TIGblogs TIG | TIGblogs GROUP TIGBLOGS LOGIN SIGNUP
SOF-JanineG's Friends


Sofmahcaiyahwg   Sofmahcaiyahwg Mahcaiyah's TIGblog
Mahcaiyah's profile

Goals and Backup Plans.

To have a goal is very important. It makes life a bit easier, because in a way, you know what you want and how to get it.
I have many goals, because my mind works very rapidly. I have what people may call "Backup Plans" just in case my first goal fails. I want to be a climatologist. This has to do with me studying the weather in different climates of the world. If this doesnt work out, I'd like to be a therapist. I am good at keeping things to myself, I love to help my friends and family whenever they need me, and I like to help people with problems that they are having about various situations. If plans A and B don't work, I think I may become a Motivational Speaker. I love to influence others with the knowledge that I have and further mine in the process. I have been told (Not that I like to toot my own horn) that I am a very influential person and that I inspire alot of people to not quit and become more than they are. If my A, B,and C plans fail, I'd Like to become a novelist. I love to read and I love to write, So that will work out well. It is important to have a goal and a few Backups incase it fails!

-M

May 30, 2009 | 1:59 PM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


Sofmahcaiyahwg   Sofmahcaiyahwg Mahcaiyah's TIGblog
Mahcaiyah's profile

World Corruption and It's People
About this category: Peace & Conflict


The world has become a divided place. Whole countries have turned on each other, Ethnic people have traded on thier own kind, and the foundation of the human race has taken a drastic turn towards the worst. In an efficient way, We are all 1 people: -The Human Rcae-. So, why is it that we have to hurt each other to prive a point? Why is it that we have to rape our women, kill our children, and destroy our entire beings for nothing? Is it the need for power? Respect? Or, had the corruption of the world and -Human Race- become a noted past-time or a just a hooby that we've picked up? Most elders claim that our ("Our" being people of all races younger than 35-50 years of accumulated age and wisdom) current behavior is the reason for the corruption in today's world, But, I say to elders, Were YOU all so different? Most traits that the chldren of today's world possess come from thier line of family. If you and a friend entered a store, and you saw they were stealing, you question them. If they told you that everyone in thier family did it for as long as they could rememeber, what could you say??? Its a trait they were raised on. I say to you (Trusted readers of this posted entry of my blog)What do you believe is the true meaning of the world's corruption? Is it the actions of young adults, or the past actions of thier elders? Do they want power? Respect? What is the meaning of it all??

May 23, 2009 | 10:52 PM Comments  1 comments

Tags:


Sofmahcaiyahwg   Sofmahcaiyahwg Mahcaiyah's TIGblog
Mahcaiyah's profile

A Harsh Life...

Depending on the circumstances, many people will tell you that they have a "Harsh Life". But what does this mean??? A "Harsh Life" can have many meanings. Someone could have just lost a job, a loved one, or their entire being because of the chaos they around. But, what is the true meaning of it? If you are robbed on the street, you would be considered to have a "Harsh Life" to some, But to others, you were just in the wrong place at the wrong time. On the other hand, Someone may have just lost a spouse, child, or very close friend. The would be considered to have a "Harsh Life" to some, But to others they may just be experiencing death and don't know how to grasp it. What Is YOUR Definition Of A"Harsh Life"???

May 22, 2009 | 3:16 AM Comments  2 comments

Tags:


SOF-RaenishaW   SOF-RaenishaW raenisha's TIGblog
raenisha's profile

volonce in philadelphia
About this event: I Can, I Will...Step Up, Stop the Violence March


The violence in Philadelphia is bad...very bad...people out of the blue getting hurt and kiling people for no reason. Sometimes there is a reason but there’s no reason for a person to kill another person.
Like my hood if you walk down the street and you don’t live down there u would get jumped are getting ran out the hood. The act of violence in Philadelphia is horrible, we need to be ashamed about how we acing because it’s unneeded.

I realize NYC is 6 times the size of Philadelphia but in 2005 NYC had 4 times as many violent crimes as Philly, but you never hear about NYC being an unsafe place to live. If NYC has 40,000 violent crimes per year and Philly’s has 10,000 violent crimes, in reality which place is more unsafe? I could show you a crime map of NYC, Chicago, DC, and La that would make you never want to step within 1000 miles of those cities.

Crime is everywhere in the cities. Certain sections are where 95% of the crimes take place. Is there spillover into what are seemingly safe neighborhoods? Yes but its exception not the norm. Just like Manhattan is going to be safer than parts of the Bronx/Queens, Center City is going to be safer than West/North Philly

Statistically you're more likely to die in a car crash driving around in suburbia than you are to die as an innocent victim of gun violence in the city.

(You're also much more likely to die on the drive to the airport than you are in the plane. People fear irrational phenomena because they don't feel in control of their lives, not because of actual risk analysis.)

As for Philly's housing values, it's not "worth it" to live anywhere but the exurban fringe of a Sunbelt city (say, Phoenix) if you're doing a strictly economic comparison of housing prices and incomes. But people value intangibles (culture, lifestyles, family). That's why people pay $2,000 a month for apartments the size of boxes in Manhattan. They're not crazy; they're just putting value in other things.

Philadelphia's housing has been historically undervalued when compared to its peers in the Northeast (NY, Boston, DC). Philly's basically playing catch-up now

November 5, 2007 | 3:04 PM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


SOF-AshleyE   SOF-AshleyE SOF-AshleyE's TIGblog
SOF-AshleyE's profile

volonce in philadelphia
About this event: I Can, I Will...Step Up, Stop the Violence March
Related to country: United States
About this category: Peace & Conflict


There's a lot of volonce going on in Philly. In my opinion the most dangerous part of the city is 52nd and Market street It was not that long ago, that 52nd and Market were hailed as the "Main Street" of West Philly;seemingly it had so much to offer.

Thanks to tit being the state-of-the-art transportation hub, there is plenty of hustle and bustle as folks came from far and wide to take advantage of its unique shops, dynamite restaurants, and classy nightclubs.

But like so many other once-proud sections of the city, this area has suffered a devastating fall from grace.This formerly thriving thoroughfare is pockmarked with boarded-up storefronts, dive bars, careless drug dealers, and roaming bands of lost souls who lurk in the shadow of the Market-Frankford El.
living and growing up in the area and see it deteriorate is very painful i just wish that things can change for the better because is a thurving city of brotherly love where have all the love gone? i would hate to have my childern to grow up in this city because i'm so scraed that something jeapordize their future we need to clean up our acts and our cities


November 2, 2007 | 11:00 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


SOF-JasmineW   SOF-JasmineW SOF-JasmineW's TIGblog
SOF-JasmineW's profile

My responce to the community walk

This was my favorite picture from the community walk because I was glad to see that the community gave tribute to the Philadelphia Negro League because a lot of black people do not recieve a lot of credit and for them to have a whole memorial deicated to the Philadelphia Baseball Negro League its a step up from not reconizing black people at all.

May 29, 2007 | 2:41 PM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


SOF-CraigR   SOF-CraigR SOF-CraigR's TIGblog
SOF-CraigR's profile

Iternational Visitors
About this category: Culture


I think today was a great oppertunity for all of us kids at S.O .T .F. ( School of the future). I think that it was a big eyeopener to the people that came from the different countries, because they learned how we function and how we live and learn at the School of the future. To me this was a big eyeopener for me in general, because I learned about how things are being functioned outside of the country I live in. I really enjoyed it alot and I sure they did. I am happy i got to expeirence this today.

February 5, 2007 | 3:53 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


SOF-JesseG   SOF-JesseG SOF-JesseG's TIGblog
SOF-JesseG's profile

question
About this event: 2006 United Nations Conference on Human Rights Migration and Development
About this category: Education


why did migrating started?
why do people want migrating?
why women like

and i know that people like mrigrating and it can help you and it do a lot to people

November 30, 2006 | 1:56 PM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


SOF-AshleyE   SOF-AshleyE SOF-AshleyE's TIGblog
SOF-AshleyE's profile

migration
About this event: 2006 United Nations Conference on Human Rights Migration and Development


the article I have read was about women and mi gration and
For a long time, the issue of women migrants has been low on the international policy agenda. Today, the world has a unique opportunity to change this: For the first time, government representatives from around the globe will be attending a United Nations session specifically devoted to migration. The 2006 High-Level Dialogue on International Migration and Development offers a critical opportunity to ensure that the voices of migrant women are heard. The explicit recognition of the human rights of women and the need for gender equality is a basic prerequisite of any sound, equitable and effective policy framework that seeks to manage migration in an orderly and humane manner
how do you feel about migration?
do you know anybody thats in migration?


November 30, 2006 | 11:41 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


ArunaArjunan   ArunaArjunan Aruna's TIGblog
Aruna's profile

chinarose
About this event: 2006 United Nations Conference on Human Rights Migration and Development


In Ghana, West Africa a little over $180 was handed over to the mother of a child and the deal was sealed a child of 3 had just been pawned by his parents to a local fisherman to be used as a diver in the Volta river to arrange fishing nets to facilitate heavy catches. It is estimated that until the practice came to light and exposed, at least 10 children were sold each day by poor parents to fishermen or anybody who was interested in buying them. These children, including some who were only three years old were sold into virtual slave labour for as much as US $180 and as little as $5 in extreme cases. the children was given out by their parents to work virtually as slaves for others in order for their parents to earn money. Ernest Taylor, the project coordinator, said the 1,203 children being reunited with their families represented a small fraction of the Ghanaian children sold by their parents into virtual slavery. Most are boys aged between 3 and 14 who are forced to work long hours casting and drawing nets. They are poorly fed and never paid. Sometimes, they drown in their attempts to retrieve nets caught on tree stumps at the bottom of the lake. The children that have not been sold into slavery to be used by other but have been forced by the economic situations at home to make a livelihood along the coast where they help mend nets and pull catches to the shore.

They said in an AP news report last year reported that some 15,000 Benin children work in Nigerian granite pits cracking stones. 116 have been returned to their homes, some unfortunately have died there.
An analysis into the background of the children show that they come from very poor backgrounds and were sold off when their parents could not afford keeping them around. This crude form of adoption was, perhaps to the parents, the only means by which they-parents and other sibling and the children involved could.
They also said In our part of the world, where the rule is, “survival by all means necessary’, the abuse of the rights of the child is a simple issue of survival. Faced with the harsh realities of poverty parents, institutions and governments have virtually thrown overboard almost all the rights of the African child outlined in the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child.

November 30, 2006 | 10:23 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


SOF-ShawnD   SOF-ShawnD SOF-ShawnD's TIGblog
SOF-ShawnD's profile

reading
About this event: 2006 United Nations Conference on Human Rights Migration and Development


what i read was about Every year millions of women working millions of jobs overseas send hundreds of millions of dollars in remittance funds back to their homes and communities. These funds go to fill hungry bellies, clothe and educate children, provide health care and generally improve living standards for loved ones left behind. For host countries, the labour of migrant women is so embedded into the very fabric of society that it goes virtually unnoticed. Migrant women toil in the households of working families, soothe the sick and comfort the elderly. They contribute their technical and professional expertise, pay taxes and quietly support a quality of life that many take for granted.


November 30, 2006 | 9:55 AM Comments  1 comments

Tags:


SOF-CraigR   SOF-CraigR SOF-CraigR's TIGblog
SOF-CraigR's profile

involuntary trafficing
About this event: 2006 United Nations Conference on Human Rights Migration and Development


involuntary traficing is a very bad thing to do to people. i dont think that it was right to take people from there home town and moved them to where ever and treat them like they want to.
1. why do they do this?
2. do the people like when they do it?
3. if you dont go will they kill you?

November 29, 2006 | 1:44 PM Comments  1 comments

Tags:


SOF-TimothyR   SOF-TimothyR SOF-TimothyR's TIGblog
SOF-TimothyR's profile

miss a
About this event: 2006 United Nations Conference on Human Rights Migration and Development


this artical is about how poor parents sold there children to fishermen for money and the kids had to work for the fishermen without pay and they did not get piad for it they were slaves.

1.why did sell their kids.
2.what was the city like.
3.was it a bad enviernment

November 29, 2006 | 1:37 PM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


SOF-DonteS   SOF-DonteS SOF-DonteS's TIGblog
SOF-DonteS's profile

Youth Right
About this event: 2006 United Nations Conference on Human Rights Migration and Development


The image of youth today is to be seen and not heard by the adult population. Today the teenage population is being the most rebelus population. It is also been taken advantage by most of the adult population, espeicaly since adolences have been able to be employed for part time jobs. On daily occation teenagers have been talked down to by adults. Teenagers rights are highly redused by Gaurdians and by law.

How are the rights of youth violated by migration?
Do youths have a right to migration aswell as adults?
Is there anyway youth can cause any form of migration?

November 29, 2006 | 1:22 PM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


SOF-SaadiqB   SOF-SaadiqB SOF-SaadiqB's TIGblog
SOF-SaadiqB's profile

ms.a
About this event: 2006 United Nations Conference on Human Rights Migration and Development


how does labor affect you?
what can we do to stop labor?
why was labpor so bad?

November 29, 2006 | 11:44 AM Comments  1 comments

Tags:




SOF-JanineG's Profile


Latest Posts
9-11-01

Monthly Archive
November 2006

Change Language


Friends
Mahcaiyah
Aruna
Dr. Grover
me
Mr. Lyrics
raenisha
Ryan
samantha marbaniang
SOF-AmiraJ
SOF-AshleyE
SOF-BreannaB
SOF-chink
SOF-CieraC
SOF-CraigR
SOF-DavidC
SOF-DavidR
SOF-DonteS
SOF-JamesC
SOF-JasmineW
SOF-JeffreyS
SOF-JesseG
SOF-JessicaN
SOF-JonathanS
SOF-JonathanS2
SOF-KareenaB
SOF-KianaB
SOF-LatifaP
SOF-LorenzoB
SOF-MarkW
SOF-MiyataT
SOF-NataniaH
SOF-QuinzellW
SOF-ReinaldoG
SOF-SaadiqB
SOF-ShamirM
SOF-ShanaeW
SOF-ShawnD
SOF-SoleilW
SOF-TimothyR
SOF-TylerW
sofsterlingt
YoungRell


3119 views
Important Disclaimer