I was looking through some of the recent purchases from Come Back Alive.  
(https://www.comebackalive.in.ua)  

Purchases include 1500 Mavic 3 Drones and many batches of bulletproof vests in 
groups of 3000.   There are individuals putting down tens as well as thousands 
of USD at a time.   Crowd sourced defense is a thing..

-----Original Message-----
From: Friam <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Steve Smith
Sent: Wednesday, March 16, 2022 10:17 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[email protected]>
Subject: [FRIAM] human side of the Ukraine crisis

Mary's nephew's "charge", Vlada made it to Warsaw most of a week ago from a 
small farm east of Kiev.   She has established a network of support and (new) 
friends among the refugees there. The goFundMe cash they gathered was very 
helpful to this effort and being crowdsourced, the load was shared among 
hundreds of friends/family.  I think the average donation was under $30.

Mary's nephew's wife just gave birth (this morning) to their second child which 
is what prevented the nephew (early 30s) from traveling to Poland to help Vlada 
directly over the last few weeks.   In the meantime, the upside-down refugee 
admissions to the US (refugees from Europe capped at 10,000 while 30,000 
Ukrainians *already* in the US have claimed (and been granted by exec order?) 
refugee status.   According to an immigration lawyer they have retained, Vlada 
can likely still enter the US under a student visa.   The family is ready to 
effectively adopt her (as a young adult) but her heart is *in* Ukraine and will 
likely return.   I understand she has no immediate family in Ukraine to rely on 
(or worry about), but she does have a more extended family there.

As someone who has become a "bleeding heart liberal" over decades of (not so) 
hard knocks, I fully support this type of immigration or more likely temporary 
refuge (years?) for anyone around the world.  When anyone is willing to "host" 
someone from another part of the world, including taking financial 
responsibility for them, it seems unconscionable not to allow that.   In this 
case, Europe, especially Poland and the other eastern EU countries bounding 
Ukraine is carrying the load and being able to release some of that pressure, 
even one individual at a time would seem like a boon to them as well.

Of course, there is all the (not unfounded) rhetoric about how cold our 
shoulders are to those from other countries where the people don't remind us of 
ourselves as much.  I understand some of both sides.  It seems a shame that we 
treat refugees from violence and poverty in Central America as a nasty, 
dangerous "horde" while we welcome these pink-faced, blonde haired people 
wearing designer label clothing.  And yet, I also understand why those who have 
been infected with fear and mistrust of "the other" would have this bias as 
well.

As I think we have discussed hear in great detail, Xenophobia is an organic 
response in individual/group survival.   But that neurochemical response of 
"it's diffr'nt, killit!" might should be something we can in fact overrule 
consciously and culturally.  The (relative) welcoming that EU has given to 
middle-Eastern and north African refugees is a positive example.   I am 
surrounded by many individual positive examples in my life, but the Fox/Trump 
News message about Caravans of Rapists and Murderers still bleeds through and 
exhibits itself in folks mostly 2 degrees of separation from me.   None of 
those have I heard squealing in horror at supporting Ukranian refugees, however.


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