Clerisy Entertainment's Broken Soldiers has been running on Eastlink-TV and one may be left wondering what happened to Fabien Melanson. Here's what happened:
What Happened to the Hunger Striker?
The Our Duty website is have some technical problems, so I am re-posting this here.
If you want to help Fabien, you can give by:
Paypal/email transfer to fabien@ourduty.org
OR
Donations can be made at TD Bank
Transit #: 05023
Institution #: 004
Account #: 6418137
Name: Jeff Rose-Martland for Fabien Melanson
OR
Cheques & Money Orders
Payable to: Jeff Rose-Martland for Fabien Melanson
Send to: Fix Fabien's House
4 Neville Pl.
St. John's, NL
A1E 2E7
(Regarding the Our Duty site - we seem to have bee caught up in the Google java-browser-hijack along with 20,000 other sites. If you try to get to ourduty.org via facebook link or a search engine, you get security warnings and/or nothing. If you click here: http://ourduty.org I hope you will get there. If not, copy/paste the address into your browser and you will get there fine. The site itself is safe, the hijacking/malware appears to occurs when coming in from facebook or search engines. We are working on fixing that.)
Showing posts with label help. Show all posts
Showing posts with label help. Show all posts
23 April 2012
24 March 2012
For their own good.
Whatever happened to pro bono publico? The idea that lawyers
would do work to help the public in order to ensure equality before the law and
to help individuals who could not afford to pay them? Where did that concept
go?
Last August, the GG
said law firms in Canada donate less than 3% of their time to this fundamental
legal ideal. 3%? You could have knocked me over with a feather. Because, as
near as I can tell, that might be a couple of firms using ALL of their time,
while the rest don't do any pro bono work.
Because I've been
pitching a simple case for a veteran who was mistreated. There is nothing
complex or convoluted and it should be able to be resolved with a few letters
written. I've approached dozens of lawyers and SIX pro bono societies. Response
rate? 1. Not 1%, 1 response. And repeated querying of the societies supposedly
dedicated to doing this work has not resulted in a single word. In my
experience, the GG's estimate is grossly overinflated.
Which leads me to
suspect that every negative thing said about lawyers may be true. Because if
not one will step up to help an impoverished veteran, then the profession
really believes pro bono pocketo.
Labels:
assist,
david johnston,
ethic,
governor general,
help,
law,
lawyers,
legal,
pro bono,
veteran
Money, money everywhere, but not a cent to help
Since I started fundraising for Our Duty, I have found it
very difficult to listen to any news story that discusses money.
To date, our biggest donations have come from veterans on
fixed incomes, who have scraped together a few bucks out of their meagre
pensions to support us. It is amazing
that they did and we appreciate every one.
BUT
Listen to any news cast you hear about hundreds of thousands
and millions of dollars changing hands, as profit, as waste, as the fine-points
in a negotiation, as the net-worth of a company that makes crap. All that money, flowing all around. And people like me, who are out there trying
to fix a problem or make the world better; we have our hands out, saying please
help me help others. And the money
whirls past, like in some pathetic game show booth.
A percent of a percent of the funds being discussed would
turn any organization into a major force.
If would take operations out of basement or garage and into an
office. It would let the volunteer staff
stop worrying about their own bills and focus on doing what they do best. It would enable travel to significant
events. It would buy ads to help spread
the messages.
But you try getting those funds. Damn near impossible.
I'm afraid to add up the number of volunteer hours behind
Our Duty or to tally the costs we have contributed. I don't want to know how much we have donated
because then I will be even more angry and disillusioned. Especially since I know a lot of that time
and energy has gone into fruitless funding appeals.
And the most aggravating part is the silence. Letters, emails, phone calls, faxes - most
are completely ignored. Perhaps 1 in
1000 actually gets a response and that’s a 'no'. The rest just disappear, like you flushed a
great wad of your time and effort down the toilet.
The Haves not only won't help, they won't even listen. Which creates our current situation: Those with the least to give, give the most.
And that is heartbreaking.
Labels:
cash,
charity,
frustration,
fundraising,
funds,
help,
money,
non-profit,
not-for-profit,
philanthropy
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