Zoellick warned that high food prices would be particularly damaging in poor countries, where “there is no margin for survival.” Now that international rice prices are down 40 percent from their peak and wheat prices have fallen by more than half, we too quickly conclude that the crisis is over. Yet 850 million people in poor countries were chronically undernourished before the 2008 price spike, and the number is even larger now, thanks in part to last year’s global recession. This is the real food crisis we face.

It turns out that food prices on the world market tell us very little about global hunger. International markets for food, like most other international markets, are used most heavily by the well-to-do, who are far from hungry. The majority of truly undernourished people — 62 percent, according to the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization — live in either Africa or South Asia, and most are small farmers or rural landless laborers living in the countryside of Africa and South Asia. They are significantly shielded from global price fluctuations both by the trade policies of their own governments and by poor roads and infrastructure. In Africa, more than 70 percent of rural households are cut off from the closest urban markets because, for instance, they live more than a 30-minute walk from the nearest all-weather road.

Poverty — caused by the low income productivity of farmers’ labor — is the primary source of hunger in Africa, and the problem is only getting worse. The number of “food insecure” people in Africa (those consuming less than 2,100 calories a day) will increase 30 percent over the next decade without significant reforms, to 645 million, the U.S. Agriculture Department projects.

What’s so tragic about this is that we know from experience how to fix the problem. Wherever the rural poor have gained access to improved roads, modern seeds, less expensive fertilizer, electrical power, and better schools and clinics, their productivity and their income have increased. But recent efforts to deliver such essentials have been undercut by deeply misguided (if sometimes well-meaning) advocacy against agricultural modernization and foreign aid.

Read the rest of the article here.

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April 28, 2010
Category: Homepage, Interesting, The Office | Tags: , , , , | Contributor: Invisible Children

Riveting trivia

Lapham Quarterly’s charts and graph are full of useful trivia. Oxymoron? Certainly not.

Literature that was written from prison.

Brilliant people who dropped out of college.

Actual laws from around the United States.

The amount of money that changes hands in the drug trade, human trafficking, and arms dealing.

The list below is somewhat macabre, but too interesting to ignore. I am especially intrigued by the last words of Che and Ned Kelly.

-Azy

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April 28, 2010
Category: Homepage, Music | Tags: , , , , | Contributor: Invisible Children

Download Free eBay Application & Help The Plain White Tees Raise Money For Invisible Children

The Plain White T’s and Zuujit™ are teaming up to make a difference by donating $1 to the Invisible Children charity for every person based in the U.S. that downloads the Zuujit iPhone application to their iPhone, iPod Touch, or iPad between Wednesday, April 28th at 12:00AM PST and Thursday, April 29th at 11:59PM PST. Zuujit™ will donate up to $5,000, but if downloads go over 20,000, they will donate an additional $5,000 to this wonderful cause. Help this very worthy cause and try a cool, free iPhone app in the process.
Here’s how:

  1. Go to the iTunes app store and download Zuujit
  2. Download the application to your iPhone, iPod Touch, or iPad.
  3. Thank you for trying the Zuujit App, and for your support towards Invisible Children.
  4. Any download of the Zuujit application during the dates above will result in a donation to Invisible Children.

Download and tell a friend!!

Thanks,

Kenny

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April 28, 2010
Category: Homepage, Interesting, The Office | Tags: , , , , , | Contributor: Invisible Children

One man’s vigilante mission to kill Kony

What the……?

Actually, let’s start with a disclaimer: Invisible Children does not in any way endorse this man’s actions or methods.

Now that that’s settled, we can say ‘what the….?’ In brief, this American preacher is leading a militia of Sudanese and Ugandans with the sole aim of killing Joseph Kony. He claims that this is his God-ordained mission.

Make your own judgments about his mission, his methods, and his religion.

To give you an idea of his personality, “he once owned 15 pit bulls.”

-Azy

From Vanity Fair:

It’s two a.m., and we’re barreling down a deeply pocked dirt road in Southern Sudan. In the cool of night, the temperature is nearly 100 degrees. Sam Childers, 46, is behind the wheel of a chrome-tinted Mitsubishi truck. Christian rock blares on the speakers. He has a Bible on the dash and a shotgun that he calls his “widow-maker” leaning against his left knee. His top sergeant, Santino Deng, 34, a Dinka tribesman with an anthracite complexion and radiant black eyes, sits in the passenger seat, an AK-47 across his lap. I sit in the back. Since leaving the town of Mundri, headed toward the Congolese border, we’ve been driving for two bone-jarring days on roads littered with the charred wrecks of armored vehicles and fuel tankers, remnants of battles past. A truck follows close behind, carrying 15 men from the small militia group under Childers’s personal command. The convoy is on its way to a Sudanese town called Maridi. In the area we’re passing through, just hours ago soldiers from the Lord’s Resistance Army (L.R.A.) hacked 15 villagers to death with machetes, then disappeared into the bush. Intelligence sources from the Sudan People’s Liberation Army—the ragtag military wing of the breakaway government of Southern Sudan—have indicated that elements of the L.R.A. are now headed to Maridi. Childers wants to intercept them, and kill their leader.

The unflappable Ugandan driving the militia truck wears a torn white pro-life T-shirt emblazoned with a picture of a fetus, a gift from Childers. Most members of his militia are born-again Christians whom Childers has baptized himself. Childers switches from Christian rock to Aerosmith’s “Livin’ on the Edge,” turning up the volume. He’s getting close to his prey. “Let’s do this,” he says. To remove the L.R.A.’s cover, villagers have set fire to the elephant grass on either side of the road. Behind us, the past disappears in a cloud of dust. Ahead, the headlights peer down a fiery tunnel. Sergeant Deng, in the passenger seat, turns around to me and says, “God’s assassins.”

Sam Childers is known in these parts, and back home in Pennsylvania, simply as the Reverend Sam. He is not your typical evangelical Christian missionary, nor, as a white American, is he your typical African warlord. Childers is a former drug dealer and outlaw biker, with tired eyes framed by grizzly muttonchops and a walrus mustache. He claims divine justification for what he does. In firefights, he says, God sometimes tells him when to shoot. He speaks country-singer American, with plenty of grit, and he recounts, over and over, the same stories from his bar-brawling days. He lifts weights, favors army fatigues, and keeps a .44 Magnum tucked in the small of his back. Harley tattoos stretch down his thick arms, and “Freedom Fighter” is airbrushed on the back of his truck. He once owned 15 pit bulls. He seems suited more to bending steel in a motorcycle shop than to saving souls in Sudanese villages.

In 1992, Childers was born again, having promised his wife he would come to Jesus if God granted them a child. A child was born. Leaving behind a life of drugs and crime, Childers set up a hardscrabble church in rural Pennsylvania. In 1998 he used his meager savings to take his first missionary trip to Sudan. He ended up near the border with Uganda, where a complicated and bloody conflict—one of Africa’s so-called forgotten wars—has been raging since 1987. At the center of the fighting is the Lord’s Resistance Army, a guerrilla group led by a Ugandan named Joseph Kony. The L.R.A.’s stated goal is to overthrow the Ugandan government and install a theocratic state based on the Ten Commandments. That effort has entailed systematically ignoring at least one of the commandments, Thou Shalt Not Kill. Most of the others have been breached as well. This forgotten war is the continent’s longest running. It spills across the border from Uganda into Southern Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo as the L.R.A. scours the region for conscripts and supplies.

Read the rest of this insane story here.

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