Category Archives: support

food for love.

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pink and pretty princess cupcakes with edible glitter
for sweet little Nova as requested
(living in foster care)
two giant lasagnas with lots and lots of sauce
 for a 3-generation Vietnamese family of 10
recently arrived and all living in one home
with all of the challenges going on around us right now
it’s nice to have the opportunity
to work with these grassroots organizations (below)
(both started by one person in their kitchen, spreading across the nation)
to bring a warm home cooked meal or first ever birthday cake
to people who suffer from food insecurity for a variety of reasons and circumstance
making their day a little easier, letting them know that someone cares, and bringing a bit of unexpected joy.
https://lasagnalove.org

for families who need a home cooked meal hand-delivered to them for a variety of reasons
(begun 5  years ago and 2.3 million now served)
(the sprinkle squad)
For Goodness Cakes matches volunteers to make and hand-deliver birthday & graduation cakes
to children in foster care and youth overcoming adversity on their special day
many who have never been celebrated
(begun 9 years ago)
‘the older I get, the greater power i seem to have to help the world.’
*susan b. anthony
*Susan B. Anthony was a prominent leader of the women’s suffrage movement and social reformer. Her work helped pave the way for the 1920 Nineteenth Amendment, which granted women the right to vote. Inspired by their belief that everyone was equal under God, she became an abolitionist and agent for the American Anti-Slavery Society. She was known for her passionate anti-slavery speeches, a rare activity for women at the time.

printing money.

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Take the Wooden Money

During the darkest days of the Great Depression, the logging city of Tenino, Washington, created a complimentary wooden currency to help locals survive the economic crisis. Now, almost 90 years later, the town is once again “printing money” on postcard-sized sheets of maple to help locals suffering from financial hardship. Pegged at the rate of real U.S. dollars, the currency can be spent everywhere from grocery stores to gas stations and child care centers, whose owners can later exchange them.

“It worked perfectly,” says Tenino’s mayor Wayne Fournier, who offers residents who demonstrate they are experiencing economic difficulties caused by the pandemic a stipend of up to $300 a month in wooden dollars. These currencies aren’t actual replacements of real money. They are complementary currencies — a broad term for a galaxy of local alternatives to national currencies.

According to research published in Papers in Political Economy in 2018, 3,500 – 4,500 such systems have been recorded in more than 50 countries across the world. Typically they are a localized currency that can only be exchanged among people and businesses within a region, town, or even a single neighborhood. Many are membership programs limited to those who have signed up; they typically work in conjunction with, rather than replacing, the official national currency.

They take many different forms. Relatively few are based on paper money; many are purely digital or exchanged via smart cards. Their goals can span multiple economic, social, and environmental objectives. Some aim to protect local independent businesses. Some promote more equal and sustainable visions of society. Others have been founded in response to economic crises when traditional financial systems have ground to a halt. As the coronavirus pandemic brings on a wave of social and economic tumult, all three challenges appear to be in play at once.

In Tenino, which has a population of less than 2,000, the wooden money is printed using an antique 1890 Chandler & Price letterpress. Since the launch in May, cities from Arizona to Montana and California have been in contact with Tenino for advice about starting their own local currencies.

“We have no idea what is going to happen next in 2020,” adds Fournier. “But cities like ours need to come up with niche ways to be sustainable without relying on the larger world.”

“sharing money is what gives it its value.”

-elvis presley

 

credits: story – Bloomberg City Lab, Peter Young. photo – Jason Redmons, AFP

i owe my success to having listened respectfully to the very best advice, and then going away and doing the exact opposite. – g. k. chesterton

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on a walk

by the detroit river

one cousin

two years older

and wiser

offers the other

a show of support

and perhaps

a small bit of advice.

Whatever advice you give, be short.

Horace