As the death toll
rises above 125,000 with countless injured, widowed and orphaned, there has
been a rush of aid and supplies to millions of the tsunami’s victims.
Assistance came from a variety of “unlikely” sources, such as President Bush
and large corporations, much to the chagrin of the liberal media and Hollywood
elite. The network news bureaus and largely liberal entertainment industry
have remained eerily silent regarding this devastating global crisis.
Indeed, at this time of year most of the entertainers go on winter holiday
to the slopes or sunny beaches. To date, they have ignored the crisis
rather than help the relief efforts and lend their support for donations.
The vile and rotund Michael Moore is filming his docudrama Sicko on
the so-called “evil” pharmaceutical industry. Moore will certainly
omit the timely and generous contributions made by this altruistic industry
sector. As of December 31, 2004 the following pharmaceutical giants
have donated and/or pledged for the Southeast Asia tsunami disaster relief
effort:
• Pfizer Inc. $10 million cash and $25 million in drugs to relief agencies
• Merck & Co. $3 million in cash
•
Both Abbott Laboratories and Johnson and Johnson have pledged $2 million
in cash. Johnson and Johnson is also supplying needed medical supplies
and drugs.
• Bristol Myers Squibb $1 million in cash and $4 Million in much needed anti-biotics.
• Roche Group and GlaxoSmithKline Plc will announce shortly their own disaster relief contributions.
Another past target of Moore’s vitriol is General Motors. GM just pledged
over $2 million in cash, agreed to match employee donations and will provide
vehicles to transport medical supplies and food to the stricken region.
The voices of the entertainment elite were energized against President Bush
during the recent election campaign, but they have yet to respond to this
international emergency. Our “heartless” President raised the U.S.
relief pledge tenfold in less than a week to a staggering $350 million.
How long would it take to organize a Tsunami-Aid concert via Pay-Per-View
to collect donations? By the time Bruce Springsteen, Bono and
the others return to the microphones, thousands more will die from starvation
and disease. Activist actors such as Ben Affleck, Susan Sarandon, Al
Franken, P. Diddy, and Barbra Streisand have not been heard from. Oh,
and where is George Soros and his billions when you need him? Too busy
distributing rolling paper and needles for addicts?
President Bush was roundly criticized by the media for failing to issue an
immediate statement from his Crawford, Texas ranch regarding the devastation.
However, UN Secretary General Kofi Annan was given a free pass. Amidst
this serious global catastrophe the Secretary General remained in Colorado
on holiday for three additional days after the tsunami hit. When confronted
by a Fox News reporter why it took him so long to return to UN headquarters,
Kofi replied that he monitored the situation via the Internet while away.
Perhaps the Secretary General was plotting with his son how to auction off
the remaining Iraqi food-for-oil vouchers on e-Bay.
By way of contrast, President Bush was fully informed and actively working
on a U.S. response to the crisis from his Crawford ranch. He appointed both
Secretary of State Colin Powell and brother Governor Jeb Bush to lead America’s
relief efforts. The President fully supports a European hosted Tsunami
aid conference, which probably will reduce the UN influence over the aid
effort.
More disgusting than the personal failures of the entertainment industry
to act is the ungrateful and obviously anti-Semitic response from Sri Lanka’s
government to Israel’s attempt to aid disaster victims. A lack
of accommodations in Columbo and airport congestion was cited as Sri Lanka’s
excuse for refusing a 150 man Israeli relief mission that included 60 members
of the Israel Defense Forces. An uproar from Sri Lanka’s small but
vocal Muslim community was cited as the true reason. To be fair, reports
reaching the West cite individual Sri Lanka citizens providing food and shelter
to stranded foreign tourists, including Americans, and for that we are grateful.
Special recognition should be afforded to Hong Kong entertainers, Jackie
Chan, Chow-Yun-fat and tycoon Li Ka-shing for their generous assistance.
Russian tennis star Maria Sharapova donated $10,000 for Thailand disaster
relief. She and Venus Williams are also providing moral support by participating
in an exhibition match in Chiang Mai. Other major corporations deserving
special recognition and thanks for their efforts include: Nike Inc., American
Express, General Electric, First Data Corp., Coca-Cola, Pepsi, Exxon-Mobil,
Citigroup, Marriott International and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
Kudos to the Catholic Relief Services for its generous pledge of $25 million
for emergency relief and long-term programs.
Our prayers and thoughts are with all those impacted by this monumental natural disaster.
Bonnie Chernin Rogoff is the Founder of Jews for Life and reports on a variety of subjects including pro-life issues and politics.
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