View Full Version : 21 Pictures That Will Restore Your Faith In Humanity
Marsila
31st July 2012, 21:53
I thought this was such a good thing when i found it, and maybe the world still goes around, because someone is doing something on the lines of these people here. We can't always only focus on the negative, and sometimes we need to see and know about people like these. as the link (http://www.buzzfeed.com/expresident/pictures-that-will-restore-your-faith-in-humanity) says
"People aren't always awful. Sometimes, they're maybe even just a little bit wonderful. Here are 21 pictures to remind you of that fact. "
I'll post them in 3 messages here, here's the first:
1. This picture of Chicago Christians who showed up at a gay pride parade to apologize for homophobia in the Church.
http://s3-ec.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/terminal05/2012/6/19/13/enhanced-buzz-9656-1340127251-3.jpg
... and the reaction from the parade. http://s3-ec.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/web05/2012/6/20/11/enhanced-buzz-2867-1340206104-3.jpg
2. This story about Japanese senior citizens who volunteered to tackle the nuclear crisis at Fukushima power station so that young people wouldn't have to subject themselves to radiation.
http://s3-ec.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/web03/2012/6/19/13/enhanced-buzz-18740-1340127256-3.jpg
3. This picture of two Norwegian guys rescuing a sheep from the ocean.
http://s3-ec.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/terminal05/2012/6/19/13/enhanced-buzz-9512-1340127249-8.jpg
4. This sign at an awesome bookshop.
http://s3-ec.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/web04/2012/6/19/13/enhanced-buzz-5262-1340127249-17.jpg
5. This poll about what Snooki should name her child.
http://s3-ec.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/terminal05/2012/6/19/13/enhanced-buzz-9511-1340127252-5.jpg
6. The moment in which this Ohio athlete stopped to help an injured competitor across the finish line during a track meet.
http://s3-ec.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/web05/2012/6/19/13/enhanced-buzz-4578-1340127249-6.jpg
17-year-old Meghan Vogel was in last place in the 3,200-meter run when she caught up to competitor Arden McMath, whose body was giving out. Instead of running past her to avoid the last-place finish, Vogel put McMath's arm around her shoulders, carried her 30 meters, and then pushed her over the finish line before crossing it.
7. This exchange between a 3-year-old girl and a shopping center.
http://s3-ec.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/web05/2012/6/19/13/enhanced-buzz-4527-1340127254-9.jpg
http://s3-ec.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/web05/2012/6/19/13/enhanced-buzz-4547-1340127254-5.jpg
Marsila
31st July 2012, 21:55
8. This note that was handed to a waiter along with a $20 bill by an elderly lady in his restaurant.
http://s3-ec.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/web04/2012/6/19/13/enhanced-buzz-5733-1340127253-4.jpg
9. This sign at an awesome Subway restaurant.
http://s3-ec.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/terminal05/2012/6/20/12/enhanced-buzz-8064-1340208430-6.jpg
10. This picture of a villager carrying stranded kittens to dry land during floods in Cuttack City, India.
http://s3-ec.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/web05/2012/6/19/13/enhanced-buzz-4569-1340127257-4.jpg
http://s3-ec.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/web04/2012/6/19/13/enhanced-buzz-5997-1340127257-3.jpg
11. This sign at an awesome drycleaner's. http://s3-ec.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/web05/2012/6/19/13/enhanced-buzz-4037-1340127259-14.jpg
Plaza Cleaners in Portland, OR, helped over 2,000 unemployed workers who couldn't afford dry cleaning. The store's owner estimated that it cost his company $32,000 dollars.
12. This photograph of a man giving his shoes to a homeless girl in Rio de Janeiro.
http://s3-ec.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/web05/2012/6/19/13/enhanced-buzz-4527-1340127260-12.jpg
13. This picture of a firefighter administering oxygen to a cat rescued from a house fire.
http://s3-ec.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/web05/2012/6/19/13/enhanced-buzz-4557-1340127258-8.jpg
14. And this one. http://s3-ec.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/web05/2012/6/20/11/enhanced-buzz-2837-1340206304-7.jpg
Marsila
31st July 2012, 22:00
15. This interaction between a Guatemalan girl and a tourist she just met.
http://s3-ec.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/web03/2012/6/20/11/enhanced-buzz-6637-1340207274-7.jpg
16. This gesture from a neighbor.http://s3-ec.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/web03/2012/6/19/13/enhanced-buzz-18883-1340127261-9.jpg
17. These photos of two children collaborating to rescue a dog who had fallen into a ravine.
http://s3-ec.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/terminal05/2012/6/20/12/enhanced-buzz-8064-1340208385-4.jpg
18. This note on a young family's check.
http://s3-ec.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/web05/2012/6/19/13/enhanced-buzz-4540-1340127262-8.jpg
19. This exchange between a protester and a soldier during a protest in Brazil.
http://s3-ec.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/terminal05/2012/6/19/13/enhanced-buzz-9574-1340127282-9.jpg
20. These pictures of a man jumping into rough waters to rescue a stranger's Shih Tzu in Melbourne.
http://s3-ec.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/web05/2012/6/19/13/enhanced-buzz-8192-1340127916-3.jpg
Sue Drummond was walking her beloved Shih Tzu, Bibi, on a pier in Melbourne, when a fierce gust of wind picked him up and hurled him into the rough waters of the bay. A passerby, Raden Soemawinata, who happened to be on the pier that day to scatter his grandmother's ashes, wasted no time in stripping down and diving into the bay to rescue the animal.
(Photos: Chris Scott)
21. And this photograph of two best friends on a swing. http://s3-ec.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/web04/2012/6/20/12/enhanced-buzz-10658-1340208538-2.jpg
Ī=[Post Update]=Ī
And not part of those 21 images ,but story i got from that link to
http://www.itv.com/news/granada/story/2012-06-18/cash-returned-by-kind-strangers/
and a summary of this from one of the people's FB comments:
"a guy in Blackpool who withdrew Ģ1,000 in cash from a bank to pay his car insurance. A gust of wind blew it all out of his hands and down the road. He went and sat in his son's car shocked at what had happened and without a clue what to do when there was a tap on the window. Loads of people were lining up to give him his cash back having chased it down the street and picked it up. He counted up what he got back and it came to Ģ980"
Yes a lot of bad happens, but a lot of good we don't know about either, and it's source is within us on a normal day, and nowhere else.
RMorgan
31st July 2012, 22:36
Thank you Marsila.
You know, this is how things were supposed to be.
Something happened, some people made the wrong choices and here we are right now, living in this mess.
However, thereīs still hope. Not hope for aliens, disclosure or conspiracies; I really donīt care much about this stuff anymore.
Thereīs hope for humanity!
I truly believe the number of goodhearted people living in this world overwhelmingly outnumbers the number of bad people.
We just urgently need to make the right choices...Itīs not easy, but itīs not that hard as well.
Weīre so beautiful, but so weird. Weīre a paradox, actually.
The hands which saved that baby sheep from drowning belongs a person who probably ate a steak in the same day...
The man who goes to war and murders innocent people is also the man who is a beloved father and husband, who helps his neighbor to paint his house, who takes care of his friends...
The hand that kills is the same hand that creates.
How come the same individuals have so much compassion and be so destructive at the same time?
We donīt need to be like this. We can choose to be good people.
Itīs just a matter of choices, really. We just need to choose to be good, not 50% good; 100% good.
Raf.
WhiteFeather
31st July 2012, 23:08
Beautiful Post OP. Wanishi. I hope you wouldnt mind me posting a video. That i often watch, gives me hope.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=roDXSHSEuoo
sentinel69
1st August 2012, 01:48
Thank you .......
gripreaper
1st August 2012, 01:57
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M1MogcDNYF4
Ol' Roy
1st August 2012, 06:07
Great post Marsila!
WF, that video really choked me up! Makes me want to get up off my ass and do something. No matter how small. We can make a difference!
Nickolai
1st August 2012, 13:44
Dearest Marsila,
Thank you so much. I really needed it.
And Raf, what you said it rings so true to me. Thank you too..))
Nickolai
Wind
1st August 2012, 14:02
This is what the world needs. Unconditional love.
Conaire
1st August 2012, 14:13
Nice thread. :)
Ivanhoe
1st August 2012, 15:19
I have tears in my eyes.
Nyce555
1st August 2012, 16:10
Marsila Thank you so much for sharing. These photos are inspirational and touching. This is the part of humanity that makes me believe that all is not lost.
Ricker
1st August 2012, 16:59
With the mass media bombarding us with all the negativities around the world these things are often over looked. Humans as a species has an uncanny instinct for compassion towards all walks of life. There are good people out there open your eyes. I see them on a daily basis. You would be surprised how many people that are not only willing to accept your kindness but are compelled to "Pay it forward"
Ricker
Karunai
1st August 2012, 17:16
Thank you for opening this thread. By the way I was wondering if this -from now on- can become like a Good News thread where we can post the good news we stumble upon here and there (just thinking aloud). : )
Marsila
3rd August 2012, 20:01
thread where we can post the good news we stumble upon here and there (just thinking aloud). : )
LOL you don't need to ask me darling just go ahead and do it as that is the whole point.
and here are a few other quick one's...no link as i got them from different places around the net, but the links are in the pictures themselves....sorry to people with slow connections as i have to put them in more than one post.... but in all cases its good to remember these things as i'm another that wakes up reads RT and newspapers from where i am and where i live...and for a break so as not to feel hopeless, it is good to keep these things in mind to! I hope all those who see this enjoy it, and feel a bit better about how some humans are :)
here they are real quick as am not even using my own computer!!
http://www.nedhardy.com/wp-content/uploads/images/2012/may/humanity/faith_in_humanity_restored_2.jpg
http://www.nedhardy.com/wp-content/uploads/images/2012/may/humanity/faith_in_humanity_restored_5.jpg
This story about a firefighter who prolonged a Koala's life, sharing his water with it as he rescued it from one of Australia's worst bush fires a few years ago.
http://www.nedhardy.com/wp-content/uploads/images/2012/may/humanity/faith_in_humanity_restored_6.jpg
http://www.nedhardy.com/wp-content/uploads/images/2012/may/humanity/faith_in_humanity_restored_8.jpg
http://www.nedhardy.com/wp-content/uploads/images/2012/may/humanity/faith_in_humanity_restored_4.jpg
Not all pranks are malicious, some are actually great.
http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-Dc4JD6xrkaA/T7WkUSuJzyI/AAAAAAAAAMg/mcXp1L8WGjk/s1600/agonas.jpg
not all stories which come out of football/soccer matches should be about hooligans.
Marsila
3rd August 2012, 20:01
And these...
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-5XhaJu-F2-A/T7WkgBmCQ_I/AAAAAAAAAMw/-DDAgFHBUWc/s1600/Faith-in-humanity-restored.jpg
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-oXt8E6R1hdg/T7WkvuZBMSI/AAAAAAAAANA/dxHQS9RbQOo/s640/muslim.jpg
http://cdn.smosh.com/sites/default/files/bloguploads/beautiful-teen-cancer.jpg
http://lolsnaps.com/upload_pic/LostIDReturnedFaithInHumanityRestored-72532.jpg
http://resources1.news.com.au/images/2011/01/12/1225985/956493-ipswich-kangaroo.jpg
http://images.brisbanetimes.com.au/2011/03/25/2252265/roo-rescue-005-420x0.jpg
And last but not least, this story about a father of 5 who risked his life to save a drowning kangaroo from flood waters.
Menkaure
4th August 2012, 00:27
You will notice that there is not ONE politician, lawyer or 'bible-thumper' in these pics. Thank you for a good feeling.
conk
4th August 2012, 14:34
We once lost our little dog's special collar on vacation. It had his name, address, and phone number on a tag. One week later we received the most gracious, wonderful note from a gentleman that found it and spend $3 to return it in the mail. That simple gesture really touched us. There are loving, caring people in the world. Lots of them!
Great thread, glorious photos.
Conk
Mark (Star Mariner)
4th August 2012, 15:25
Love this thread..
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Marsila
4th August 2012, 21:12
You will notice that there is not ONE politician, lawyer or 'bible-thumper' in these pics. Thank you for a good feeling.
For good reason lol ....these pictures and stories give us a break from the disruption that lot causes to many peoples daily lives!
We once lost our little dog's special collar on vacation. It had his name, address, and phone number on a tag. One week later we received the most gracious, wonderful note from a gentleman that found it and spend $3 to return it in the mail. That simple gesture really touched us. There are loving, caring people in the world. Lots of them!
Great thread, glorious photos.
Conk
great story conk...amazing how when we lose hope at times, how someone living their own life and reality will cross over onto ours, just to give us a happy moment and hope again, before going on to their own lives : D
and thanks for the pictures star mariner!!
Here are two more, a picture reminding how special children and some adults are and another from last year about the one person in a race, who always remembers it isn't always about winning 'that' race.
http://thingsnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/Romanian-child-hands-a-heart-shaped-balloon-to-riot-police-700x949.jpg
A few months ago, while the people were protesting austerity measures in Romania...someone was raising a great child, and the other side was helping him.
http://l.yimg.com/a/p/sp/editorial_image/09/0984a79b56a8f5b4d8aad1348f20491a/andover_cross_country_runner_josh_ripley_who_carried_a_competitor_for_mile_at_an_event.jpg
And click here (http://rivals.yahoo.com/highschool/blog/prep_rally/post/runner-carries-injured-foe-half-mile-to-help-in-middle-of-race?urn=highschool,wp6171) for this story about a young man who was the only one to turn back in a cross country race, after hearing another competitors screams. After finding the injured person he carried him all the way back, to the start were he was later rushed to hospital....and then turned around and surely enough finished the race.
yiolas
4th August 2012, 23:12
I love you guys ! Thank-you.
Student_Energy_Healer
5th August 2012, 14:27
I've never cried so much for joy until today. these pictures are priceless! I look forward to a near future where there are more people like these in the world!
Beautiful.... just beautiful!
Marsila
6th August 2012, 19:47
And 3 more today.
(don't know what to do about the numbering...but it is okay as there is space for more pictures)
Love or hate him, the first is the end result of a duel between street artists Robbo and Banksy that lasted more than 26 years....after learning that Robbo got into an accident and had fallen into a coma, Banksy put his ego aside, and repaints the original Robbo painting in black and white, with a candle painted for his friend (that Robbo accuses Banksy of having a career is quite funny to, tbh)
The second is from the Ping An a Fu stray animal shelter in Jiangsu Provine, China, last December (2011), all these dogs were going to get slaughtered until some people surrounded the truck, paid $8000 to buy every single dog, and then sent them to this shelter with a new lease on life
and the third..the message is in the picture : )
it is a challenge, but i hope this shows what the news isn't showing, as i do see a great effort in trying to spread hopelessness around the world in the past few weeks everytime i read any news website ;p
http://www.damnlol.com/i/3750fd8793646b5a79a85a1a8753267f.jpg
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-JedwsbzcfWE/UApwVzDRyoI/AAAAAAAAAOc/OJlaSLVrVdM/s1600/554218_466986506644911_102506617_n.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/1G2fb.jpg
shijo
6th August 2012, 22:45
Thanks for this great thread,it was a pleasure to open up Avalon today which is not always the case for me,regards shijo.
Marsila
30th August 2012, 17:29
Well not to bring this up again, but there are more good stories about good people having done good things, that our seeing more light than they did t the time of their happening.....why should only bad people have their words on the news and on the net?
First 6 good stories with links to them i got from this site here (http://www.cracked.com/blog/6-true-stories-that-will-restore-your-faith-in-humanity/) compiled by David Wong.
#6. Regular Folks Risking Their Asses to Stop Hatred
In the wake of a terrorist attack in Egypt that left 21 minority Christians dead at the hands of radical Muslims, there was fear throughout the country that any Christian gathering was a target. So when Christmas Eve came just a few days later, Christians left their houses for church services feeling like there was a bull's-eye on their back. And sure enough, what they found when they arrived at their Christmas Eve services was a mob of Muslims waiting for them.
The mob was there to deliver a very clear message: "If the terrorists want to kill you, they'll have to kill us, too." They were there to act as human shields.
Via Ahram.org
This means they also missed the A Christmas Story marathon on cable.
In case you were wondering "Why would Christians even risk living in the Middle East in the first place?" you might be surprised to find out that Egypt is 10 percent Christian -- Christians and Muslims eat at the same restaurants and go see the same movies, and by God, they've got each others' backs when **** gets serious. Even in Iran, both Christianity and Judaism are legal and protected in their constitution. I guess what I'm trying to say is, none of this is as simple as the people with suits and podiums want you to believe.
ahramonline
The signs in these people's hands prove it.
Let's try an even more awesome example. In the war-ravaged African nation of Liberia, it's the Muslims who are the minority in a nation that is overwhelmingly Christian. They were in the middle of two consecutive decades of civil war, where factions of warlords basically staged a reality show where whoever committed the most atrocities won the country. Finally, a woman named Leymah Roberta Gbowee started convincing other women -- Muslims and Christians both -- to stand up and demand an end to the war. From mosque to church they went, recruiting women who were as fed up as they were.
Via Sfgate.com
"Let's full on Lysistrata this mother****er."
These women proceeded to get right in the faces of the warlords, demanding an end to the violence. Keep in mind, this isn't like protesting in America, where maybe you get pepper sprayed and spend a night in jail on a disorderly conduct charge. These are warlords who used drugged children as battlefield drones and mutilated the faces and limbs of anyone who stood in their way. These are people who used rape as a military tactic.
But in 2003, this group of women protested and shouted and increased their numbers, demanding that the warring factions sit down at the peace table and hammer out a truce. And they did. They actually stopped the war just to shut them up. Liberia held its first democratic elections two years later.
Via Wikipedia
And Leymah Roberta Gbowee went on to win the Nobel Peace Prize in 2011.
#5. Random Acts of Kindness from People Who Had No Reason to Care
When you work fast food, they're really not paying you enough money to give a ****. In fact, one of the only upsides of the job is that nobody expects you to.
So, for instance, if you're a delivery driver for Domino's, it's not like you have some close relationship with the people who greet you at the door. You probably don't even remember them, unless they keep opening the door nude. So, when delivery driver Susan Guy realized that a particular elderly woman had mysteriously stopped ordering pizzas, what reason did she even have to notice? Maybe somebody opened a Papa John's nearby. Maybe the lady went on a diet.
Photos.com
Maybe she died from eating all that ****ing pizza.
But on a hunch, Guy jumped in her pizzamobile and, on her own time, drove out to the lady's house. She banged on the door. No answer. She banged on a window. Nothing. Finally she got a neighbor to call 911.
Stop and think about how foolish she would have looked if she were wrong here. Maybe the lady was just on vacation, maybe she had just run out to the store, maybe she would be furious that a stupid pizza delivery driver was nosing into her business. But when the cops came and forced the door, there was the old lady, lying where she had fallen three days earlier, unable to get to a phone.
No one else had checked on her, and no one else was going to. Except for pizza delivery woman Susan Guy, who had every right in the world to just shrug and go on with her day.
Via Memorycrossblog.com
Making her the first pizza delivery person to increase someone's life expectancy.
Then we have Virginia Saenz. Let's say one day you get a wrong number phone call from a total stranger. It's a woman who leaves a nonsense message on your voice mail, addressing a person who doesn't live there, with a message that goes something like this: "I can send you money for groceries, but that won't leave me enough to pay my mortgage this month, and the house is already in foreclosure."
Saenz, a real estate agent whose only connection to these people was that her phone number was a couple of transposed digits away from theirs, could have just deleted the message. Or, if she was motivated to be a good Samaritan, Saenz could have called the person back to let her know she had gotten the wrong number, so she'd know that the person she had intended to call would never hear her message.
Getty
Or at least call her back so she could hear our cruel, mocking laughter at her misfortune.
But instead, Saenz called the stranger back and said, "I'll take care of the groceries, don't worry about it." The lady, Lucy Crutchfield, had meant to leave a message for her daughter. Saenz contacted the daughter and bought her and her family enough groceries to get them through the end of the month, allowing Crutchfield to pay her mortgage.
There are people who make a habit of this sort of thing, by the way. In Tennessee, a group of nine women have been running a secret charity for decades, just prowling around the city looking for strangers who'd had their power turned off, or who had just had a death in the family, whatever. Then they'd sneak by their home in the wee hours of the morning and drop off envelopes of cash and a freshly baked cake. Over the decades they've dispensed nearly a million freaking dollars this way.
They did it anonymously, on their own time, just for the pure hell of it.
#4. Real-Life Bruce Waynes
Photos.com
The problem with dreaming of being Batman is that in real life, spending your family fortune on martial arts training and grappling hooks wouldn't really do anybody any good. Stopping street crime requires a justice system, not vigilantes, and in the real world, supervillains work in offices behind a moat full of lawyers. There are ways to put your fortune to good use, however, without throwing a single bat-shaped shuriken at anyone.
Washington Post
"Of course, lil' Jimmy. I'll sucker punch the Joker twice for you."
Take Lenny B. Robinson, the Baltimore businessman who has poured more money than some of us make in a year into a full Batman costume and other gear to go entertain sick kids. He even bought a black Lamborghini and decked it out with bat symbols (though we suspect he would have done that anyway).
Via Washington Post
"In fact, doing that was the only reason I got rich in the first place."
He spends about $25,000 a year on this little crusade, buying toys and gifts to give out to kids suffering from leukemia and equally awful diseases. Yes, he's rich and he can do this kind of thing, but it's still nice to see an example of a rich guy giving back when you hear so much about pro athletes and such blowing their fortunes on bull****. Hey, speaking of which ...
There was an assistant coach with the Los Angeles Clippers named Kim Hughes who was diagnosed with prostate cancer. The doctor who was approved under his insurance plan was going to require him to wait a few months to do the surgery, and Hughes didn't want to (it would be risky, and that would require him to miss a good part of the upcoming season). He found another doctor willing to do it sooner, but the insurance company let him know that they wouldn't be paying for it.
Via LA Times
"Kim, can you lick my phone? Kim?"
It was a good thing he didn't wait -- the cancer, it turns out, was already starting to spread. But saving a life isn't cheap -- the bill wound up over $70,000, and Hughes and his family were going to get nailed for every penny. That is, until several Clippers players heard about the situation and told him not to worry about the bill. They just paid it themselves.
Though we guess all of this is small potatoes compared to Bill Gates. Once voted Most Likely to Carve His Face into the Moon With a Giant Laser, Gates has donated a mind-boggling $28 billion of his personal fortune to date. Billion, with a "b." As in, he's donated a million dollars 28,000 times over.
But then, he and fellow billionaire Warren Buffett convinced 57 billionaires around the world to give away half of their money to people in need, and got them to sign a pledge saying so. If you're sitting there thinking, "Yeah, but those guys can afford it!" you are profoundly misunderstanding how hard it is to separate the super rich from their money. That's how they got rich, after all. Right now, go to your nearest rich guy's mansion and ask for half his money. All you'll get is a bill two weeks later for the electricity the bodyguards used Tasering you.
#3. Not Seizing the Chance to Be a Dick
Photos.com
Most of us have a secret fantasy where we'll get the perfect excuse to act like a dick in a situation where nobody will blame us. That's why we love revenge movies, like the ones starring Liam Neeson where he or his family is wronged and he goes on a completely justified murderous rampage. It's not just that we fantasize that we'd respond like a destructive god of vengeance if wronged -- it's that we want to be wronged just so we have an excuse. It's also why we love sitcom smartasses and Dr. House types, because we wish that we too had the perfect insult ready to whip out on the next person who deserves it.
So here's one of those perfect smackdown situations that actually happened: Imagine you spend your entire life in the military as an officer who leads units in multiple wars. In 40 years of service, you rise through the ranks to become a general, and the vice chief of staff of the U.S. Army. So one day you're at a fancy Washington dinner with the president of the United States and other bigwigs. As you pass one table, one of the liberal women Obama has working in his administration glances back at you and tells you to go get her a glass of wine.
Via Wikipedia
"And don't drop any of those stupid patches in it."
The man was General Peter Chiarelli, the woman was Obama adviser Valerie Jarrett, and the situation was an all-time setup for a smackdown of epic proportions. "Who are you, you freaking bleeding heart bureaucrat, to talk to me that way? YOU CAN'T HANDLE THE TRUTH." He had the chance to utterly obliterate her, and he'd have been applauded for it.
What did Chiarelli do? Well, he immediately figured out what had happened -- the waiter's uniforms were identical to what the officers were wearing, minus a couple of dozen medals. She just saw him out of the corner of her eye and mistook him for a server. Immediately after seeing her mistake, she probably assumed that she had just ruined her career. But Chiarelli? He went and got her some wine, just like she asked. Then they all laughed about it.
Getty
Silently quieting the urge to send her to Guantanamo.
There is a similar famous story where a woman at a Utah airport saw a big black man at the curb and assumed he was an airport employee. She asked him to carry her bags to her car, not realizing the man was NBA great Karl Malone. She did not find this out, in fact, until after he carried out her bags and had to explain why he couldn't accept her tip.
But probably my favorite example of this was a Major League baseball pitcher named Armando Galarraga. The guy has had a mediocre career, spending most of it in the minor leagues. But in 2010 he got called up out of the minors by the Detroit Tigers and pitched one of the greatest games in the history of the sport.
Getty
That's him, straining under the weight of the standard 28-pound American baseball.
He reached the final out in the ninth inning, having pitched a perfect game -- he allowed no hits and no walks. Understand, this is something that had only happened 19 times in the last century. So before you say, "Ah, it's just a game, who cares?" keep in mind that he was doing something that, in the field he worked in, would have earned him instant immortality. That perfect game would follow him for the rest of his life. The vast majority of even the greatest Hall of Fame pitchers play their entire careers without ever doing it, and here this 28-year-old nobody was about to pull it off, in miracle fashion. He just had to get one more out.
He made the pitch. The batter hit a little ground ball. The fielder threw it to first base, the runner was out by a mile.
Via Huffington Post
"His shadow touched the plate! It counts!"
But first base umpire Jim Joyce wasn't paying attention and declared the runner safe, ruining the perfect game, and ruining the one great achievement of Galarraga's life (the very next batter would get an out, ending the game). The crowd went nuts, sounding like they were about to riot. The Tigers players and manager screamed at the umpire, who admitted that he blew it (or as he put it, "Biggest call of my career, and I kicked the **** out of it.").
Galarraga's reaction to having the crowning achievement of his life ruined by an incompetent umpire?
He said, "Nobody's perfect. Everybody's human. I understand." Joyce, the umpire, came to apologize to him after the game, and Galarraga hugged him. Joyce was working the next Tigers game, and Galarraga made it a point to carry the lineup card out, part of every pregame ritual. He shook the umpire's hand. Joyce was crying.
#2. The Internet Making Sappy Stories About Reunited Loved Ones Come True
Photos.com
In 1938 Germany, it was widely known that things were about to get very bad for the Jews. Seeing the approaching ****storm, some Jewish families secretly sneaked their children out of the country, sending them to America on ships.
A pair of 12-year-old German girls -- Edith Westerfeld and Gerda Katz -- met on one of these boats, and for two weeks during their journey, they became friends. Two girls, heading to New York, while a black wave of horror was about to crush the lives they left behind. Upon arrival in America, they went their separate ways -- one to Chicago, the other to Seattle -- and never saw each other again. For most of a century, anyway.
Then, 73 years later, Westerfeld's daughter was talking to a classroom full of middle school kids about the Holocaust. She told this story, about the ship and her mother and her mother's long-long-lost friend. The eighth graders looked at each other and said, well, ****, we have the Internet now. Nobody needs to stay lost.
Getty
Then they showed her how to watch all the porn she could ever want for free.
So, while we think of Internet-using 13-year-olds as spending all of their time spamming racist comments on YouTube, this class spent four solid days tracking down Gerda Katz. They found her, still alive, and got her in touch with Westerfeld. After more than seven decades, those two girls on the boat spoke to each other, and later met up in person, in Seattle.
The Internet, it turns out, is actually pretty good for this stuff. In 2007, a woman living in Malaysia took to her webcam and asked for help finding the mother she had left behind in America 32 years earlier, after her father had taken her away.
She uploaded the video to YouTube and, months later, her mother's nephew and his girlfriend were sitting around vanity searching their own names when this weird YouTube video came up. The nephew forwarded it around to the rest of the family. They got in contact with the woman from YouTube, Halimah Hajar, and said yes, your mother is still around, and she has a whole family now. A couple of webcam conversations later, they bought her a one-way ticket to come to the USA. She was hesitant, because she had been raised as a Muslim and heard that Muslims weren't welcome in the U.S. Then she got off the plane and the first thing she saw at the airport were other women in head scarves and nobody really giving a **** as they wandered around eating their meals from Chili's Too. She was home.
In China, meanwhile, they've set up a whole system for doing this. Child kidnappings are rampant there, and in a country of 1.3 billion people and 3.6 million square miles, the odds of finding your kid again are almost nil. But now they've set up a system where parents of lost children can upload photos of their missing kids, and other people upload photos of random kids they see begging in the street, trying to find a match. It seems like (literally) a one in a billion shot, but this has already resulted in one man reuniting with his son who had been lost for three damned years.
#1. Making Naive Dreams Come True, At All Costs
Photos.com
I don't want to come off like I'm being too hard on 5-year-olds, but they tend to have grossly unrealistic expectations of the world.
For instance, when a 5-year-old girl in Seattle heard her poor mother hinting that maybe "Santa" might not have the cash to bring Christmas presents this year, she embarked on what probably seemed like a reasonable solution: She wrote a letter to Santa with her Christmas wishes (a doll, a tea set, some pants) and tied it to a couple of balloons. Then she sent it off under the drastically incorrect assumption that it would somehow find its way to Santa's shop at the North Pole.
Photos.com
"There's email now, kids. You know this."
It didn't, of course, but it went further than you might think: The note made it from Seattle to an empty field in Northern California, 700 miles away. And that's where it should have stayed, to be ground up by some farm equipment months later. But the Sanderson family, who owned the property, happened to stumble across it.
NBC News
This traveled 676 miles.
Why would they particularly care about the piece of paper they found in the mud with Spanish writing on it? They couldn't even read Spanish, after all. But they had a ranch hand who could, and they had him translate. Then they realized it was a little girl's plea to Santa for some rudimentary Christmas gifts. Then they went out and bought all of the gifts, and shipped them to her. Because Santa Claus does exist, if we want him to.
Of course, I can't talk about this sort of thing without bringing up the Make-A-Wish Foundation, which specializes in granting the wishes of dying children (we did a whole article about the most badass wishes they've granted). But occasionally they'll get that weird kid whose wish is, say, to rain down utter destruction as if by the horrible fist of Shiva himself. And that's when the Make-A-Wish Foundation says, "No problem."
And so, when a 7-year-old cancer patient from California said his big wish was to utterly destroy a large building, they found where a huge concrete grain silo complex was about to be demolished in Ohio. They pulled some strings and little Maxwell Hinton got to push the button on this:
Then you have the 6-year-old kid who, for his wish, wanted to meet Hellboy. Well, that's easy enough -- anybody can slap on a Hellboy costume and the kid would be thrilled. But the guy who actually played Hellboy in the movies -- Ron Perlman -- wanted to do it himself. And he wanted to go all the way -- he actually sat down and went through the four-hour-long makeup process so he'd have the exact look from the movies. The kid had to have felt some combination of elation and sheer terror.
Via Hollywoodreporter.com
He just stared at him like that for a solid hour. Didn't even blink.
This last one happened completely by accident, but I'm including it because it happens to be my most favorite photo of all time. In early 2012, the Pope went on a visit through Latin America, which, as you can imagine, is a big deal. You've seen on the news what these events are like -- massive crowds and parades and people screaming their heads off, as one does when face to face with the man who one believes is God's representative on earth. But during a parade in Mexico, just as the Pope's motorcade passed, Washington Post cameras captured this random dog trotting down the parade route ...
Via Washington Post
"For my first decree as emperor: All vacuum cleaners must be purged."
... soaking up the adulation and truly believing that the crowd of tens of thousands had gathered just to tell him he was a good dog.
Check out the look on his face. Every human should have a moment like that.
Read more: 6 True Stories That Will Restore Your Faith in Humanity | Cracked.com http://www.cracked.com/blog/6-true-stories-that-will-restore-your-faith-in-humanity_p2/#ixzz253FMNCjV
And the other story here someone with too much money who decided to share it with those who helped him make it Lenovo CEO Yang Yuanqing decided to share his $3 million bonus with
Rather than pocketing the cash for himself, Yang decided to share it with Lenovo's lower-tier employees in the company's call centers, and production lines.
The report from China indicates that the a third of Leonovo's workers, or about 8500 people, earned a bonus of $314. While that's not a lot by US standards, it's a bit less than a full month's wages for Chinese worker in manufacturing. The math also works out -- $314 given to ~8600 people is a total of $2.64M, which makes sense once you consider the impact of various taxes.
The full story here (http://hothardware.com/News/Lenovo-CEO-Gives-3M-Bonus-To-Factory-Workers-Faith-in-Humanity-Restored/)
...have a great day whoever reads this!
DeBron
30th August 2012, 19:25
This thread is fantastic. Thank you all for your additions. The beauty in life is in compassion between those who live it.
Jeffrey
31st August 2012, 23:31
Bump this thread, and thank you
Marsila
2nd September 2012, 17:54
Bump this thread, and thank you
:)
This thread is fantastic. Thank you all for your additions. The beauty in life is in compassion between those who live it.
Is the absolute truth my friend!!
First here are the pictures of those dogs getting rescued that i posted about in post 24 (i knew i saw them somewhere asiatown.net), and then an inspiring story about a football/soccer player jumping at and not running away from the opportunity of giving back to the world.
This one beause it is inspiring to see people so easily giving both their time and effort to stopping humans,nature or animals as in this case from being treated in such a cruel fashion...and to do it in such civilized way and for the other side to make it easy is all great : )
http://i2.asntown.net/h4/funny-animals/5/dogs-rescued-in-china/faith-in-humanity-restored-01.jpg
http://i2.asntown.net/h4/funny-animals/5/dogs-rescued-in-china/faith-in-humanity-restored-02.jpg
http://i2.asntown.net/h4/funny-animals/5/dogs-rescued-in-china/faith-in-humanity-restored-03.jpg
http://i2.asntown.net/h4/funny-animals/5/dogs-rescued-in-china/faith-in-humanity-restored-04.jpg
http://i2.asntown.net/h4/funny-animals/5/dogs-rescued-in-china/faith-in-humanity-restored-05.jpg
http://i2.asntown.net/h4/funny-animals/5/dogs-rescued-in-china/faith-in-humanity-restored-06.jpg
http://i2.asntown.net/h4/funny-animals/5/dogs-rescued-in-china/faith-in-humanity-restored-07.jpg
http://i2.asntown.net/h4/funny-animals/5/dogs-rescued-in-china/faith-in-humanity-restored-08.jpg
And next one in the next post such i can't put any more pictures in this post....
Marsila
2nd September 2012, 18:14
And this one about Argentinean Football/Soccer player Lionel Messi, who decided to pay the medical bills of a Moroccan child who has the same disease he had until he the young boy is 18.
Now he could have totally ignored the plea to help and no one would have known. Instead, remembering how someone helped him, when he was young, he jumped at the opportunity to give back to the world (his own words from some video blog somewhere) and made a pledge to pay all the boys expenses.
here is the story with the little boy
http://www.goal.com/en-gb/news/3277/la-liga/2012/05/13/3098894/messi-pays-medical-bills-for-suffering-12-year-old
A 12-year-old diagnosed with the same condition previously suffered by Lionel Messi will be treated for by the Barcelona attacker after the 24-year-old vowed to pay for the child's medical bills.
Waleed Kashash, who was diagnosed with growth hormone deficiency (GHD), had dreamt of beating the disorder to make the grade as a footballer, but the cost of his treatment threatened to destroy his hopes.
However, a woman named Soad al-Affani decided to notify Messi of the youngsters' illness, to which the Argentine replied by stating that he would cover his costs of 3000 dirham (Ģ167) every 15 days until he becomes 18.
Messi then took a photo of himself holding Waleed's T-shirt and wrote a message for him to be strong and with all of his love.
GHD is a rare condition that affects approximately one in 3800 child births, while in adulthood, symptoms are felt in roughly 10 per million.
And here is a picture of him posing with the child's shirt, with encouraging messages and all, knowing the psychological impact of such a gesture by someone a child idolizes.
http://www.kckrs.com/wp-content/uploads/Messi-posed-with-a-shirt-with-a-picture-of-Waleed-Kashash-FCB-Fans.png
And even better with the child himself and his family
http://www.alwatan.com.sa/Images/newsimages/4245/30AW36J_1405-6.jpg
Tarka the Duck
2nd September 2012, 18:33
Bump this thread, and thank you
I'm so glad you bumped this, Vivek...I somehow missed this thread until just now. Thank you so much, Marsila and everyone else who has contributed. I really needed to see something like this, and love the idea of keeping this thread going - as Raf so eloquently put it, it's what it's all about.
Thank you again.
Kathie
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