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Where's the Social Web Revolution for Abused Women and Starving Children? (Boiling Frog Syndrome)

RT @SayNO_UNiTE: RT @safeworld4women: YOU can support #IVAWA (International Violence Against Women Act) http://is.gd/7DXw5
from UNIFEM
New Blog Post: #Peacekeeping -- International Forum Helps Turn Talk into Action http://bit.ly/cPTDEY
from DipNote
I posted 14 photos on Facebook in the album "UNIC Memorials for Haiti Earthquake" http://bit.ly/aVrjeG
from UN


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Visitor:
8 Feb 1:29pm
Miiiika rocks.
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Visitor:
8 Feb 12:23pm
güzel sözler [1]
[1] http://www.asksozlerim.com
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Visitor:
8 Feb 12:21pm
bu sitelerde güzel sözler ve aşk sözleri bulabilir e-okul sistemi
hakkında yardım alabilirsini
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Visitor:
6 Feb 10:26pm
The ICC is doing heroic work. I am disappointed in the USA for not yet
joining.
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Visitor:
1 Feb 3:39pm
We are shipowners and we like to offer our vessel to the responsible agency
for contracting vessels
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Visitor:
26 Jan 1:15pm
WHo is this idiot? Tom Miller, president and CEO of the United Nations
Association of the United Sta
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Visitor:
26 Jan 4:16am
Haiti,Haiti, world waves, there are a survivalsituation, water, fire(energy),
shelter(whetherdefence
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Visitor:
25 Jan 10:17am
We have to keep Haiti in the news
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Visitor:
24 Jan 1:57pm
I think only good buildings will help them to prevent the disaster
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Visitor:
23 Jan 11:15am
Como podemos Ayudarsi El personal de las Naciones Unidas o la Fundación no
correso respoden los
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Final Durban Thoughts
John Boonstra - April 24, 2009 - 2:06 pm
Haiti Earthquake
Mark Leon Goldberg - January 12, 2010 - 5:52 pm
One Laptop Per Child - The Dream is Over
Alanna Shaikh - September 9, 2009 - 8:06 am
The Coup Caucus
Mark Leon Goldberg - July 7, 2009 - 11:05 am








DISPATCH TWEETS






Peter Daou - June 20, 2009 - 12:45 pm
It's worth noting that with all this triumphant talk about the Twitter revolution in Iran - especially when it's about a lesser-of-two-evils candidate - we can't summon a fraction of the energy and passion to save abused, raped and battered women across the globe. Nor can we muster the same attention and will to deal with the plight of children who are dying of hunger, deprived of the bare necessities of life.
Here are the brutal facts:
* There are four million new hungry people every week, over a billion total. Every day, almost 16,000 children die from hunger-related causes - one child every five seconds.
* Millions of women and girls (our mothers, sisters and daughters) endure one or more of the following: intimate partner violence; sexual abuse by non-intimate partners; trafficking, forced prostitution, exploitation, debt bondage, sex selective abortion, female infanticide, and rape.
Perhaps it's boiling frog syndrome, the fact that global hunger and women's rights are ongoing tragedies/travesties without sudden spikes of interest. Or perhaps it's the futility of confronting these intractable issues, a sense that we're powerless to change such pervasive problems.
That's not to say that there aren't many courageous and dedicated people working to alleviate hunger and protect women's rights. There are. But where is the massive outrage, the worldwide focus, the grainy images, the Twitter-mania, the color-coded avatars? Most importantly, where is the urgency, the immediacy?
Clearly, something is happening in Iran with technology that signals a new era in global activism. This is the first period in human history when so many individuals, friends and strangers, can speak to one another simultaneously, on equal footing; there's never been a time when ten million people could converse at once, on the same topic, using the same platform.
That also means they can shout and raise the alarm about injustice together. And as we're seeing with CNN, those millions of impassioned people can pressure the media to get on board, further increasing the level of attention.
So why isn't this happening for oppressed and abused women or hungry and starving children, when their aggregate pain and suffering is far greater and the threat to them more severe than to the (brave) Iranian demonstrators? Where's the intense coverage, the excitement over the potential of Twitter and Facebook to alter the course of history?
I'm not calling for less focus on Iran, but more, much more, on the mortal threat so many women and children face.
I'll conclude with a clip from Channel 4 News in the UK, where I was asked to comment on Gordon Brown's statement that because of the Internet, there will be no more Rwandas. My answer: what about Darfur?
Cross-posted on CTN