INFO: Racial Wealth Gap Soars for American Families - The Daily Stat - > from Harvard Business Review

Racial Wealth Gap Soars for
American Families
White American families' median wealth (not including home equity) grew from $22,000 to $100,000 over the 23-year period ending in 2007, while African-American families' median wealth remained virtually flat at just a few thousand dollars, according to a new study led by Thomas M. Shapiro of Brandeis University. In each year of the study, at least a quarter of African-American families had no assets at all. Source: The Heller School for Social Policy and Management, Brandeis University (PDF)

 

GULF OIL DISASTER: BP 'recovering less oil' than estimated > from BBC News

US oil spill: BP 'recovering less oil' than estimated

Page last updated at 21:13 GMT, Friday, 21 May 2010 22:13 UK

Video from BP appears to show vast quantities of oil still leaking from the well

BP has said the amount of oil recovered from a leaking Gulf of Mexico oil well on Thursday was less than half an earlier estimate.

BP said it had siphoned 2,200 barrels in the 24-hour period to midnight on Thursday, down from an estimate of 5,000 barrels earlier in the day.

The US government has formed a team to develop a more precise estimate of the amount of oil gushing from the well.

BP will attempt to stem the oil flow next week, instead of Sunday as hoped.

The oil leak began more than a month ago, when a rig leased by BP exploded.

A dead Northern Gannet covered in oil lies along Grand Isle Beach in Louisiana
Heavy rust-coloured oil has washed ashore, threatening wildlife

The spill has reached Louisiana and is threatening Florida and Cuba.

Thick, sticky oil is washing on to miles of fragile Louisiana wetlands, with brown, foul-smelling globs coating reeds and grasses.

The crude oil has been flowing since the offshore drilling rig Deepwater Horizon exploded off the coast of Louisiana on 20 April and sank two days later.

'Flow not constant'

It was widely expected that BP would proceed on Sunday with a so-called "top kill" operation to plug the well, which underwater video shows to be gushing oil and gas.

But BP chief operating officer Doug Suttles on Friday said the move would be delayed until next week, perhaps on Tuesday.

ANALYSIS

Increasingly, the oil pouring from the Deepwater Horizon spill feels politically toxic.

Under pressure from reporters, White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs pointedly refused to say that President Barack Obama had faith in BP as it struggles to contain the spill.

Mr Gibbs denied that the administration was a mere spectator in the unfolding disaster, but acknowledged that only the oil company possessed the technology to address the emergency 5,000ft, or 1,500m, beneath the waves.

In the "top kill" operation, heavy mud would be injected to stem the oil flow, then cement used to block the well permanently.

The delay was announced on the same day the company indicated the amount of oil it has been able to capture from the well was significantly less than initially estimated.

A BP spokesman told Reuters news agency on Friday that the company had only siphoned off 2,200 barrels, or 92,400 gallons, in the 24 hours up to midnight on Thursday.

"The flow changes, it's not constant," BP spokesman John Curry said on Friday.

But on Thursday, a spokesman had said the company was collecting 5,000 barrels per day or more.

A live video feed showing the oil gushing from the well has been made available by BP after pressure from a US congressman.

It shows a large, flowing plume of oil and gas next to the tube that is carrying some of it to the surface.

Transparency call

It remains unclear exactly how much oil is streaming from the burst well 5,000ft below the surface, and the US government has formed a multi-agency task force tasked with precisely gauge the amount.

Independent scientists have estimated the flow is as much as 10 times more than the widely distributed figure of 5,000 barrels, or 210,000 gallons, per day.

GULF OIL SPILL

View from the bottom of the ocean Live pictures (External site)

In the meantime, the Obama administration has asked BP to make public all measurements of the growing leak, air and water quality samples, trajectories of underwater plumes and locations of dispersants.

The request came in a letter to BP chief executive Tony Hayward from Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano and Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) administrator Lisa Jackson.

It said: "In responding to this oil spill, it is critical that all actions be conducted in a transparent manner, with all data and information related to the spill readily available to the United States government and the American people."

The officials said that despite claims by BP it was making efforts to keep the public and the government informed, "those efforts, to date, have fallen short in both their scope and effectiveness".

They said it was "imperative that BP promptly" make public all data on the spill.

Dispersant damage warning

Also on Friday, Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal demanded the federal government and BP commit to long-term clean up efforts until the tainted beaches and marshlands have been restored to their pre-spill state.

And a top coast guard official in Louisiana speculated that oil had washed ashore because the weather had been too calm for the past two days to use chemical dispersants to mitigate the slick.

A ship makes its way through surface oil in the Gulf of Mexico An ocean current is threatening to carry the oil into the Atlantic

The EPA has told BP to use a new dispersant to contain the spill, as fears grow about potential damage from the use of such chemicals.

BP has used a number of dispersants, all approved by the EPA, to try to break up the spill.

It emerged on Wednesday that a small part of the slick had entered the so-called Loop Current, which could take it to Florida and up the eastern US coast.

Florida forecasters said it would be at least a week before the oil reached waters near the state.

Farther south, US officials have been talking to Cuba about how to respond should the spill reach the island's northern coast.

 

HAITI: Hanging with Rea Dol at the site of the future Sopudep School | San Francisco Bay View

Haiti: Hanging with Rea Dol at the site of the future Sopudep School

May 18, 2010

by Wanda Sabir

Building the wall of the new school - Photo: Wanda Sabir

Rea Dol and Dodo were at the airport with a sign with my name when I arrived. We then headed to the building site, where a wall is going up around the perimeter. [Rea is the principal of SOPUDEP School in Port au Prince, founded as part of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide’s National Literacy Project, and she’s building a new school to replace the one that was damaged in the earthquake.]

 

When I left six days later, it was about a third completed. Students and family members, as well as employees, are up early at the site working. Occasionally volunteers and other important visitors like former mayors also drop by to speak to this wonderful, dynamic woman, Rea Dol.

If the last earthquake was 200 years ago, then it seems like it marked the end of slavery and the beginning of a Black nation. Does this earthquake signal something similar?

There’s no active government in Haiti. President René Préval is missing, and the people are on their own, literally, which could be a good thing, until one sees nude madmen walking down busy streets.

“What would happen if the person threatened someone’s safety?” my friend asked Thursday when we saw another nude man sauntering down the busy evening street. Just around the corner we saw a policeman. Would he have the training to handle such an incident? I can recall so many times in the San Francisco Bay Area where the mentally ill were beaten and sometimes killed because police used excessive force in responding to calls for help.

What systems are in place in Haiti to handle the obvious shock and post-traumatic behaviors victims have experienced now that family and friends are lost, homes and possessions destroyed in an earthquake of a magnitude not seen in 200 years?

The Association of Black Psychologists made a recent trip to Haiti to take emergency relief supplies, but what of the short and long term psychological assistance to help the country heal? Are such conversations taking place and who will implement the resolutions?

California has earthquakes. Japan has earthquakes, Mexico has earthquakes, but not Haiti. Not in a long time. People didn’t know what to do: run outside or stay inside? Many ran indoors, while othesr already outside and clear of any falling masonry ran indoors to their deaths.

The structural integrity of a house and the safety of those inside also depended on whether or not one’s neighbor’s house was also stable. Many people I spoke to lost family to apartment buildings or houses nearby collapsing on them.

As we drove along Delmas 33, a busy thoroughfare in heavy traffic, a man stood on a leaning building relaxed, his arms holding a collapsed roof, his legs spread, feet on the porch just below – the entire structure, caved roof and housing tumbling down the side of the hill. It looked really unstable, yet there he stood, casually observing the traffic below on the street.

Driving along, Yvon looked up and asked the rhetorical question: Doesn’t he realize what danger he’s in?

In Cap-Haïtien I met a man in a store, a friend of my new daughter, Monica, who spoke of arriving home and evacuating his wife and two daughters. Afterwards the children were afraid to be indoors. They wanted to leave the country, so when he was able, he put his family on a plane to New York. Now he is alone working and sending them money.

Abel spoke of not having any money to go anywhere, living in his car until he got money for gas to drive to Cap-Haïtien where he is now working. He gave his wife’s car to a NGO working on earthquake relief.

Yvon said he’d put his car in a shop and the garage collapsed and there went the car. Insurance?

I could see the anguish in Abel’s face as he relived those moments. He spoke of how loud noises made him jump and how he often woke up from nightmares. When asked if he’d gotten any psychotherapy, he didn’t know where he might get such help. I told him I would connect him with some people I know in New York who might be able to help.

OK, so maybe mental health is not an immediate priority, because if it was there would be systems in place with access. On the other hand, perhaps mental health is a priority, but in a situation as chaotic as a country without leadership can be, perhaps folks are just trying to stay afloat until immediate needs like housing and food and water are met.

Rea Dol at the site of the new SOPUDEP School - Photo: Wanda Sabir
My hostess, Rea Dol, has teachers who are living on the streets and in their cars since the earthquake. I was happy I could leave my tent and sleeping bag, Imodium and toilet tissue. It wasn’t a lot, my resources are limited, but every little bit certainly helps.

 

Tuesday evening Rea and I went over to a collective consisting of nonprofit organizations like SOIL, which puts in toilets for people free of charge, and connected with Paul, a Haitian American, who brought her tents for those staff members who are homeless, along with shoes and a ball. He’d just arrived from Ft. Lauderdale that day. He spent the night with us.

I took some of the shoes the next day to Cap-Haïtien with BC or Junior, who lives with Rea’s family, Wednesday morning on the bus. BC’s from Cap-Haïtien and was excited to see his mother and brothers.

My daughter sent bubbles and Mardi Gras beads, necklaces and rings and crayons and coloring books and spinning tops and balls and tablets and pens and playing cards. The adults liked the party beads. We just wanted to take a little something to lift people’s spirits.

Considering the large amount of funds raised here in America, I expected people to have tents and support services three months after the earthquake, this Monday, April 12, 2010. How long does it take to put such systems in place?

In many neighborhoods, teams of people in yellow t-shirts sweep the streets, but to clear the debris one needs bulldozers, the kind that unconscionably are used to demolish houses in Gaza. In Haiti, though, the tractors and other heavy equipment would help people move on with their lives.

I have never lived in a place where the government supports random gunfire on citizens who do not support current leadership, but such happened in Cité Soleil in 1999 and again in 2004. It’s a community located on Haiti’s waterfront, what one might call prime property, yet there is no investment in the people before or since President Aristide. His government built a school and nearby started construction of apartment buildings which are standing. We didn’t know if they were occupied when we drove by, but they certainly did not suffer any damage.

The home of sugar plantations, the major factory was bought out a company which then closed it down and started importing the crash crop in the 1970s. At that time the company was a major anchor in the economy of the area. One can imagine the hit the community felt once it closed; also affected were the railways which transported the goods.

This reminds me of what happens throughout America when urban removal is the goal – urban removal a code word for Black removal – something that has been going on since 1865, the legal end of slavery. The only thing is, Haitians don’t leave their land or communities; they just hang on.

Cité Soleil, the infamous city – one of the largest ghettos in Haiti, with perhaps the country’s largest population in such a small geographical area – is also the place that has a love for President Jean-Bertrand Aristide and his Fanmi Lavalas movement, measurably so great, it makes the knees of the political machine quake. Target of raids where children, elderly and adults were killed, their bodies covering the sidewalks and hallways and staircases, bedrooms and homes.

The buildings looked like loofah sponges, bullet holes covering the entire surface, like pock marks. The holes were so distracting and distressing recent attempts to spruce up the neighborhood has had crews filling in the holes – I hear it looks better. Hm? But if one knows where to look, evidence of the war is still there.

It is here where infrastructure would be a good thing. However, if the political system is apathetic and ineffective, then complaining about the health and welfare of the economy and community would do nothing because the citizen’s review or complaint department is run by the very people committing the crimes.

For many Haitians it’s almost like, hm, I’ll do what I can without access to resources because I can’t wait for help, help is too unreliable, too costly – not just monetarily; it could be too time consuming – and too slow.

Rea Dol is rebuilding her school, Pastor Frank is rebuilding his school, one of 15, Regine Zamor is getting ready to open her center for street kids next week, Jean Yvon Kernizan is expanding his afterschool program from 86 to 300 served, So Anne prepares a meal for her community daily, people who are homeless and hungry.

Making do in the rubble - Photo: Wanda Sabir
I only saw one line for a food giveaway the entire week I was in Haiti. I saw a lot of people going for water at the spigot or creek a few times a day, young and old, with different size containers. Most folks didn’t have indoor plumbing or electricity, but they were making do and doing very well at that.

 

I saw huge blocks of ice, yes, for ice boxes. I’d heard of ice boxes, but hadn’t seen one before. The charcoal I’d heard about, its use for heating homes and for cooking food, and the soil erosion from cutting down the trees to make the charcoal came to mind.

There are things good government supports like public education, public safety and public health. The Haitian government is falling down on all of these things; is this the reason why former U.S. President Bill Clinton is in charge of rebuilding Haiti?

Why can’t the grassroots organizers get the funds so they can mobilize their communities and rebuild Haiti themselves? How would Clinton know what Haiti needs or wants? Give the people the money and leave them alone.

The money will create jobs and provide incentives to those without hope.

Many of the people I spoke to mentioned how President Aristide’s presence would do much to lift the spirits of his people. If people knew President Aristide were coming, Jean Ristil, Cité Soleil activist, journalist, said, they would start cleaning up the streets now.

In a large field in Cité Soleil, earthquake displaced residents are swatting on privately owned land. If there were an infrastructure in place, government could compensate the landowner, so that he wouldn’t make the temporary residents on his land feel unwelcome – dumping mounds of rocks in the middle of fields near people’s tents – aesthetically uninviting and humiliating.

Did I mention the tents? More correctly all the people donating money to “worthy causes” like the Red Cross etc. – do not think for a moment I believe the Red Cross is a worthy organization, certainly not the United Nations – should have been told that the tent is a piece of plastic held in place with sticks in all for corners. I have never seen a shanty town, but I think Cité Soleil (Kreyol: Site Solèy, English: Sun City) qualifies.

“The vast majority of residents of Cité Soleil remained loyal to President Jean-Bertrand Aristide and his Fanmi Lavalas movement. Unlike Haiti’s unelected past governments, Lavalas governments invested money into parks, literacy programs and medical centers in Cité Soleil,” says Wikipedia.

This is a running commentary. I kept a daily journal and will post the day’s musings and photos here as well. The huge tent city is a potential disaster waiting to happen. Young girls might get accosted by predators, which has been documented by visitors.

I was heartbroken to see so many children trying to make a buck for a meal – washing cars as they waited at a traffic light. I am glad there are so many people, like Jean Ristil Jean Baptiste, 29, www.freewebs.com/koleZepol, and Rea Dol, www.sopudep.org, who care about these children, many in Cité Soleil, orphaned when the shootouts occurred and their parents were killed.

As I stood in line at Immigration once we’d landed in Ft. Lauderdale, I was talking to Sam, who was in Haiti to check on his family in Jacmel. He was telling me that he lost I think eight relatives in the quake and was looking at rebuilding the family home at minimally $40,000. I told him about Constantine Alatzas, Institute for Creative Evolution: Tools for Peace, who is working with Rea Dol in designing a sustainable structure for her new school. The key is AERBLOCK, a light weight material which is earthquake and flood or hurricane resistant used in the designs proposed by Alatzas.

As we speak, I happen to mention the people I visited this past week, one of them Jean Yvon, and Roselene in the line just ahead of me says, Jean Yvon is my cousin. I’m like wow. Well, Yvon is Rea’s friend. Both Sam and Roselene know Yvon, but not each other. I give both of them Yvon’s information as well as that of Constantine. Sam also knows Jen and the project she has with kids with cameras.

Talk about small world. As I travel the African Diaspora, I am finding my role as facilitator of collaborations clear. It happened in Haiti, it happened in Dakar and The Gambia to a lesser degree, and it always happens here. I see connections which might not be obvious and easily connect the dots between people, organizations and projects. Not everything is followed up on; the people I am joining are very busy and always short staffed. But sometimes they do … at least I hope they do. However, even if they don’t, the idea that they are not alone in the community building processes is I’m sure a boost to morale.

Bay View Arts Editor Wanda Sabir can be reached at wsab1@aol.com. Visit her website at www.wandaspicks.com for an expanded version of Wanda’s Picks, her blog, photos and Wanda’s Picks Radio. Her shows are streamed live Wednesdays at 6-7 a.m. and Fridays at 8-10 a.m. and archived on the Afrikan Sistahs’ Media Network, at http://www.blogtalkradio.com/wandas-picks.

 

VIDEO: ‘Something to Believe’ > from Africa is a Country

‘Something to Believe’

May 20, 2010 · 1 Comment

Rapper Blitz the Ambassador (representing for the Ghanaian diaspora and Brooklyn), featuring Tess, who can sing, doing the song “Something to Believe,” off Blitz’s new “StereoLive” album. (BTW, he has an EP, called “Native Son,” coming up which features songs written entirely in Twi.)

I like this big band sound on this song.

Sean Jacobs

VIDEO: Music: Rox > from AFRO-EUROPE

Music: Rox

 


Introducing 21-year-old ROX. The half Iranian, half Jamaican singer-songwriter from South London, who is sometimes compared with Amy Whinehouse and Lauren Hill. Her debut album 'Memoirs" will be out June 7.

website: http://thisisrox.com/
 

 

 

 

================================

Rox - My Baby Left Me - Official Video

_____________________________________

Rox - BBC The Beat - My Baby Left Me - Acoustic session

=================================

Black Europeans and the media (Netherlands)


It is always interesting to see how black people in Europe are portrayed in the media, since there are many stories and pictures where black people are portrayed in a stereotype way. Today I stumbled upon a remarkable example. 

In the Dutch free newspaper Depers I saw a picture of Rox, the new singer songwriter from South London. 

The front page (above) had the following headline: “We are really proud of Europe.” And in the byline: "And that’s why we advise Rox and four other singers."

And there is more 


The headline: “New, good, female and European”

I thought great for Rox that she is featured like this. But I had mixed feelings about the by-line. 

“An ailing eurozone survives only by substantial investment in the own economy. So buy European products, starting with music.“

When I read the byline it felt as if they are using a black girl on the cover to make protectionisme look a bit friendly. As if they where saying that this appeal is not an anti-foreigner thing. 

But maybe I am wrong, and this is just a story of an editor who likes the music of Rox.
>via: http://afroeurope.blogspot.com/2010/05/black-europeans-and-media-netherlands.html
==============================

 

PUB: Friday Comes On Mondays – Nonfiction Contest

Friday Comes On Mondays

If you follow this blog you know that we are fast approaching the one year anniversary of the launch of #fridayflash. My first story, Plus Tax, was posted under the #FictionFriday hashtag on May 29th, 2009. Only later did I discover that there was another nice group of writers already using that name. So we brainstormed, trying to come up with another name for our Twitter meme. I was leaning toward #thefridayflash. It was Laura Eno who suggested the more economical, #fridayflash. So, #fridayflash it is.

We’ve grown over the intervening months, from a handful of early adopters, to close to seventy new pieces of flash fiction every single week. Some of the authors who currently post have been regulars since the beginning. It’s an amazing feat, if you think about it. That’s a lot of flash fiction, and a huge commitment.

I regularly receive Twitter direct messages and emails from people who tell me how #fridayflash has significantly touched their lives. I’m humbled and awestruck by these messages.

So, with our one year anniversary coming up, I think this is a great time to have our very first #fridayflash Writing Contest. Since I have a disturbed and twisted mind, this will be a contest with a twist – it will be nonfiction, and not done on Friday.

The contest:

Write a nonfiction post on the theme: What #fridayflash has meant to me. Keep it to 1000 words or less. I’m looking for creative nonfiction here. Please give it an original title, not What #fridayflash Has Meant To Me. Ack!

Post your piece on your blog any Monday between now and May 24th.

Come back to this post and add a comment announcing your entry, complete with a link.

On May 25th I’ll compile the list. I hope to have a poll up by May 29th, the one year weekend anniversary. I’ll leave the polls open for one week, and then announce the winners.

Who can enter?

The contest is open to #fridayflash authors and readers alike. I always say it takes both to make #fridayflash work, so readers get the same opportunity here as writers. Don’t worry, pretenders (those who have never read a #fridayflash in their lives) won’t be hard to figure out. As to people who are just jumping on the bandwagon – that’s fine by me. Those of you who do #fridayflash know how addictive it is. If we pick up new readers and writers for this contest, I’m convinced a significant number of them will stick around and become regulars too.

Three cheers for three prizes!

So, you want to know what you get out of this, besides lots of new web traffic and some great essays to read. Well, there are prizes, of course.

  • First place wins $50, a PDF copy of The Best of 2009 #fridayflash Anthology, and gets their essay published here on Mad Utopia.
  • The second place winner gets a $10 Amazon gift certificate, a PDF copy of The Best of 2009 #fridayflash Anthology, and a link to their essay.
  • The third place winner gets a PDF copy of The Best of 2009 #fridayflash Anthology, and a link to their essay.

Ties will be broken by the Random Number Fairy. Trouble makers will be dealt with by the werebeagle.

Have fun. Get writing.
~jon

PUB: Wag's Revue Literary Contest

CONTEST GUIDELINES
 
Wag’s Revue is currently only accepting submissions for its Summer Contest. Please read the guidelines below carefully before submitting. The editors also strongly suggest that writers read the magazine to gain a sense of it prior to submitting (all issues are free and available online and as downloads).

Wag’s Revue invites you to enter its Summer 2010 Contest in fiction, poetry, and essays. Submissions of electronic writing are also encouraged in any of the above genres. First prize receives $1,000 and publication in Wag’s Revue; second prize is $500, third is $100, and all submissions are considered for publication. The contest deadline is May 31, and winners will be announced June 21. There is no limit to the number of entries an author may submit, but each entry must be accompanied with its own submission fee of $20.

Submissions of poetry may include multiple poems but should not exceed 10 pages. Fiction and essay submissions should not exceed 10,000 words. All submissions should be previously unpublished. Wag’s Revue asks for first serial rights to all published work; all other rights revert to the author upon publication. Please make sure to remove your name and any contact info from the document you upload so that we may judge every entry anonymously. Wag’s Revue complies with the CLMP code of ethics.

Submitting is easy. First, please click on the “Buy Now” button at the bottom of this page to pay for your submission fee. This will take you to the Wag’s Revue Paypal page. We accept credit/debit and PayPal payments only; no cash or checks. In order for us to confirm your payment, save your PayPal receipt number. Next, visit our fancy new online submissions manager and follow the instructions for uploading your work. Make sure to paste your PayPal receipt number into the “Comments” box of your submission. You may also provide us with a brief cover letter in the “Comments” box, but it is not required.

We look forward to reading your work!

–The Editors, Wag’s Revue

(If you submitted work during the open submissions period and haven’t heard back yet, no worries; your work is still being considered for publication and you will hear from us soon. Please feel free to submit to the contest as well.)

If you are a visual artist and would like to have your work considered for publication in Wag’s Revue, please send a resume and portfolio to . Works in all media are welcome; new media and Internet art are encouraged. The editors are above all interested in work that is waggish.

 

PUB: Quatrain Poetry - Poetry Contest

Quatrain Poetry
Organized by FanStory.com
Contests are free to writers.
For this contest you are challenged to write a Quatrain poem. A Quatrain is a poem that has four lines and also has a specific rhyming scheme.

An Example:


The mountain frames the sky (a)
As a shadow of an eagle flies by. (a)
With clouds hanging at its edge (b)
A climber proves his courage on its rocky ledge. (b)

- The Mountain by Donna Brock

In the example above the first two lines rhyme (a) and the last two lines rhyme (b)

The word quatrain comes from Latin and French words meaning "four." So your poem must have four lines. And it must rhyme. The rhyme scheme is up to you.

A few examples of a quatrain rhyming scheme are as follows:

 


  1. abab
  2. abba (envelope rhyme)
  3. aabb (as shown in the example above)
  4. aaba (chain rhyme)
  5. We are keeping the topic open. Write about anything using this format.

    One entry per person. New entries only. Quatrain poetry only (must have a rhyme scheme and must be four lines). Poem can have multiple stanzas.

    The winners will be selected by the FanStory.com Contest Committee. A winner will be announced approximately one to two weeks after the deadline passes. The decision is final.

     

    $100 Gift Card To The Winner
    The winner takes away a one hundred dollar pre-paid Visa gift card. Second place will win twenty-five member dollars. Third place ten member dollars.

    This contest is open to all members. Past contest winners can join the contest.

     

     

    The voting booth will include this summary of the contest:

     

      For this contest we were looking for quatrain poems.

       

       

      One entry per person. New entries to the site only.

      Deadline: Sunday, May 30, 2010 at 11:59 p.m. EST.

      Click the link above to submit your entry. Members with reservations can use the link provided in their contest profile.

      Members may not request votes, mention contest entries, or notify potential voters of the vote by private message or other means as specified in the contest terms. The site automatically checks for this form of communication. A break in the contest terms will result in the cancellation of the account. Reserve Your Spot.

       

      INFO: Bobble > from Cool Tools

      Bobble

      waterbobble.jpg

      The Bobble is a personal water bottle that holds 18.5 ounces of tapwater and filters out chlorine and other contaminants as you drink. I love fresh clean water and have gotten tired of the expense and inconvenience of taking bottled water with me when I'm out and about. Recently, the Bobble came to my attention and when the company offered a two-for-one special for Earth Day, I broke down and ordered six for my family. Well, we've had them for just over a week and I must say that these do a fine job of providing great tasting filtered water. I've used the Brita system for years, but still drank bottled water. The Bobble has changed that. The water coming out is fresh, clean with no plasticky taste at all. I take mine with me wherever I go.

      At the business end is a carbon based filter that does all the work. All you do is fill the bottle with water and squeeze.The filter lasts for 300 bottles and needs to be replaced roughly every two months. The filters are available separately. The bottle itself is BPA free and the plastic is thick and quite squeezable . My guess is it should last quite a while. While it isn't dishwasher safe, some mildly soapy water and a little agitation and thorough rinse should do the trick.

      The Bobble is also a good idea environmentally speaking. As the Bobble website notes, 1.5 million barrels of oil are used annually to make plastic water bottles, most of which are then casually discarded. We had been buying bottled water. Looks like now we'll be drinking from our Bobbles.

      -- Jeff Bragg  

      Water Bobble
      $10

      Available from Amazon

      Manufactured by Water Bobble


      Check out Jeff's video review:

      via kk.org