17 July 2007

Goodbye Desolate Railyard

So, I was thinking before, that maybe I am sort of too tough on people in my head. Maybe like, I expect too much from them, I mean. Like, I do think there are tons of issues that need addressing in the world, and I think that our culture could use a bit less apathy, but maybe I should consider that there's also a lot of shit going on. Not everyone really has time to contemplate all that's going on in the world. There's too much personal tragedy. Much too much. I mean, I don't know if I've ever posted my views on divorce on this space, but for a long time I've held the view that our astronomic divorce rate is really kind of horrific. I mean, over half of the kids in America are put in a really awkward family situation where they've got you know, biological fathers and step fathers and step syblings and it's like... I could see why it'd be really stressful. And I could see why these kids are you know, torn up. How can I expect them to care about others when no one's really looking out and caring for them? It's all a consequence of this culture we've got here. I guess I am really fortunate to have no real personal horrors going on in my life. I mean, I'm single, but I don't care as much as I used to. My family is a bit odd, and I don't quite enjoy the situation sometimes, but it's not driving me nuts. So I guess I'll just sit here, type my feelings on large issues like my opinion matters, and you know, try to be a nice guy.

Speaking of large issues, I think you've got to read this:

GENEVA (AFP) - Conditions for children in Iraq have deteriorated sharply in recent years as their humanitarian plight has fallen largely into neglect, a senior UNICEF official said Monday.

"I have no doubt whatsoever that the condition today is much worse," Dan Toole, acting deputy executive director of the UN Children's Fund, told journalists after being asked for a comparison with the situation under Saddam Hussein's regime.

"Children who have had to flee Iraq -- and millions have fled -- are much worse off than a year ago and they certainly are much worse off than they were three years ago," he added.

Toole said there were signs that the health and nutrition for Iraqi children was "changing for the worst", despite recently released two-year-old indicators that had shown signs of an improvement.

UNICEF said the information gleaned from people leaving Iraq, and from the agency's "quite limited" access within the country, indicated that the number of female-headed households has increased "dramatically" because mostly men have been killed in the violence there.

"Many of those women are too frightened to bring their children to health clinics, many are too frightened to send their children to school," he added

Only two-thirds of Iraqis have access to clean water, according to UNICEF.

"My concern is that the focus on Iraq is on the political situation, the security situation, it is not on the lives of Iraqis living day in, day out, with deprivation, with lack of food, with lack of medical supplies," he said.

"That says something about the attention of the world, the attention of our leaders," Toole added, urging a greater focus on the impact on children.

UNICEF says its aid programmes for children in Iraq have only received about one-third of the funding they need.

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