Showing posts with label health crises. Show all posts
Showing posts with label health crises. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Popular Causes and How College Students Promote Them

Being a child during the 1990s, my main exposure at the time to trends of popular causes was lessons about the rainforest. Being on a liberal east coast college campus in the late 2000s of course sheds light on a variety of the new popular causes, such as HIV/AIDS. In contrast to the olden days of protesting the world's ills with witty picket signs, sit-ins, and Bob Dylan songs, though, college students have new, innovative ways of tackling big issues without leaving their campuses, or even their rooms.

A list of popular causes on my campus, and how students contribute to them:

* The environment, by focusing on "green" shopping bags, cleaning products, reusable water bottles, household decorations, etc., organic food, and wearing expensive t-shirts made of organic cotton, which is slightly less wasteful of petroleum than non-organic cotton. 
* Fighting HIV/AIDS in Africa by purchasing CDs, t-shirts, coffee and paper goods whose producers send a small portion of the profit to organizations that provide medicine/counseling to HIV/AIDS patients in Africa.
* Protesting the genocide in Darfur through many of the same means used to fight HIV/AIDS without actually providing direct aid.
* Fighting global poverty, especially in Africa, by buying beaded necklaces and signing online petitions pre-written by ONE.
* Organizing very big, expensive dances with student activity/club funds and donating the ticket proceeds to a particular cause.
* Handing out plastic water guns with local fire fighters to symbolically extinguish poverty, as opposed to giving club money to a prominent NGO or financially-challenged schools.
* Paying for expensive speakers to tell the students that things in [name a country with major economic/health/social/political/religious issues] are really bad, but we are trying really hard to fix things up… would you like to buy the book I wrote about the process?

Call me cynical, but I think there are better ways to fight AIDS, poverty, and help the earth than buying expensive t-shirts.