
Saturday, August 20, 2011
Easy creole at 111 Minna Gallery by Peter Bruce Photo

Sunday, May 15, 2011
Rules

10 CHALLENGE RULES
So I am going to Live Below the Line. Thanks to the many people who have ask how. To be completely frank. I don't know how,but I am going to do it
Here are the rules:
Live Below the Line Week
From Monday, May 16 – Friday, May 20, I can spend no more than $1.50 per day on food and drink.Total budget
I have a total of $7.50 with which to buy all ingredients for your meals. If you only use half a packet of something, I only need to budget for half the cost.
Share your food
I can share the cost of ingredients amongst a team, as long as no participant spends more than $1.50 per day or their total $7.50 budget. Having team dinner parties is a great way to enjoy the challenge!No sneaky snacks
I can't grab snacks at home unless you include the cost of buying the item new from the supermarket in your budget.Garden goodies are OK I can use food sourced from your garden - if you factor in the cost of buying it from a market, supermarket, or other supplier.
No meal combinations
No combination of meals on any given day can exceed the $1.50 spending limit.No donated food
I can't accept "donated" food from family or friends, but monetary donations towards your fundraising goal are acceptable and encouraged!Donation Goalpost So if you want to help,here is the link
Help feed a hungry kids through Peter
Please check back as I am going to try and post photos of this week
Tuesday, May 10, 2011
Bodie newspaper

Bodies first newspapers. Here is an original . Check out this photo
Hugh Jackman video

Please watch what I am about to do,though this video presented by Mr Hugh Jackman
Sunday, May 8, 2011
$500,000

War is costing us $720 million a day or $500,000 a minute, according to the group's analysis of the work of Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph E. Stiglitz and Harvard public finance lecturer Linda J. Bilmes.
Friday, May 6, 2011
Wal Mart Hunger

Wednesday, May 4, 2011
American waste

Tuesday, May 3, 2011
Fifth birthday

Did you know? In 2008, nearly 9 million children died before they reached their fifth birthday. One third of these deaths are due directly or indirectly to hunger and malnutrition.
The world is facing a hunger crisis unlike anything it has seen in more than 50 years.
925 million people are hungry.
Every day, almost 16,000 children die from hunger-related causes. That's one child every five seconds.The time it took you to read this.
There were 1.4 billion people in extreme poverty in 2005. The World Bank estimates that the spike in global food prices in 2008, followed by the global economic recession in 2009 and 2010 has pushed between 100-150 million people into poverty.
OK I know what you are saying now. Peter has told us this all before. Yes I have,you are right
Soon I start my journey for a week,only a week of trying to live on $1.50, unlike many people who have to do this day in day out,going to bed hungry. I am asking for two things. One your help,in the way of a $1.50 donation and two your best wishes.
Here is the link to donate to me
Below the line/help Peter Bruce
Monday, May 2, 2011
Millions of Children Still Hungry

More than a quarter of the children in the developing world are still critically undernourished, according to a new report. It also found 146 million children go hungry every day and 5.6 million kids die every year because they are not getting enough to eat -- a figure that corresponds to 10 children every minute.
"The lack of progress to combat malnutrition is damaging children and nations," said UNICEF Executive Director Ann Veneman. "Few things have more impact than nutrition on a child's ability to survive, learn effectively and escape a life of poverty."
Children continue to die of hunger in huge numbers despite a worldwide drive to combat it. In 2000, the United Nations announced a series of "millennium development goals." One of the goals was to halve the number of people worldwide who suffer from not getting enough to eat. But the number of children who go hungry in the developing world has improved only slightly in 15 years. In 1990, 32 percent of kids in the developing world were undernourished; this year that figure is 27 percent.
As you know on May 16 I enbark on a journey to find out what it is like to go hungry. And try to live on $1.50 per day. If you would like to help I am asking for people to give a $1.50, about the same as your cup of coffee.If you don't want to help a thought is enough.
Here is the link to help...
Sunday, May 1, 2011
Coffee can save people

Yes coffee can save people...
The National Average is $1.38/cup. The American coffee drinker consumes 3.2 cups per day!
So I will do the math for you
3.2
x $1.25
= $4 LOW SIDE per person per day
$16 HIGH SIDE per person per day
Therefore this is enough to feed....how many people.
So I hope you can take one of those cups of coffee and help and starving person. Here is the link to help
http://my.e2rm.com/personalPage.aspx?registrationID=1124003&langPref=en-CA Thanks for your help and good thoughts
Pets eat better an people
I love my pets, yes even my neurotic poodle on some days. And I am not saying that we should not take care of them,but I think we need to look at the whole picture. Most American spend more money on the pets to feed them than we spend on feeding some humans.(I know I am going to get bad e mail from the like of Peta etc). But lets go on here...
$45 Billion on pets This is in the USA only. I’d probably faint if I saw the international numbers. Here’s how we pet people spend all that money:
For 2009, it estimated that $45.4 billion will be spent on all pets in the U.S. in these categories:
1. Food………………………………………………………………….$17.4 billion
Now there are 1.4 billion starving people in the world.You do the math
2. Supplies/OTC Medicine…………………………………..$10.2 billion
3. Vet Care……………………………………………………………$12.2 billion
4. Live animal purchases……………………………………$ 2.2 billion
5. Pet Services: grooming & boarding………………….$ 3.4 billion
OK as I said I love animals, I am not saying they are less important than humans, god forbid some animals are better than human ( and the name michael vick comes to my head... WHY ) But people lets get back to basics here. People living on less per day in 3rd world countries than we feed our pets.Look at the big picture
As you know,and I would love for you to past this on to others,I am going to leave on a $1.50 (no Ia m not going to eat dog food) but think about not having coffee for a week.
If you want to donate to me here is the link. Min help $1.50
http://my.e2rm.com/personalPage.aspx?registrationID=1124003&langPref=en-CA
Friday, April 29, 2011
Realization of world hunger

Realization of world hunger is a problem which needs to be a concern for all the people of the world. It is not a problem just for those it directly affects.
As citizens of the United States of America (U.S.A.) we constitute about 6% of the world's population. If the students in this classroom represented the world population then two people (have 2 students stand) would represent the population of the United States. Imagine these two people consuming 40%, or a little under half, of all the resources produced by everyone in the class. For example, these two would eat close to half of all combined lunches of the class.
It sounds ridiculous, doesn't it. And, if not ridiculous, it certainly sounds unfair. Well, it is true! The United States constitutes about 6% of the world's population and consumes about 40% of the world's resources. Resources include fuel, manufacturing materials, fabrics, food, and many other commodities. (Illustrate these facts by drawing pie charts on the board - one for population and one for world resources.)
In the U.S.A. we have so much food that we have millions of people who are trying to eat less, so they can lose weight. Dieting is almost a national obsession and is sometimes a health hazard.
Food is the resource we are most concerned about in our discussion on world hunger. The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) estimates that of the world's 6-billion-plus people.
- at least ¾ of a billion people suffer from some form of malnutrition.
- about 50,000 people die each day as a result of malnutrition.
- 800 million people know what it is like to go to bed hungry.
- about 200 million children under the age of 5 are underweight.
- millions of children die each year from the diseases of poverty: parasites and infectious diseases such as whooping cough, measles, tuberculosis, and malaria, with accompanying diarrhea, which interact with poor nutrition in a vicious cycle.
- one child dies of these causes every two seconds
- HERE IS THE BIG ONE...15 children have died in the 30 seconds it took to read these statistics.
The four groups most often suffer the effects of hunger and malnutrition due to high nutrient needs or low tissue reserves are: children, pregnant women, those who are ill, and the elderly.
People in other countries also have an obsession. Their obsession is to have enough food to eat and to maintain life. Many are so poor they do not have the means to buy enough food for their families to stay well and stay alive. Many countries do not have the abundance of food which U.S. citizens have available.
I hope you can help with my journey. Please just think of me May 16-21
And if you want to help a hungry person in a third world country please go to this web site here to donate...
http://my.e2rm.com/personalPage.aspx?registrationID=1124003&langPref=en-CA
Min donation $1.50 A lot ha.
Thursday, April 28, 2011
What is Hunger.

For hunger is a curious thing: at first it is with you all the time, waking and sleeping and in your dreams, and your belly cries out insistently, and there is a knawing and a pain as if your very vitals were being devoured, and you must stop it at any cost, and you buy a moment's respite even while you know and fear the sequel. Then the pain is no longer sharp but dull, and this too is with you always, so that you think of food many times a day and each time a terrible sickness assails you, and because you know this you try to avoid the thought, but you cannot, it is with you. Then that too is gone, all pain, all desire, only a great emptiness is left, like the sky, like a well in drought, and it is now that the strength drains from your limbs, and you try to rise and you cannot, or to swallow and your throat is powerless, and both the swallow and the effort of retaining the liquid tax you to the uttermost.
When people in the United States go to the grocery store they have a choice of thousands of products including fresh meats, fruits and vegetables, and dairy products, as well as countless prepared foods. Few nations in the world have these choices. Even people in some supposedly developed countries have limited food choices.
In the book Mig Pilot, John Barron tells of the escape of Viktor Belenko, a Russian pilot, who defects to the United States. At one point his CIA companions take Viktor to a shopping center. This story illustrates that in many modern countries people have limited resources and only the very rich in many other nations can afford the things that United States citizens often take for granted.
In countries known as third world countries, or developing countries, the food situation is much more severe. In countries such as India, several areas of Africa, and parts of South America hundreds of people die of starvation every day.
It is hard for us to imagine situations like the one described in the poem, THE ARITHMETIC OF POVERTY.
Live below the line

Sunday, January 16, 2011
Walgreens,your last day at work
Saturday, January 8, 2011
MIT Sloan with John Thompson















I just did a shoot for MIT Sloan where Mr John Thompson ex IBM from Symantec and Virtual Instruments was the guest speaker. ABC 7 was there to cover the event of over 250 people.