In:

Intimacy of Life


Every living being is connected intimately, and from this intimacy follows the capacity of identification and as its natural consequences, practice of non-violence .. Now is the time to share with all life on our maltreated earth through the deepening identification with life forms and the greater units, the ecosystems, and Gaia, the fabulous, old planet of ours. ~ Arne Næss

In:

Begin like a seed to sap


So i start again, my journey into social activism, the tug pulls me back to my true form and i hear the sweet sound of that inner voice urging me to precede back into this path, i have strayed from.

Anyone wanna join me.
Start's on the 31st May.

In:

The Lost Generation

Not many years ago, i felt like i was part of a generation lost and impartial to the world around me. A song from Gary Jules captures this perfectly with "Mad World".

But this post is not about that song, instead it's about a video that captured my imagination recently. Life as a young adult, as a youth and a teenager is no different from the challenges faced by the older folks, but our struggles are different. We still have the energy and enthusiasm to make change. They have the experience and the position to enact change. To come together is essential, enough of youth conferences, enough of global forums. It's mostly talk anyway - what is needed is to re-establish the youths dreams of the world and for the experts to make it so. Just like parents doing what they can to protect and nurture their children. The world can do they same. But we need to listen, we need to work together and we need to love.

Just an idea.

Here's the video.

In:

Serious Times

A beautiful song by a Jamacian Artist called Gyptian.

Enjoy

In:

Go back to sleep.

I've been a big fan of "A Perfect Circle" and "Tool" every since i can remember. Lyrics by James Kenan Maynard has always sought to poetically arouse the listener from an unconscious slumber. The Song "Counting Bodies like Sheep to the rhythm of the War Drums." is no exception. In the song one, cannot help but wonder about the ignorance and pessimism of war.

He tries to patronize the listener into going back to sleep, while we count bodies like sheep...

So either go back to sleep or do something.

Lyrics Here

In: ,

The epidemic scale of drug abuse.


I know we don't have much of a drug problem here is Singapore, but i thought you shpould know about the worldwide fight against it. This is major problem and is a huge violation of human rights as it keeps minds numb and pockets empty.

Join the discussion.
Add a comment.
A drug-free world: could we do it?

In 1998, the representatives of governments gathered in New York at the United Nation’s General Assembly’s Special Session on Drugs (UNGASS). The meeting was dominated by the slogan: “A Drug-Free World: We Can Do It”. Governments adopted a 10 years action plan with ambitious targets, including a significant reduction in the demand and supply of drugs. Today a drug-free world seems more distant than ever before: heroin production has doubled, cocaine production has grown by 20%, and the prevalence of illicit drug use has been increasing in almost all countries since 1998.

What is even more appalling is the terrible cost we are paying for unsuccessful drug control efforts: millions of drug users are behind bars and hundreds of thousands of injecting drug users are infected with HIV and Hepatitis C (because goverments are concernd with punitive measures rather than harm reduction). There has been an escalation of violent crime on the streets of our towns because of the drug black market. Corruption has infected law enforcement agencies and political institutions because of the profitability of illegal drugs. In many countries the human rights of people who use drugs are violated not only in the name of drug control, but also in the name of treatment and care: they are too often placed in labor camps, forced detoxifications, and other punitive, inhumane facilities in the name of “drug treatment”. Access to effective forms of drug treatment and Hepatitis C and HIV prevention (for instance opiate substitution treatment or needle and syringe exchange) is very low in most regions of the world. Potential users of such services suffer not only from criminalization but from stigmatisation, discrimination and social exclusion.

High Level UN meeting on drugs: what is at stake?

Recently, governments are reviewing the global drug control efforts of the past ten years. High level government officials from around the world will meet in Vienna from 11 to 12 March, 2009 to draw conclusions and adopt a new Political Declaration. Altough a radical (policy) shift is unlikely (like drug legalization), the new declaration can shape future drug policies to be more responsive to the needs of our communities or something. The document must reflect the need for the respect of human rights of drug users and growers, broader access to harm reduction services and a greater and meaningful involvement of civil society.

Global NGO Forum: the voice of civil society

The Vienna NGO Committee organized a global NGO forum with the purpose of monitoring the implementation of goals set by the United Nations General Assembly Special Session on Drugs in 1998. In July 2008, more than 300 NGOs from all over the world were invited to the Beyond 2008 Forum to discuss three objectives: NGO achievements, NGO involvement, and drug policy principles.

Where can I learn more?

The UNODC has a website where you can find the official documents related to the 1998 UNGASS, the sessions of the Commission on Narcotic Drugs (CND) and the 2009 High Level Segment. Mr. Antonio Maria Costa, the head of the UNODC has his own blog, Costa’s Corner, with his personal views on the international narcotic control system – unfortunately, he does not allow comments.

The World Health Organization (WHO) and the UNAIDS produced many documents in favor of harm reduction and the human rights of people who use drugs.

A number of non-governmental and academic initiatives from all corners of the world are now attempting to articulate the problems of current drug policies on the global and national levels. Their analysis will be made available for to governments and the UN itself. NGOs and researchers have made excellent reports and other papers highlighting the anomalies of the international drug control regime.

The Transnational Institute (TNI), a Dutch drug policy think tank, created a website on the UNGASS review. On this site you can find the key documents of the 1998 UNGASS on drugs, reports on the International Narcotic Control Board (INCB) and NGO responses to its annual reports, and a lot of information on harm reduction, and the control of coca leaf, opium and cannabis. It is also the best news update on the UNGASS review process.

The International Drug Policy Consortium (IDPC) is a global network of NGOs that specialize in issues related to illegal and legal drug use. Its website is an outstanding knowledge hub with a lot of information on UNGASS issues. The HCLU is also a member of this network.

The International Harm Reduction Development Program (IHRD) of the Open Society Institute works to reduce HIV and other harms related to injecting drug use, and to press for policies that reduce stigmatization of illicit drug users and protect their human rights.

The International Harm Reduction Association (IHRA) recently published a global report on the state of harm reduction and many other important documents related to the UNGASS process. Their harm reduction & human rights blog (hr2) provides very interesting news. Paul Hunt, the human rights commissioner of the UN made a powerful speech on the drug control system at IHRA’s conference in Barcelona - watch our video and learn more!

In:

Spectral Fire



I guess its alright, to let things fizzle out, to let a fire become a flame again. It is in the natural flow of life, but a single spark can always become a spectral fire again. But there is a spark in all of us, to find causes we understand, causes in which we relate emotionally - something we find absolute passion in. 


Injustices in this world, the saddening tragedy we seldom see, lives in between the lines; in the sub-cultures and remote parts tainted by popular corporatization and the residue left by industrialization. The sudden push and common goal of economic progress has left many behind, this coupled with the mismanagement of resources has also eaten up agriculture in many parts of the world. Poverty and the lack of drinkable water has lain waste to many a human being. 

After watching Bono (U2) speak so passionately of Africa and their plight has left an imprint in both my heart and mind. (click here to view his video) When comparing it to the struggles we Asians face, the similarities are fundamentally the same. Even here in metropolitan Singapore, the face of injustice and poverty are issues not documented and even avoided - let alone in countries like Laos, Myanmar and Philippines where these issues are a major problem. 

No sanctions from regional bodies like ASEAN nor UN has the ability and reach to tackle these problems head on. Governments are already swamped and restricted by constant corporate lobbying and ensuring the needs of it's citizens, which justifiably take precedence over the impoverish, dis-empowered and the sick. 

This is a battle that cannot be met by the organized powers and political forces. It is a battle that has to be met by the grassroots, by people like you and me. Every initiative is a gift, a blessing that takes commitment from us commoners. Every effort, is significant cause it is produced by human beings that simply care. This must be applauded, documented and studied to improve and evolve our capacity to instill significant liberation of the billions who cry silently at night, who are cold and without the warmth of care, who go hungry and seek clean water, who sleep in slums, overcrowded and the only option is to live a life of crime and prostitution. 

I believe this can be met with a verve of love and compassion from the movement of people who simply care about others. The very people who understand that life is about what one can do for another, instead of doing for oneself. We should all be patriots of earth, of our human race. But it starts with a heart, with a voice and with a resolve to end unnecessary suffering. It's like a spark that will start spectral fires. I guess it's alright, to let things fizzle out, to let a flame become a fire again.


"As we become purer channels for God's light, we develop an appetite for the sweetness that is possible  in this world. A miracle worker is not geared toward fighting the world that is, but toward creating the world that could be."
~ Marianne Williamson

In: ,

Nightmare at Dey Krahorm: Forced Eviction in the Heart of Phnom Penh


Ok today i want to highlight the plight of certain Cambodians in Dey krahorm (Phnom Penh.) The entire village was forcefully evicted from thier land to make way for construction. These villagers stood up for their rights, their homes and their livelyhoods (markets and stalls were destroyed as well) but were attacked and maliciously forced to abandon thier community. 

A corporation called 7NG is responsible due to their expansion and business development.

Below is the report, images and video of January 24th 2009.

http://www.licadho-cambodia.org/articles/20090208/85/index.html




Published on February 8, 2009 In the early morning hours of Saturday January 24, 2009 approximately 500 demolition workers escorted by 300 mixed police in full riot gear surrounded the community of Dey Krahorm. Their mission, to forcibly evict the approximately 400 families that were living on the disputed land in the heart of Phnom Penh. 

At 6am the police armed with electric and steel batons, wooden sticks, tear gas, water cannons and guns moved towards the remaining Dey Khrahorm families who had erected barricades and stood defiantly in front of their houses. The police were able to brake through the villagers' lines and disburse them with the use of tear gas, water cannons and rubber projectiles.


Click here for full report, including images and testimonials from the villagers themselves.


I am deeply sadden and horrified by the nerve of a single Coperation coupled with Police literrally kicking human beings from their homes. My heart goes out to these folks and i am embedding a video here as a tribute to this Freedom fighters.

This is why pathway was created, to arm oursleves and support each other, so this atrocities can be curbed and maybe even stopped completely. The fight is on...

Please watch the video.

With love.
Lets kick ass.





In:

Suffering


When there is no observer who is suffering, is the suffering different from you? 


You are the suffering, are you not?  

You are not apart from the pain – you are the pain.  

What happens?  

There is no labeling, there is no giving it a name and thereby brushing it aside – you are merely that pain, that feeling, that sense of agony.  

When you are that, what happens?  

When you do not name it, when there is no fear with regard to it, is the center related to it?  

If the center is related to it, then it is afraid of it. Then it must act and do something about it. But if the center is that, then what do you do? 

There is nothing to be done is there? 

If you are that and you are not accepting it, not labeling it, not pushing it aside - if you are that thing, what happens?  

Do you say you suffer then?  
Surely, a fundamental transformation has taken place. Then there is no longer “I suffer” because there is no center to suffer, and the center suffers because we have never examined what the center is. We just live from word to word, from reaction to reaction.  
~ Jiddu Krishnamurti  

This journey of rigorous self-examination has brought me to question "suffering". Cause i have began to notice the massive amount of suffering from all the people close to me. Self-induced or not is not the point here. All the "i don't have enough money, i need more sales, i have to justify abortion, i spend too much time at work, i have lousy clients, i have my heart broken and the list goes on...  

and i question my own suffering, like my insane schedule, my forays with women, my choatic emotions and my lack of physical discipline. 

But at this stage i don't relate to any of it. I smile and know that i am relinquishing my idea of who i am, my "self", the "I" is dissipating daily. The longer and harder i peer into my abssy and see my divinity, the more detach i become from this sickness, this loathing of circumstance. My faith takes over, knowing i will die and that this life is far more mysterious than my current consciousness can hold - everything ceases.  

T'is strange this experience i now dwell. The daily meditation, the physical centering, the journaling and the constant self-examination is far reaching. I am beginning to accept, to understand and to be in the "tao"  

For those in this journey, this pathway... you know what i am talking about. 

I am an initiate.
I am finding my feet.

In:

An Apple Tree.


Hey dudes...

I had a great time today, we had a nice closing to a chapter.

Think about this,

If life has no intrinsic value in it whatsoever, what would you do with your days anyway?

I remember Dr Martin Luther King Jr's words when a journalist asked him, "if he was to die today, what would he do?"

His answer:
I would still plant my apple tree.

This remark has left a tremendous impression to my life, "to still plant my apple tree", for me is to keep on doing what i love, which is to make a difference to all around me, to have people explore themselves and to bring about compassion to others.

We have started the work on the apple tree; and for three months, we have started digging the hole(ourselves) to plant that seed. We got tools that worked, and we got tools that didn't but that wasn't the mechanism that eventually dug the hole. It was commitment and love for the cause.

So with that said, and with the seed in the ground.... now what?

We can leave and have nature takes it's cause, or we can start nurturing it with plenty of resources like energy, love and discipline to have it be grow and fruit. But this stage requires more from us, not necessarily time and sacrifice, but a step up from the old, to call forth our inner strength, and for us to finally and truly support each other.

The goal is not to end poverty, nor to save humanity from global warming - but to live fully, to live justly and to love in a way that transforms all we touch, all whom we come in contact with. So i request YOU be the example, i request YOU take charge, i request YOU be the one to plant this tree...
With love,
Wiki Wiki Lua Lua.