Consider Concert 2009

2 11 2009

On Sunday, November 22nd at the legendary Moore Theater in Seattle, plan on joining us as we host the 2nd annual Consider Concert.

Inspired by the vibrant enthusiasm of Kim Evanger Raney, whose life was unexpectedly cut short at the age of 26.  We are reminded of the gift of each day, so Consider Concert is a celebration of life– taking a night to stop, breath deep, and think big.

The evening will include performances from Shawn McDonald, Ruth, and Phillip LaRue, and through the Kim Evanger Raney Foundation, the concert proceeds will go directly to the underprivileged and oppressed youth of the Northwest and around the world.  The foundation partners with organizations such as International Justice Mission, Childhaven, Royal Family Kids Camps, Seattle Children’s Hospital, Special Olympics, and Bicycle Alliance of Washington.  Thank you to all who supported last years event– through your support and attendance you helped to raise over $20,000 for underprivileged youth.

Get YOUR tickets and come join us for this important night of music and reflection at the historic Moore Theatre in downtown Seattle on Sunday, Nov. 22nd.





Who do YOU climb for?

25 07 2009

peopleascommodities

People climb for many different reasons.  But we climb for the captives—the nearly 27 million men, women, and children who are bound in slavery and illicit human trafficking.

You will be shocked (and we hope you are) to know that  that, despite living at the historical zenith of wealth, political freedom, and self-actualization, there are more people living in slavery today than ever before.  The statistics are staggering and the total market value of illicit human trafficking is estimated to be in excess of US$32 billion (UN), or more money earned by Google, Nike, and Starbucks combined.

Although our history books teach us that slavery was abolished in the 1800s, the reality is that there are more slaves in the world today than ever before, and modern slavery manifests itself in a host of nefarious ways.  Forced labor, child soldiering, unjust detention, the commercial sex trade—slavery in the modern world knows no creative bounds.

As if a shadow cast beneath the extraordinarily active and interconnected global economy, human trafficking is quickly becoming the most expansive criminal industry in the world today, rivaling even the drug and arms trades.  The commercial sex trade perhaps epitomizes the cruelest forms of this practice, with each year, more than 2 million children are exploited in the global commercial sex trade (UNICEF).  Despite the almost universal outrage over this injustice, sex trafficking remains one of the most profitable form of human trafficking, manifesting as prostitution, pornography, bride trafficking, and the sexual abuse of children for profit.  This epidemic is not solely a “overseas” phenomenon either.  An estimated 17,500 foreign nationals are trafficked annually in the United States alone and the number of US citizens trafficked within the country is estimated to be even higher with an estimated 200,000 American children being at risk for trafficking into the sex industry each year.

Driving this underground economy of slavery is, at heart, a worldview that regards people as commodities—whether inhumanely working a man and his family to exhaustion to pay off debt, or subjecting young children to service the sexually demented of our world, the modern day slave trade is empowered by a deranged mindset that aggressively defies the innate dignity in each and every person.

We hear often about the audacious claims by abolitionists to end the modern day slave trade which oppresses nearly 27 million people through forced labor, prostitution, and indentured servitude.  But what is the purported abolition of slavery without the restoration of the soil in which this ancient weed has sprouted, for as William Wilberforce so insightfully remarked, “God Almighty has set before me two great objects, the suppression of the slave trade and the reformation of manners.”  There will be no abolition of slavery without the reformation of our society, and it is to this end we must labor.

So the question is not why we climb.  What we and our supporters know, is that it is the who we climb for that makes Climb For Captives so compelling:

We climb to give a voice to the voiceless.

We climb to give hope to the hopeless.

We climb to advance the modern day abolitionist movement.

We climb to inspire a generation to radical generosity, solidarity, and activism to end slavery in our lifetime.

**photo by ThEssenceOfFaith.  Statistics provided by Kevin Bales @ NotForSale, International Justice Mission, the UN, and UNICEF.





Climb For Captives 2009

4 07 2009

Many of you joined me last year in the global fight against Human Trafficking by supporting the 2008 Climb for Captives.  As we continue preparing for the 2009 climb, which will be taking place on August 14-16th, we need your help to launch a global awareness campaign.  For this years climb we will be partnering with the International Justice Mission (www.IJM.org) to raise $40,000 to free slaves in India and we want to spread the word to EVERY corner of the globe!  We will be launching our new website on July 4th,  Independence Day here in the US, to signify our commitment to freedom for ALL, and we need your help to make the launch a success.

HERE is a video with instructions for how you can participate in our I Support Climb for Captives campaign.  Basically, we are trying to get as many of our friends around the globe to take photos of themselves with a sign that says “I Support Climb for Captives” (and has their city/country in parentheses) in front of famous landmarks in their area (i.e. Statue of Liberty, the White House, Mt. Rushmore, the Pyramids, Big Ben, the Eiffel Tower, the Great Wall, etc).  We are trying to get photos from every state in the USA and every continent of the world!

We would like to have several pictures on the website by the time we go public on July 4th and that is why we need your help now.  If you could take some time in the next week to take a photo in your area it would be a huge help for us as we try to gain some momentum early in our launch.  You can either email the photos directly to me or send them to the site mentioned in the video.

Thanks again for your support and your friendship.  Stay tuned for other ways you can be involved in the 2009 Climb for Captives!





Conferencing

19 05 2009

Unbound

This past weekend was full of more conferencing than I’ve been involved with in a long time.  The 2009 Pacific Northwest Microfinance Conference was visited by an all star lineup of practitioners from some of the leading microfinance organizations in the world, including Kiva.org, WorldVision, Esperanza International, and Agros.

Just down the street was the Freedom Initiative’s UNBOUND Anti-Human Trafficking Conference, a great breakthrough in unifying Seattle’s many abolitionists in a meaningful weekend spearheaded by the student-led Freedom Initiative.  I was honored to lead a workshop on the topic: Social Entrepreneurship and the Abolitionist Movement, and my presentation is posted online at HERE.

Speaking of which, to present the content for the workshop, I did a last-minute switch from Microsoft PowerPoint to www.Prezi.com, and I must say I have never been more impressed with a free, web-based app than I have with Prezi.  It has completely changed how I will share presentations from now on.  Check it out!





Unbound Conference

21 04 2009

unbound

On May 8-9 in Seattle, the Freedom Initiative is hosting the 1st Annual Unbound Conference.  It’s been a privilege to work with this alliance of students who are passionate about seeing justice in the streets of Seattle and an end to human trafficking in our own neighborhood.  Register before April 24th and join us as we bring together artists, musicians, non-profit leaders, and experts on modern-day slavery to raise awareness and empower people to become advocates for the victims of human trafficking.

I’ll be leading a conversation about how the injustices of the 21st century call for innovative, community-based solutions that look more like businesses than bureaucracies. Be a part of the conversation on how social entrepreneurs are collaborating to confront human trafficking through community-driven, technology-based innovations that are providing sustainable solutions across the globe.

The cost of registration is $10. All proceeds go to organizations providing services to victims of human trafficking. The $10 registration fee is not tax deductible.

If you have any questions about the conference, please contact registration@freedominitiative.org





I Will Teach You To Be Rich Scholarship for Social Innovation

7 02 2009

Last week, my team was honored to be selected among seven finalists in the I Will Teach You To Be Rich Scholarship for Social InnovationRamit Sethi, author of the wildly popular IWillTeachYouToBeRich.com, inaugurated this contest to empower young people with a scholarship for $2,500 towards developing socially innovative projects.

Our proposal for this scholarship is to radically expanding the boundaries of current microfinance by serving the most marginalized and forgotten people in the world today: former and current slaves in the commercial sex trade. This requires creating viable economic alternatives to prostitution for victims through proven microfinance processes, and then equipping them with the resources, tools, and a support network to empower these aspiring micro‐entrepreneurs to restored self‐worth, dignity, and independence.  The I Will Teach You To Be Rich scholarship would be used in its entirety to provide at least fifteen micro‐loans (of approximately US$150 over a 6 month term) to current or former prostitutes to launch alternative income‐generating micro-enterprises in their communities.
Our initial pilot program would take place through a current and established microfinance institution in the Dominican Republic, Esperanza International.  Esperanza will facilitate and monitor the loan process, while local service providers offer vocational training, medical treatment and education to current or former prostitutes living in impoverished communities of rural Dominican Republic. Through comprehensive research and a candid evaluation of the pilot program, the long term objective is to then develop a transferable concept for rehabilitating and empowering former victims of the commercial sex trade through microfinance opportunities around the world.

I’d like to offer my congratulations to all the other finalists– all impressive in accomplishment and vision, and I trust opportunities such as these will continue the conversation among young people of how we might provide more innovative, radical solutions to the injustices we see in our world.





William Wilberforce Trafficking Victims Protection Act

19 12 2008

Original Article posted HERE by Logan Gage @ the Discovery Institute:

On December 10th, Congress passed the William Wilberforce Trafficking Victims Protection Act and by unanimous consent. It sounds like an easy achievement, but behind that unanimous consent lies the fact that this bill took two years to hammer out.  Bureaucratic opposition was strong and yet almost mute.

Neither side got all it wanted, but the end result appears to be a commendable bill that offers hope for the hundreds of thousands of enslaved and trafficked human beings (mostly women in sex slavery and men in forced labor).  Senators Joe Biden and Sam Brownback deserve high praise for their willingness to compromise and make sure an effective law was passed. Credit outside Congress the many human rights NGOs and give particular praise for Michael Horowitz of Hudson Institute who has labored on this and other human rights issues. We at Discovery are also proud once again of the role of our Senior Fellow John R. Miller.

Let us hope that the incoming Obama administration puts serious effort into enforcing the strong provisions of the law.





An Open Letter to President Obama

5 11 2008

President Obama,

To begin, I’d like to offer my sincere congratulations to you on your remarkable campaign for President of the United States.  You are the first politician in my lifetime who has captivated the hearts and minds of, particularly, my generation in an empowering and unifying way.  With your charisma, innovative campaign techniques, and authentic demeanor, you have been selected by the American people to be that transformational leader to intersect the gap between old and new.  Undoubtedly, there is a shift taking place between the old guard of modernity, and the new rising stars of (post) post-modernity.  The baton has now been passed, and you take the stage as the first of a new generation of leaders in America.

I have grown up in a political and economic culture where capitalism (and subsequently, conservatism) has been the order.  Born amidst the Reagan revolution, I have come of age in the modern conservative experiment– where free markets, minimal government intervention, and the Protestant work ethic were the exalted pillars of our political economy.  Recent events in our economy and the implosion of the Republican party would indicate the embarrassing failure of these ideas.  Although I think these conclusions to be grossly premature, we now enter a season in our nation’s history where you can begin a new experiment.  With a healthy majority in Congress at your back, you can usher in, what some might call, an era of American socialism.

But what will YOUR America look like?  My education and experience cause my skepticism of your socialist propositions to run deep– that the hapless US government can be the solution to most of our society’s ills.  Yet, how can I possibly know of the failures of socialism, having never personally lived under such a regime?  Purportedly, as the lights fade on conservatism, a new show is taking center stage– one with a new sound, a new rhythm, and a new star.  Now is our opportunity to witness, first hand, the consequences and unintended consequences of socialism in action.  This is the marketplace of ideas at it’s finest, as you will have unfettered opportunity to educate us with the impact on families, government, and culture of this philosophy.  Mr. President, we will be watching.

One can only hope that the audacious and compassionate claims for your administration will become a reality, as no one can deny the appeal of your Utopian rhetoric and revolutionary promises.  Yet, I have deep misgivings of your proposed means to that heavenly end, and thus I’m more inclined to conclude that your Presidential legacy could very well be my generation’s final example of the absolute failure of socialism, rather than it’s ascendancy.  Perhaps then, we as a nation, will finally no longer put such faith in the power of government– for we will have your administration as a memorial stone of misplaced hope to remind us and our children of it’s failures.

Regardless of your legacy, we will be watching.  And praying– for you and your family.  As it indelibly reads on our currency, “in God we trust”.  Not in you.  Not in government.  Not in the value of our own political ideology or economy.  Rather, we trust in God, that truth, peace, and justice will prevail in and through our nation because, or in spite of, your efforts.

Respectfully,





Porn is slavery

12 10 2008

It is remarkable to me that our culture would so revile incidences of human trafficking and forced child prostitution, but fail to see the interconnectedness of these socially intolerable crimes with the more accepted forms of exploitation of women and children– namely, pornography.  Particularly during a time when there are so many initiatives brewing that claim to seek the end of the commoditization of people, perhaps the single most effective solution would be for dudes to simply stop downloading porn.

There is an economy at work here, one in which “illegal” child prostitution, pornography, strip clubs, erotic chat rooms and call centers, sex tourism, and adult films are products within the same system– the sex industry.  The interconnectedness lies in the fact that if there were no buyer, there would be no seller, and there would be no victim– the only difference is the social acceptability of each practice within this economy.  Although human trafficking and prostitution are perhaps the most poignant and vilified manifestation of this economy, these crimes are given roots in a culture that is hyper-sexualized, dehumanizing and even accommodating to instances of man’s grotesque lusts– one only has to walk the streets of New York City to see the many “gentlemen’s clubs” that speak of this cultural concession.

We hear often about the audacious claims by abolitionists to end the modern day slave trade which oppresses nearly 27 million people through forced labor, prostitution, and indentured servitude.  But what is the purported abolition of slavery without the restoration of the soil in which this ancient weed has sprouted, for as William Wilberforce so insightfully remarked, “God Almighty has set before me two great objects, the suppression of the slave trade and the reformation of manners.”  There is no abolition of slavery without the reformation of our society, and it is to this end we must labor.

For a thoroughly Biblical treatment of this topic, you can check out Mark Driscoll’s latest, Porn Again ChristianShared Hope International is also leading the effort on decreasing the demand for sexual slavery.

******

CALL+RESPONSE Update

Thank you all to those of you who attended the opening screening of CALL+RESPONSE in Seattle last Thursday.  The film has achieved high marks from major media sources around the country including:

MSNBC’s Morning Joe: Dillon and Kristof Talk about C+R to millions!  If you missed this morning’s special segment featuring Justin and Nicholas Kristof, please check out the video HERE.

Washington Post: Call+Response “is a harrowing ‘rockumentary’ built on difficult images interspersed with musical performances that are meant to give voice to the oppressed — as music often has — and spread their cries for freedom.“  Read the Review and be sure to check out the exclusive interview with Justin in the video right next to the article!

The Seattle Times says CALL+RESPONSE is “impassioned . . .eye-opening” and “ignoring this crisis is no longer an option.Read the Review Here by Jeff Shannon.

Julia Ormond and Justin Dillon were on Dr. Phil today for a full hour-long show on Call+Response.

We still need your help to make this film a success.  On www.CallandResponse.com, we have provided some great event posters, with information for each theater. Simply click on a city and download a poster to hand out or email.  The RESPONSE is growing…





CALL+RESPONSE

26 09 2008

It is becoming universally aware that we live in a day where, despite living at the historical zenith of wealth, political freedom, and self-actualization, there are more people living in slavery today than ever before.  The statistics are staggering– with nearly 27 million men, women, and children held as slaves (Kevin Bales, Disposable People), and the total market value of illicit human trafficking is estimated to be in excess of US$32 billion (UN), or more money earned by Google, Nike, and Starbucks combined.

At a time when public intolerance for the continued existence of slavery and human trafficking is at an all-time high, a new film steps onstage to capture the sound, and particularly the anthems, of the modern day abolitionist movement.  The CALL+RESPONSE film project is establishing a new genre in film where the audience isn’t left to mere passive observation, but rather called to respond to the reality of the injustice portrayed in it’s images and depicted in it’s songs.  Not only is C+R unique to documentary film, but it’s popularity is further establishing the growing notion of “open source activism”– where the power and inherent talent of a unified community is the groundswell behind the fight against slavery (and all injustice), and not just the governments, NGOs, and enforcement agencies society overly relies upon to do our dirty work.  This project is the vision of musician Justin Dillon, who has himself demonstrated the impact one man’s life and talent– committed to serving the oppressed– can accomplish.

If you are in Seattle, plan on attending one of the opening screenings with me at Metro Cinemas on October 9th, 13th-16th at 7PM and 9PM each night.  Tickets can be purchased HERE or by calling 888.495.7064.  The film opens nationwide in October; for your city visit HERE.