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You asked for it... Young adult friends, welcome to the Dog Days of Summer edition of You asked for it ..., your more or less monthly email from the New Community Project. First, a correction. In the June edition, I left a bunch of zeros off a number. The number of plastic water bottles thrown away in the US every day is 40,000,000 (40 million), not 40,000 (40 thousand), as stated in the Enviro Fact. At least I wasn't exaggerating... The main event of this edition is an excerpt from an article in the Chicago Tribune featuring a gas station just a 20-minute bike ride from my house. Amazingly for mainstream media, the article calculates the true cost of a gallon of gasoline ($11 for Middle East oil!!) and connects the frenzied gas-addicted lives of US suburbanites with the poverty of people next door to oil rigs in Nigeria, where a good chunk of our oil originates. I'll attach a pdf of the whole article, but paste in the excerpt below. Before getting to the article: Thanks for tuning in--and welcome new readers from the CoB National Youth Conference! Keep in touch. Keep the faith. Keep on provoking your world to be better--they'll get the message sooner or later....hopefully before it's too late. David 2007 Learning Tours
Some folks get college credit for these trips. Everyone gets life-experience credit. Enviro fact: How many cell phones (with their toxic components) do US'ers throw away every year? 100,000,000 (counted my zeroes this time!) [ Made to Break , Giles Slade] Justice Fact: Young adults spend 10 percent of their income per year on cell phones, down-loading ringtones, etc.--or about $2000. Number of the world's people who live on less than $2000 per year: 4 billion. Faith Fact: "Call, and I will answer you." -God, Job 14:15 (roaming charges don't apply...) By Paul Salopek What are the hidden costs of America 's imported oil? The answer is complex. It may ultimately be unknowable. But this hasn't daunted the likes of Milton Copulos. Chapter 2 The lot occupied by the South Elgin Marathon-- Kane County parcel No. 0636200008--first entered recorded history in 1836. *** Felicia, Beatrice and Comfort were running through Itak Abasi. Breathless. Their bare feet drummed the Nigerian village's sandy alleyways. In their small hands they clutched packets of rehydration salts. *** *** *** Almost every night, Sunday Jeremiah climbs into a motorized open boat and confronts the monster crosscurrents at the mouth of the Akwa Ibom River . *** *** *** |
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