Saturday, February 4, 2012

The beginning of the O.F.O,C. project

April 18, 2010 by  
Filed under Images

Orphan friends from the Casa de Protección orphanage in Tlaquepaque, Jalisco, Mexico where the founder of the Families for Orphans™ adopted his sons.

Social Business Investment

January 31, 2009 by  
Filed under Blog, Blog-Omit-Tweet

For those of you who have not heard of “Social Business” it comes to us from The Banker To The Poor – Nobel Peace Prize Winner, Muhammad Yunus. He extablished the first experiments with micro-credit which evolved into Grameen Bank.

His latest book is: Creating a world without poverty – How Social Business can transform our lives.

The Social Businesses described are like traditional for-profit businesses except that instead of all of the profits going into the pockets of the investors, the profits help the humanitarian cause for which the business was established. Depending on the agreement with the investors, they may continue ownership of the enterprise or they may be repaid thier investment with appropriate interest. Some investors will, for the sake of the humanitarian cause agree to taking no profit, others may still need one or two percent to meet the needs of their board of directors or shareholders.

The businesses in the Orphan Communities are being established as Social Businesses. You can see the various businesses that make up the Funding Activities that in turn pay for the Childcare Activities of the community at: www.orphancommunities.org.

You can contact the organization to discuss your interest in investing…

A Challenge to Social & Business Networks: Which helps most, is most Charitable?

January 5, 2008 by  
Filed under Blog, Blog-Omit-Tweet

There are now hundreds of on-line social and business networks around the world vying for our attention.

When we look at just the networks that each have a minimum of one-million members, combined, they have over a billion members. The question that may be asked is, “What good are they doing?”

Many people join just for the social interaction, many as job seekers and many just to share ideas.

We may also wonder however, do Social & Business Networks have a Social Conscious? Do they purposefully do good things for our world and those in need? Do they, via their members, really help when presented with an opportunity to do so? If so, then we wonder, which Network can prove itself to be the most responsive, the most charitable?

This is the question that is the subject of the Proving People Care project.

The Test Subject being used for this Challenge is the 501-c-3 charity, Our Family Orphan Communities, Inc., and their humanitarian project Ethanol & Orphans/Disabled Children.

This project, now underway in Ninh Binh Province, Vietnam will do all of this and more:
· Improving the environment by providing ethanol instead of petrochemical fuels
· Caring for street orphans…

Why are people (you?) indifferent to thousands of children dying daily?

January 4, 2008 by  
Filed under Blog, Blog-Omit-Tweet

“The worst sin towards our fellow creatures is
not to hate them, but to be indifferent to them;
that is the essence of inhumanity.”

—-from The Devil’s Disciple by George Bernard Shaw

Vietnam Vice President Appreciates Ethanol & Orphan/Disabled Children Project

January 1, 2008 by  
Filed under Blog, Blog-Omit-Tweet

In our recent meeting with Vietnam Vice President Nguyen Thi Doan in Ha Noi, executive director Bob Miller had the opportunity to discuss the Ethanol & Orphan / Disabled Children Project being started in Vietnam.

She expressed her appreciation for how this project will help the disabled and disadvantaged children of Vietnam – estimated at over 3 million.
The project is currently looking for the funding needed to do the engineering, environmental and feasibility studies.

For complete details of how this project will use the profits from the ethanol refinery to help humanitarian projects, see the website for Our Family Orphan Communities, Inc. = http://www.orphancommunities.org/

Agent Orange continues its Devastation

December 31, 2007 by  
Filed under Blog, Blog-Omit-Tweet

Our partner organization, the Vietnam Aid Society for Disabled Children, helps those who are still being born today with birth defects, to become self-sufficient.

Here, helping children to gain computer skills, even if they have to use their foot to move the mouse.

The profits that will come from the ethanol refinery will provide more assistance to more children.
www.orphancommunities.org