Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Mo Bro El Bandido says: "Hey, gringos - get regular health checkups, OK?"

So far this month I’ve had a doctor’s digit up my rear end, a bit of blood siphoned out of my left arm, undergone an MRI scan and a hearing test, not to mention enriching my dentist with some bridgework and a crown.

I’m not doing this because I’m a hypochondriac but because it’s just part of my annual medical checkup and ongoing maintainence of my body. Although at my age (54, maybe 53 in good light) it increasingly seems like patching up!

And I’m mentioning all that because the reason I’m growing a moustache for MOvember is to support the cause, which is raising awareness of men’s health. A lot of guys are blasé about their health, at worst dangerously negligent.

Too many of us think because we can run around a soccer pitch or cycle every morning that we have no health worries. Or that exercise cancels out all the booze and bad food we may consume. Regular exercise is certainly a must but too many of us forget or avoid getting regular checkups for things like blood pressure, cholesterol, prostate cancer and so on. Regular checkups can help early detection and treatment of many potentially fatal conditions.

So if that sounds like you, do yourself and your loved ones a big favour: at least get an annual check up. If you your health insurance doesn’t cover some tests, contact the Bermuda Cancer and Health Centre and they can help you out.

Oh, and while you’re at it, stop by my MOvember page and make a donation before the bandido gets shaved off on Wednesday!

[This has been a public service announcement from Breezeblog.]

Slave labour

Posted: November 11, 2011 in Uncategorized
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I’ll admit that it came as a bit of a shock to learn that 79 slaves are apparently working on my behalf around the world.

That’s the number that Slaveryfootprint.org – a website that tracks the forced and unpaid labour that goes into producing the things we take for granted – conservatively estimates have toiled to produce the raw materials used to make my clothes and food to my car, bike and the iPad I’m writing this on.

Slaveryfootprint uses a general survey to chart the type and quantity of products you use and the type of food you eat and produces results based on the number of exploited workers it knows are used to produce those type of goods. Most of the slavery occurs way down the supply chain in the mines, fields and factories that produce or process the raw materials that go into making your jeans, morning latte or your smartphone.

Most of my “slaves” appear to be in China as clothing and gadgets figure more prominently in my results. Many of China’s 150 million migrant workers toil illegally in mines and kilns producing everything from silicon, silk and silver to pearls, pig iron and polyester.

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Ten years after

Posted: September 10, 2011 in Uncategorized
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I’m sure I’m not alone in viewing the media’s intense focus this past week on the 10th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks as needlessly sensationalising what should be a solemn and reflective time.

Even so, I too found myself reflecting back to that day. On the morning of 9/11, my daughter – then aged 11 – and her mother were on what proved to be one of the last flights out of JFK, on their way home to Bermuda.

I was driving to the airport to pick them up when I heard the first reports on the BBC World Service that a plane had crashed into the World Trade Centre. Like everyone else at first I thought it was an unfortunate accident but when the second plane hit it was obvious it was a terrorist attack.

As I drove across The Causeway that separates the airport from the main island, reports were coming in that several airborne flights were still unaccounted for and that further attacks were expected. All flights were being ordered to land. It was at this point my stomach churned – was my daughter’s flight one of them? Were there terrorists on board?

The wait for the flight to land was agonizing. We did not know for sure until they began their approach that the plane was safe and had not been turned back.

Fortunately, the passengers did not know about the terrifying events in Manhattan until they landed. The pilot and crew knew but thankfully did not tell the passengers and cause what would have been understandable anxiety and panic.

When the passengers eventually emerged they were visibly shaken and many were in tears. I hugged my daughter as though I would never let her go. We spent the rest of the day glued to CNN and the BBC numbly watching the tragedy unfold, barely able to believe what we were witnessing, yet knowing that the world had changed.

My heart will be full of sadness on Sunday remembering those who died on 9/11 and the families and loved ones who have had to live with the aftermath. I will also remember the thousands of innocent Iraqi and Afghan people who have been killed over the past decade as a direct result of that day.

Yes, a terrible crime was committed on September 11, 2001. But by using it as justification for waging an unjust war, Bush and Blair are guilty of equally abhorrent crimes. As Tom Vesey put it in the Bermuda Sun this week: “They were arrogantly convinced of their own rightness, dismissive of evidence that did not support their views, and deaf to opposing opinions …”