Why Did Edward Snowden Go to Hong Kong? \u2013 (Nation of Change \u2013 June 13, 2013)<\/a><\/b>
\nA lot of people in the US media are asking why America\u2019s most famous whistleblower, 29-year old Edward Snowden, hied himself off to the city state of Hong Kong, a wholly owned subsidiary of the People\u2019s Republic of China, to seek at least temporary refuge. Hong Kong has an extradition treaty with the US, they say. And as for China, which controls the international affairs of its Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, while granting it local autonomy to govern its domestic affairs, its leaders \u201cmay not want to irritate the U.S.\u201d at a time when the Chinese economy is stumbling. These people don’t have much understanding of either Hong Kong or of China. The author of this article, someone who has spent almost seven years in China and Hong Kong, offers his thoughts about why Snowden, obviously a very savvy guy despite his lack of a college education, went where he did.<\/p>\nLIFE STYLE\/SOCIAL TRENDS AND VALUES<\/b><\/p>\n
\u2018Buycott\u2019 \u2013 (Buycott website \u2013 no date)<\/a><\/b>
\nNo longer will consumers have to wonder what companies are behind the millions of products that fill supermarket shelves because there\u2019s an app for that. Buycott, now available on Apple and Android platforms, is a tool that allows consumers to organize their spending depending on personal values. The app helps consumers determine whether their spending is funding causes that they either support or oppose. From categories such as animal welfare and the environment to Gay Rights and social responsibility, the app prompts users to join the causes they support and, or boycott the campaigns they oppose. Users of the app scan products\u2019 barcodes while shopping to determine \u201cwhat the product is and who owns it,\u201d according to Buycott\u2019s website. The app then crosschecks the products\u2019 parent company to the app user\u2019s participating campaigns and will alert them of any conflict.<\/p>\nMapping The Most Hate-Filled Places In America – (Fast Company \u2013 May 15, 2013)<\/a><\/b>