Archive for the ‘Give Page’ Category

China Prevents Activist From Accepting Nobel Prize

Friday, December 10th, 2010

By cracking down harshly on government reformers, China is drawing international attention to the very activists it’s trying to silence.

  • Today’s Nobel Peace Prize award ceremony was missing one popular award-winner: Chinese political reformist Liu Xiaobo. He is being held in a Chinese prison for proposing changes to the communist government there.
  • China treats Liu as an enemy of the state, and accuses nations that support him of creating unnecessary conflict between China and the Western world. They have responded by ending trade talks with Norway, where the prize ceremony was held.
  • When prizes winners are unable to attend the ceremony, a family member is allowed to accept the prize on their behalf. But Liu’s wife, Liu Xia, has been under house arrest since October.

Facts & Figures

  • The last time a Nobel Peace Prize winner did not claim his award was when Hitler prevented Carl von Ozzietzky (a pacifist) from accepting the prize in 1936
  • Seventeen other nations joined China in boycotting the event – most of them non-democratic
  • Liu is currently serving his fourth term in prison – 11 years for the alleged crime of sedition (which is any act or speech that is intended to provoke rebellion in a country)

Best Quote

“[As a world power, China] should become used to being debated and criticized.” – Thorbjoern Jagland, Chairman of the Norwegian Nobel Committee

Facebook Founders Pledge To Give Away Most Of Their Assets

Thursday, December 9th, 2010

Why wait until you’re dead to make your mark on the world?

  • Mark Zuckerberg and Facebook co-founder Dustin Moskovitz are the latest billionaires to sign on to “The Giving Pledge.” They’re part of a growing number of wealthy individuals choosing to get involved in philanthropy while they’re still young.
  • The Giving Pledge was thought up by Warren Buffet and Bill Gates, who are on a joint mission to get other billionaires to donate the majority of their wealth to charity before they die.
  • Internet and technology billionaires like Gates and Zuckerberg have a special motivation to give – they’ve already built their wealth by trying to change the world.

Facts & Figures

  • More than 50 billionaires have signed onto the pledge so far
  • In 2008, donations in the U.S. totaled $315 billion; in 2009, that number fell to $303.75 billion
  • Zuckerberg recently pledged $100 million in donations to Newark public schools

Best Quote

“Wealth is an advantage, but it also is frankly a responsibility.” – Nicolas Berggruen, Investor, recently signed on to The Giving Pledge

Jumo Picks Up Where Facebook’s “Causes” Left Off

Monday, December 6th, 2010

Jumo.com wants to “do what Yelp did for restaurants.” But do people want to connect with nonprofits as badly as they want to eat tasty food?

  • Chris Hughes, one of Facebook’s founding fathers (and if you watch the movie, they’re alllll fathers), has started a new kind of social networking site all about connecting people to the issues they care about.
  • Jumo indexes charities, projects, and causes to help users learn about them. It also gives charities big and small easier access to potential supporters.
  • Users sign up with their Facebook account, so sharing donation announcements and favorite causes/ organizations with friends is easy. The site also has some familiar Facebooky features – users can share and comment on pages, and see which organizations their friends like.

Facts & Figures

  • Hughes was the Chief Digital Organizer for Obama’s presidential campaign in 2008
  • Only 9% of the $300 billion in donations in 2009 were submitted online
  • Jumo launched with over 3,000 issues and organizations on the site

Best Quote

“It’s still not clear whether or not followers translate to volunteers and donors. But people that are more engaged with nonprofits are most likely to become a donor or support them in another way.” – Steve MacLaughlin, Director of Internet Solutions at BlackBaud, a tech consultancy serving nonprofits

Monsters of Entrepreneurship: Peter Thomas Talks About Giving Back at the Student Entrepreneur Awards

Friday, December 3rd, 2010

We found Peter Thomas hanging around at the Global Student Entrepreneur Awards while we were at the New York Stock Exchange this October. He’s been supporting young people with big ideas for almost a quarter century, and he was happy to take a minute to tell us about the hows and whys of giving back.

Watch the oh-ficial GSEA 2010 recap video here. To see all our GSEA interviews, click here.

Budget Cuts Kill Hope For Arizona Transplant Patients

Friday, December 3rd, 2010

To help balance budgets, most states are trimming Medicaid benefits, but so far none have opted for denying people lifesaving transplants. That is, until now.

  • In October, Arizona stopped funding organ transplants for low-income patients relying on Medicaid (the state-funded healthcare program).
  • Transplants cost hundreds of thousands of dollars, but they’re the only hope of survival for many people. Doctors say these cuts are basically a death sentence for these patients, many of whom are already on a waiting list to receive an organ.
  • Some politicians are trying to reverse the situation, but the governor of Arizona, Republican Jan Brewer, blamed “Obamacare” (referring to the newly passed health care bill) for the cuts. Actually, Arizona voted to approve the measure before the national health care bill was signed into law.

Facts & Figures

  • The cuts affect roughly 100 people currently waiting for a transplant
  • Lung transplants, certain liver transplants, and some bone marrow and pancreas transplants will be discontinued, saving the state about $4.5 million
  • Private donors are now stepping in to help patients fund their operations

Best Quote

“I know times are tight and cuts are needed, but you can’t cut human lives. You just can’t do that.” –  Flor Felix, wife of denied liver transplant patient Francisco Felix

No Fracking Way

Tuesday, November 30th, 2010

Shooting chemicals into New York State’s groundwater to capture an unsustainable energy source? Not in my backyard.

  • New York State is days away from approving a temporary ban (moratorium) on high-volume hydraulic fracturing (a.k.a. “fracking”).
  • Fracking (outside the parlance of Battlestar Galactica) is a method of drilling for natural gas trapped beneath shale rock. Water, chemicals, and sand are blasted into the rock until it gives, then the gas is collected.
  • Environmental groups, and now New York State legislators, are concerned about shooting harmful chemicals into the state’s water supply. Gas industry people disagree.

Facts & Figures

  • Natural gas trapped under the Marcellus Shale – a rock formation spanning NY, PA, OH, and WV – could meet U.S. gas demand for more than 10 years
  • The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency will release a report about fracking in 2012
  • The moratorium will go into effect when Governor Paterson signs it before the end of this year

Best Quote

“Right now, we think any time-out is a good one. The gas isn’t going anywhere.” – Craig Michaels, Watershed Program Director at

Microfinance Hits A Wall In India

Wednesday, November 24th, 2010

The great microcredit experiment in India was a wild success… but now it’s on the verge of collapsing entirely.

  • Politicians in India are accusing microfinance institutions of taking advantage of poor borrowers, and encouraging borrowers not to pay back their loans.
  • Microcredit is one of the only ways that poor people around the world can get loans to start small businesses. And in India, microfinance has become a booming industry in recent years.
  • Unfortunately, many people who receive microloans won’t be able to pay them back. So the loans tend to be really small, and their interest rates are really high. That means that entrepreneurs who do pay back their loans cover the cost of those who don’t pay.

Facts & Figures

  • Indian banks have about $4 billion tied up in the microfinance industry
  • In the past few weeks, less than 10% of borrowers made loan payments
  • SKS Microfinance charges a 24% interest rate on its microloans

Best Quote

“The money lender lives in the community. At least you can burn down his house. With these companies, it is loot and scoot.” – Reddy Subrahmanyam, Senior Official of the Indian Government

U.S. To Build World’s Largest Solar-Power Plant

Wednesday, October 27th, 2010

China may be in the lead when it comes to investing in renewable energy, but the U.S. is about to take a 1,000 megawatt leap.

  • The Obama administration just approved a permit allowing a $6 billion solar thermal plant to be built on federal land in a California desert.
  • Solar thermal energy production isn’t the same as photovoltaic solar panels. The plant works by using mirrors to direct sunlight into a tube, where its heat generates steam and moves turbines.
  • The company building the plant, Solar Trust of America, intends to start construction immediately to take advantage of government incentives for renewable energy projects before the year ends.

Facts & Figures

  • This plant, along with 8 others recently approved by the CA Energy Commission, will produce enough power to sustain 800,000 homes.
  • CA law requires all state utilities generate 1/3 of their power from renewable energy by 2020.
  • Solar Trust estimates that this project alone will create 7,600 jobs.

Kiva Partners With Accion To Microlend In The U.S.

Monday, October 25th, 2010

Poor entrepreneurs are everywhere, so why limit U.S.-based microfinance operations to overseas customers?

  • Kiva.org, an online nonprofit that helps anyone make microloans to foreign businesses via local institutions, is expanding its scope to include entrepreneurs in the United States.
  • Through a partnership with Accion Texas-Louisiana, Kiva will start to offer microloans to new and existing business owners in those states. Kiva’s model is a kind of “crowdfunding,” which allows lots of small donors to make a big impact.
  • Microfinance helps poor entrepreneurs get access to loans. These individuals are usually seen as too risky for traditional bank loans, so microloans can greatly increase their chances of success.

Facts & Figures

  • Accion is the third U.S. microfinance institution Kiva has partnered with since October 2009.
  • Less than 1% of the borrowers featured on Kiva’s website are based in the U.S.
  • The average U.S. microloan is about $7,000.

Best Quote

“Awareness of microfinance is really low here.” – Premal Shah, President of Kiva

Chicken Gas Chambers For Humanity

Friday, October 22nd, 2010

If nobody wants to be reminded that their chicken was slaughtered before arriving in the supermarket, then how can chicken producers advertise their new “humane” slaughtering process?

  • Your typical chicken arrives at the slaughterhouse on a truck. It’s plucked from its cage and hung upside-down with its legs shackled to a rail that takes it first to an electrical stunner, and then to a machine that slits its throat and bleeds it to death.
  • But electrical stunners aren’t perfect, and the ethics of hanging already-stressed live chickens upside-down for the last minutes of their lives are sketchy. So some producers are starting to use a gas-based alternative to the electrical stunner.
  • You can call it “controlled atmosphere stunning,” “sedation stunning,” or “slow induction anesthesia,” but the new method uses a carbon dioxide gas chamber to knock the birds out before they’re slaughtered, vastly reducing the stress, pain, and suffering that come with traditional methods.

Facts & Figures

  • Bell & Evans, one of the companies using the new gas-stunning method, “processes” 200,000 chickens a week.
  • Tyson Foods, which uses electrical stunners, slaughters more than 1 million chickens per week.
  • Companies in Britain and Nebraska that already use “controlled atmosphere stunning” tend not to advertise this fact on their product packaging.

Best Quote

“People don’t want to know too much. It’s hard to sell humane killing as a concept.” – Marc Cooper, Senior Scientific Manager in the Farm Animals Department of the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, London