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Sam Bankman-Fried, the 28-year-old CEO of cryptocurrency exchange FTX, has been making waves in the financial world. A recent report by The Washington Post delves into Bankman-Fried’s family background and how it has shaped his path to success. Bankman-Fried comes from a family of accomplished financiers, with both his parents having successful careers in the […]
Meet Sam Bankman-Fried: The Bitcoin Genius Changing Finance and Giving Back #Bitcointrading #businessworld #career #cryptocurrencyexchange #cryptocurrencyexchangeFTX #education #familybackground #finance #Ftx #Investing #numbers #philanthropy #SamBankmanFried #scientificresearch #socialresponsibility #sociallyconsciouscapitalism #success #WashingtonPostreport #wealth #workethic
Your Healing Crystals are Funding the Taliban and Destroying the Environment
Crystal healing started as a niche of spiritual hippies that believed in the metaphysical properties of crystals. Millions of years ago, these stones were formed when liquid rock inside Earth cooled and hardened, creating these beautiful eye-catching stones. We cannot deny that these stones were made under intense energy, which has been interpreted as having mystical healing properties that have been marketed as alchemy for the soul. Nowadays, the niche crystal-healers community has expanded into the mainstream due to celebrity endorsements, such as Adele needing them to perform on stage, Kim Kardashian-West using it as a PTSD-healer after her traumatic robbery, and Gwyneth Paltrow using them to purify water. The rumored healing properties have echoed in all the corners of the world, making people feel closer to Earth through their stones. In reality, they are funding human rights violations, environmental chaos, and, yes, the Taliban.
Environmental effects:
We all know that the mining industry is a huge polluter, destroying pristine forests in every corner of the world. Countries such as Myanmar, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Afghanistan are a few of the leading suppliers of crystals. Their governments have little to no environmental restrictions for mining, allowing them to pollute without control or sanctions. Even in the United States, which has some environmental policies, a recent study found that mines in New Mexico that extract blue chrysocolla -which is supposed to support "goddess energy" -are responsible for leaking 2 billion gallons of acid and heavy metals that contaminate surface and groundwater.
It all begins with deforestation, and land degradation to arrive in the rock underlayers. Then then it
Pollutes the air
Deteriorates the ozone layer
Pollutes water sources
Limits water consumption for wildlife and people
This affects the local population too, making the air toxic and a biodiverse imbalance, cutting down the water supply and food security, which can eventually lead to pandemics...
Besides all of this, crystals are non-renewable resources, so if we continue to extract these precious stones, we will eventually run out of them.
Social effects:
The crystal trade and mining lax regulations, making it easy to foster social conflict and human rights violations. Most of these mining jobs are performed by minors searching for a route out of poverty at the cost of being part of massive organizations that own their lives, such as the Taliban.
The international NGO, Global Witness found that the Taliban earns up to $20 million a year from Afghanistan's crystals, such as nephrite, lapis lazuli, aquamarine, jade, jasper, morganite, sapphire, tourmaline, and topaz. So if you buy a crystal from Afghanistan, you are indeed funding the terrorist, human-rights violator, and misogynist organization.
Other than the obscene organization behind the mining industry, workers are also exposed to highly toxic environments where their health is at extreme risk. When miners cut and polish the stones, they inhale silica particles and catch silicosis, a fatal disease similar to lung cancer. Often that part is outsourced to countries such as China and India, where worker safety regulations are limited.
So if you believe in the energy stored in these crystals, imagine the dark energy these crystals experienced when being extracted. Boys giving up their childhood to work underground for long hours. Afghan women are being controlled by the Taliban. And environmental degradation. Is that the energy you want to heal your soul?
Buying crystals for the sake of feeling grounded and healed comes at the cost of international peace, human rights violations, and environmental deterioration.
If you still believe in the metaphysical properties of crystals, you can:
Research where these crystals come from.
If the mining practices are ethical and regulated.
Keep the ones you already own. Focus on quality and not quantity.
Look for crystals yourself near rivers, your garden, and hikes. This way, you can be sure of the process in which your healing crystal was found.
Social Responsibility 101
The best I can do today. New comic. My best varies from day to day, but I’m trying. These have been heavy weeks. Side note: I wear a mask when in public and around other people because it helps keep the virus from spreading further. I do it out of respect for the people around me. Thanks for supporting Connie on Ko-fi
Who woulda thought #socialresponsibility & #socialdistancing might offer up a chance to play out a childhood fantasy... until #socialconscience & #socialjustice got in the way... (at Lake Junaluska, North Carolina) https://www.instagram.com/p/B-kij6MhmM4/?igshid=12pzg45ge0nw7
In the current zeitgeist, I really wish there were a label/nickname for bands that are reasonably socially conscious - not consciously racist, sexist, homophobic or transphobic. When I get invites from bands I've never heard of, I kind of just want to check the "NOT A NAZI OR SERIAL RAPIST" box up front before listening, liking, and potentially sharing something poisonous. Probably though, if this label were created, there would be a huge contingent of totally not shitty bands that hate the idea of being so overtly "PC" and would make themselves look like "the enemy" just for refusing the label, thus creating a totally unnecessary divide. Really though, the interesting reality we're living in - for better and for worse - is that it's SO EASY to discover and share new music. And unfortunately, it takes more than 2 minutes to figure out what a band is about, what they're doing in the world, and what their message is. It's hard to be 100% responsible when you're so eager to support great music, art, and good people.
The point is to understand. #socialresponsibility (at Buriram) https://www.instagram.com/p/Bt_h3yGnCWq/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=1er1mggeqfrfu