Friday, November 30, 2007

Is Burger King “Penny Foolish”?

Today’s New York Times ran a terrific Op-Ed piece, Penny Foolish.” (Thank you to our friend the World Traveler for the heads-up!) Turns out the King isn’t so generous when it comes to treating farm workers fairly. Here’s an excerpt:

“In 2005, Florida tomato pickers gained their first significant pay raise since the late 1970s when Taco Bell ended a consumer boycott by agreeing to pay an extra penny per pound for its tomatoes, with the extra cent going directly to the farm workers. Last April, McDonald’s agreed to a similar arrangement, increasing the wages of its tomato pickers to about 77 cents per bucket. But Burger King, whose headquarters are in Florida, has adamantly refused to pay the extra penny — and its refusal has encouraged tomato growers to cancel the deals already struck with Taco Bell and McDonald’s... ”

A penny? C’mon. How cheap can one get? The Coalition of Immokalee Workers is marching on Burger King’s corporate headquarters tomorrow in Miami, to protest this silliness. Not in Florida? Our friends at Sojourners have posted a link that allows you to send an email message directly to Burger King executives urging them to treat farm workers fairly.


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Thursday, November 29, 2007

The Rice Game

I’ve been busy lately at my public blog, Daily Mitzvah, and neglecting my personal blog over here. But I just discovered something worth blogging about: The Rice Game! This web site takes “click to give” to new levels. The fascination is a vocabulary game: choose the correct definition for a word, “win” 20 grains of rice for the United Nations World Food Program. (Beginning today, the site has raised its correct-word donation from 10 to 20 grains of rice. So an auspicious day to blog about them!) Does 20 grains per word really amount to much? Yesterday’s total: 187,906,380 grains of rice donated. Killing time, word play, games, and giving to a good cause. What could be better?

Play the Rice Game today — you’ll be hooked!


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Saturday, November 17, 2007

Welcome to jengaworld!

Hello and welcome to my first blog post! If you have found your way here, you are quite the explorer!

Today I am all about Kiva, the terrific organization that allows individuals to help fund microloans to low-income entrepreneurs around the world. You'll see a changing photo of a Kiva entrepreneur on the right side of the blog each day. For as little as US $25, anyone can help fund a Kiva microloan. I am currently participating in microloans to two terrific female entrenreneurs: Mabel in Benin City, Nigeria, who sells soft drinks and pepper soup to neighbors and travelers; and Eang in rural Cambodia (above), who runs a small outdoor grocery in front of her home.

I first became interested in microcredit when Muhammad Yunus and the Grameen Bank won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2006. And now thanks to Kiva, anyone can get involved as a mirocredit lender.

Today's mitzvah: check out Kiva.


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