Sunday, January 13, 2008

CARE USA Says Thanks

I have exciting news to share!

In 2007, you helped us educate Congress and President Bush about HIV and AIDS, and the earmark that requires one-third of all global HIV prevention funding to be spent on abstinence-until-marriage programs. This one-size-fits-all restriction ignores the daily reality of millions of women and weakens CARE's ability to help vulnerable people avoid HIV infection.

You played an important role by drawing attention to this issue and encouraging your representatives to support legislation to overturn this flawed policy.

On December 26, President Bush approved a provision that gives the president the flexibility to support effective HIV prevention programming and to ignore the abstinence-until-marriage restriction.

This is a significant victory and we want to thank you. Your voice made a difference.

While this is a step forward, we're not done yet. We will need your support later this year when Congress considers current legislation regarding HIV and AIDS. Help us hold Congress accountable for a strong new law that addresses the social, economic and cultural reasons that make people, especially women, vulnerable to HIV.

As a member of the CARE Action Network, you understand the importance of reaching out to legislators during critical times throughout the year to make your voice heard in Washington. Your vital outreach helps educate policymakers and the public about problems facing the world's poor and helps CARE communicate effective solutions that can give hope and health to millions.

We look forward to continuing to work with you in 2008. Together, we can raise our voices in support of policies that help people lift themselves out of poverty and claim a brighter future for their families.

Best wishes for a happy new year! We'll stay in touch.

Sincerely,

Giulia McPherson
Legislative Communications Coordinator
CARE USA

Thursday, January 10, 2008

Port Phillip Bay Cyber Action

Dear friends

At the beginning of February dredging will begin at Port Phillip Bay (Melbourne, Australia) by Dutch company Royal Boskalis Westminster, putting marine life in the bay at risk.

The southern waters of Australia, including Port Phillip Bay, have the highest diversity of marine species anywhere in the world.There are 5,000 species in the bay, 90% occur nowhere else on Earth and many have never been fully studied.
Blue Wedges, who are taking on the developers in a Federal court case to be heard on 10 January 2008, and Friends of the Earth Melbourne need your support.

Please visit our website at http://www.foei.org/en/get-involved/take-action/port-phillip-bay to send an email to Federal Environment Minister, Peter Garrett (ex lead singer of environmental rock band Midnight Oil), who approved the project in late December 2007.
It only takes 2 minutes and could help put a stop to this damaging project.
Please forward this message to your contacts and ask them to take action too.

Thanks for your support

Debra Broughton
Friends of the Earth International

Friday, December 21, 2007

Close Guantanamo - Action

David Hicks is due for release from Adelaide's Yatala Labour Prison next week on 29 December, but does not know whether he will be subject to a control order. We believe control orders violate human rights, and that he must be allowed to return to a normal life.

As we approach the sixth anniversary of the Guantanamo Bay detention centre on 11 January, there are still 290 men detained there without charge.

We are marking the anniversary with a global day of action. Join us outside the U.S. Consulate in Sydney's Martin Place at 8am on Friday 11 January 2008. Meet our new National Director, members and staff as we call for the U.S. to immediately shut down Guantanamo Bay. Take part in the largest orange jumpsuit action in Australia.

Check out all the action info at the link

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Exciting, defining times for women

Exciting, defining times for women
Tracee Hutchison


IT'S HARD to identify the exact moment I knew Australia was
experiencing a seismic shift in identity and direction over this past
week. There have, after all, been so many monumental occurrences to
choose from, it seems impossible to rank or compare them.

John Howard's comeuppance. Julia Gillard's sustained grace in the
tally room. Maxine McKew's unbridled euphoria as she resisted the
temptation to gloat. And Peter Costello's smug exit. All of it gold.

But if I had to nominate a flashpoint when I felt my body jolt upright
with exultant anticipation and gushing love of country, it actually
came courtesy of the first lady-elect, Therese Rein.

When Kevin Rudd walked on stage to claim his place as Australia's 26th
prime minister, the woman he calls his life partner stood with her
hand in his beside him, and shimmied. She leant forward and, with a
cheeky glint in her eye, shook her shoulders from side to side and
shimmied. And it was glorious.

If ever there was an image to differentiate the old from the new on
election night, it was Therese Rein's shimmy. As surprising as the
revelation that I've placed a shimmy above Australia electing its
first female deputy prime minister and Maxine McKew's "in heaven no
one's blind" moment might be, the shimmy said it all.

It was sassy and confident and delicious. And 100% woman. Suddenly we
had a first couple who were smart, successful AND sexy. It was magnificent.

And it set the tone for how the rest of the week unravelled. The new
Opposition crumbled and the Government-elect unveiled its new line-up,
complete with a posse of impressive, talented women who would help run
the country.

After too many years of twin-sets and pearls in the federal
government, Australia finally has a group of governing female MPs who
reflect the status of women and the diversity of our lives in
contemporary Australia.

Finally, we have a group of women in the highest office in the land
who don't make me feel like a freak.

Women who are the daughters of migrants, women who are single and/or
childless, openly gay, unmarried with children, married with children
but who haven't taken the surname of their husbands and others who have.

Our first couple will be known as the Prime Minister and Ms Rein. Oh,
for the moment our PM is name-tagged Kevin Rein on an overseas trip.

It is significant and noteworthy that half the women Kevin Rudd has
given high-profile cabinet and portfolio responsibilities to are
childless and/or unmarried – the Deputy Prime Minister to name just
one. It is a great moment for generational change and validates the
often difficult choices so many of us have made to pursue our careers.
And it is so very welcome.

Finally, Julia Gillard gets the long last laugh over those appalling
misogynist attacks on her character, her life choices, her hairdo, her
voice and her wardrobe – that undermined so many other women in the
process – as Deputy Prime Minister.

The daughter of working-class Welsh migrants, 46-year-old Gillard came
to Australia in 1966 when she was five.

She'll juggle the massive portfolios of education, employment and
workplace relations. And become acting Prime Minister later this month
when Rudd is in Bali for climate change talks. So much for the empty
fruit bowl barbs; her plate looks pretty full to me.

There are many other great stories in Labor's new team of leading
women: 37-year-old Tanya Plibersek, the Minister for Housing and the
Status of Women, 40-year-old Nicola Roxon, the Minister for Health and
Ageing, and 39-year-old Senator Penny Wong, the Minister for Climate
Change and Water – the first Asian-born female MP and openly gay – are
just a few.

Look out for 30-year-old Kate Ellis, the new Minister for Youth and
Sport. She's young. And it's exciting. As is the parliamentary debut
of Maxine McKew, who – after tipping out PM Howard in Bennelong –
becomes the parliamentary secretary to PM Rudd. Then there is Labor
veteran and former deputy leader Jenny Macklin, the new Minister for
Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs.

These are exciting and defining times in Australian political life and
in our nation's history. And they are exciting and defining times for
Australian women. We are finally at the table of power in this country
and it's been a long time coming.

Let's all get down and shimmy!
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Tracee Hutchison is a Melbourne writer and broadcaster.