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HUBBUB: Consider how you evangelize, vote yes on Amendment 1

Editor's Note: Featured comments are the most thoughtful or eloquently stated comments from our Facebook page and crestviewbulletin.com and do not necessarily reflect the newspaper management's views.

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TOP COMMENT: Consider how you evangelize

Interesting that a religion — that is, the majority for our country, and even more so in our area — has rallies to show children that they are not alone.

What I have witnessed while working in the public schools is that this entire event is used as a tool to intimidate other students whom are usually nonbelievers.

After the fervor of the rally and prayer, they tend to go back invigorated, begin harassing other students about their religious beliefs, and go so far as to evangelize, telling people that they are condemned to hellfire.

So fellow believers (yes, I am a Christian), if you do this, please do it as Christ would, and do not bully, harass or condemn those around you for not participating.

Remember humility, and to be truly humble when it comes to relating to those who are of a different cultural or religious background.

Jonah Irvington

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Vote yes on Amendment 1

Conserving what assets we have left should be a top priority, using the funds to buy beachfront property, wetlands and other natural unspoiled properties makes sense.

Not only does it protect the native ecosystem but it will also contribute to tourism by guaranteeing that not every square inch of beach, river or lake side has a huge hotel on it.

If the tourists coming here wanted to stare at big buildings with small patches of nature here and there, they would go to NYC.

A yes vote is the logical choice.

Richard S. Singleton

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A word about drinking

Drinking can cost you your life and your freedom. I don't mess with the stuff myself.

Shanda Krispykreme Davis

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Praising colonoscopy column

Bravo! Bringing awareness… you may have just saved someone's life!

Silver Sparkle

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Try this dog, George

Would love to meet George! I'm not a jumpy kind of scary dog. I often visit special boys like George. They seem to like to trace my spots with their fingers. (I like it, too.)

Dozer the Therapy Dog

Join the conversation on our Facebook page>>

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: HUBBUB: Consider how you evangelize, vote yes on Amendment 1

HUBBUB: Fund sidewalks, grateful for childhood cancer awareness

Featured comments from our discussion at facebook.com/crestview.bulletin

Teenager's death a tragedy

Very, very sad. Maybe now the city of Crestview will … fund sidewalks for its roadways especially those side roads.

… As more and more people get into fitness, my fear is that this will occur more and more. The roads are tight, in disrepair, and nowhere for pedestrians to walk.

An absolute tragedy: A young person getting ready to begin life struck down. My sincerest sympathies!

Jenny Edwin Santos

Grateful for childhood cancer column

Thomas Boni, I'm grateful for your editorial and for your sharing facts for September's Childhood Cancer Awareness Month!

Since moving to Crestview in 1979, the Crestview Bulletin has been a source of vital local information and recognition.

Before Crestview became a larger "small town," every student in our area had their name and/or photograph in "The Bulletin" sooner or later.

It is my prayer that cancer research will advance to the point of a cure and prevention in my lifetime and that there will no longer be a need for awareness, fundraising, spam or special features on children or adults suffering with cancer or long term effects from treatment!

Pam Callahan

Little has changed since Ivan

Nothing has changed since Ivan. When we get another (hurricane), it will be a major disaster. No additional roads or alternatives have been created. Even today it is gridlock in the morning and afternoon going through Crestview.

If a fender bender occurs, may as well call it a day. Accident investigation takes forever and blocks the road for too long a period.

Gisela Harper

Tried to report IRS collection scam

Received one of these scams and tried to tell the sheriff's department in Crestview, but sadly, they were all too busy to speak to me. Sat there for 40 minutes.

Jeane Phelps

Editor's Note: Featured comments are the most thoughtful or eloquently stated comments from our Facebook page and crestviewbulletin.com and do not necessarily reflect the newspaper management's views.

Join the conversation on our Facebook page>>

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: HUBBUB: Fund sidewalks, grateful for childhood cancer awareness

EDITOR’S DESK: And the adventure continues… (VIDEO)

Sometimes, I believe the saying that you can't have it all: balance various aspects of your personal life and various aspects of your professional life.

Each week, it's a whirlwind of work, work, work, maybe squeeze in some exercise and actually eat something, checking personal email, getting in some creative writing (it's a lifelong hobby I neglected when I got in the news business, and with all these characters swimming in my head since high school, it's starting up again!), cleaning and scrubbing the apartment (I'm Type A all the way), attending local club and organization meetings and events, and visiting family and friends in South Alabama.

Not necessarily in that order, of course. And not that I'm complaining. But at 31, life is busy!

Take this week, for example.

Visit family in Alabama Sunday afternoon? Check.

Get stood up for a date in Spanish Fort later that night? Check.

Swing back to Crestview late Sunday evening and squeeze in some creative writing? Check.

Monday: Update all production reports, reply to all readers' email, phone calls and social media comments, tweet and retweet news and commentary, edit stories, oversee our minimum 16 web posts and have back-to-back meetings with various associates? Check, check, check, check, check and check!  

Noticing an email from the Okaloosa County Sheriff's Office roll in when you're already making great timing on the midweek edition deadline? Well, I have a ritual for that: Saying aloud to Renee Bell, our editorial assistant, "Please don't let it be about Crestview, please don't let it be about Crestview, please don't let it be about Crestview…"

Unfortunately, that always jinxes it. It's always about Crestview: In this case, road rage leading a senior citizen to gunfire. 

Bummer.

That extended the work day, but hey, it's part of the job.

Monday evening: That meal I referred to squeezing in, along with some exercise, checking personal email and remembering my Icebreaker Speech for Crestview Toastmasters is Tuesday evening.

OK, I kind of procrastinated. Because ever since college, I realized I actually work better under pressure.

Besides, I got this. The topic's about how a workaholic farmer's son who's also active in the community became a workaholic news editor who's active in the community. (Piece-of-cake.)

Reviewing the speech criteria at 10 p.m.? Check.

Emailing confirmation to the club at10:55 p.m. that, yes, I'm still giving the speech? Check.

Sorting through folders and finding homework to do for Relay For Life's Crestview kickoff? Check.

Getting a call from Mom saying she needs me to do research for a quarterly event at her church? Check, and scheduled. (She volunteered for the task years ago but I always do the research since she has never really used a computer. Even though she bought herself a laptop 10 years ago. And my brother bought her an iPad last year, which she lost. Anyway, seems odd, perhaps, but it's the least I can do for her giving birth to me!)

Realizing at 11 p.m. (when I usually write this column) that ace reporter Brian Hughes already wrote some great commentary about colonoscopy this week so I'm exempt from writing about a big issue? (which is great because it's such a packed week)?

And that in a month, I'll take a real vacation with family overseas?

Amen!

And yes, I got a call Tuesday morning explaining the being stood up thing. Like me, she just has a busy schedule.

We'll try for later this week since she's in Pensacola for three days.

But I know how those things work.

And if you were wondering, fellow Toastmasters voted me their Best Speaker for that speech. The evaluator credited how "well prepared" I was. (Told ya I work well under pressure!)

Now, for the online version of this column (which always gets an update since readers see it later than the print edition is released), I can say how happy I am to still be in the office at 8:33 p.m. Thursday. Things got busier than usual because of good news (like Drew Barefield's homecoming.) 

And the adventure continues!

What's your view? Write a letter to the editor or tweet News Bulletin Editor Thomas Boni.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: EDITOR’S DESK: And the adventure continues… (VIDEO)

Getting to the bottom of a common procedure

Baring my soul — let alone my bottom — to strangers isn’t something I usually do, but this is important.

Recently, Dr. Wayne Campbell hinted that I have reached the age when it’s time to have a, er … oh, you know, that “procedure” we’re all supposed to have after reaching, um, a certain age.

It wasn’t that I feared the procedure. I just dreaded the preparation the day before.

On Dr. Wayne’s referral, I soon found myself in Dr. David Herf’s waiting room.

He’s seen many a heinie in his professional career: 34,739 of them at North Okaloosa Medical Center alone, to be precise.

I got the figure from his lovely bride, Amy, who writes, “He's not great with faces …. He says, ‘I’ve seen more butts than faces’!”

I’m sharing all this trivial background to soften you up for my description of the procedure.

It was…nothing. Nichts. Nada. I was in and out of NOMC in no time. Thankfully, I slept through it.

More memorable, however, was the prep, which would make a great weight-loss method.

Imagine a whole day of consuming nothing but lemon Jell-O, bouillon and white grape juice. That’s followed by 4 liters that evening of something called GoLytely.

It’s a misnomer.

Golightly was the surname of Holly, a character played by the chic Audrey Hepburn, in “Breakfast at Tiffany’s.”

There is nothing chic about GoLytely. Marge, a jovial nursing supervisor at NOMC, said it should instead be called Blow-It-Out Juice.

Hesitantly, I drank the first cup. Then, every 15 minutes, I had another.

Nothing happened. So I thought I’d be productive on my computer.

GoLytely is sly stuff. It kind of sneaks up on you. Another liter later, while at the computer, there suddenly was an urgent twinge.

You can imagine the rest. (If you can’t, Google “Great Mississippi River Flood of 1927.”)

Mother Nature, like Nurse Marge, has a great sense of humor. I quickly learned that when she says, “Ready, set…” you’d best be enthroned when she says, “Go!”

However, the procedure was effortless and I was soon in Cracker Barrel cozying up to a mammoth Sunrise Sampler, making up for the previous day’s lemon Jell-O and bullion regimen.

At my follow-up appointment, Dr. Herf smiled and said, “See you in five years.”

What joyous words! (Sometimes, alas, he has to deliver less cheery verdicts.)

“The procedure” is really important. It can catch something potentially awful, like colon cancer, in time to remedy it.

I put it off a couple years too many, mainly for the same reason many people put it off: not fear of the procedure, but fear of a night curled up with a jug of Blow-It-Out Juice, which, despite my embellishment, isn’t all that nasty.

Do yourself and your family a favor and make that appointment. It’s called a colonoscopy.

There, I said it. Now go do it.

Approximately 1 in 20 people risk developing colorectal cancer, the third-leading cause of cancer-related deaths in the United States, according to the American Cancer Society. Colorectal cancer is expected to cause about 50,310 deaths during 2014.

A colonoscopy, a roughly 30-minute test, allows doctors to use a flexible tube to look at the large intestine's inner lining. The test can reveal ulcers, colon polyps, tumors, inflammation or bleeding, according to Web MD.  Doctors can take tissue samples, check for cancer and remove abnormal growths.

People should get their first colonoscopy at age 50, according to Johns Hopkins Health Alerts.

Email News Bulletin Staff Writer Brian Hughes at brianh@crestviewbulletin.com, follow him on Twitter or call 850-682-6524.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Getting to the bottom of a common procedure

EDITOR’S DESK: September is Childhood Cancer Awareness Month (VIDEO)

For the past couple of weeks, the News Bulletin's Facebook page has been flooded with posts about childhood cancer.

"Flooded" is no exaggeration. I counted 23 posts —  many identical —  on our wall.

At first glance, they look like spam. But a community newspaper sees such messages, posted by a local woman, as passionate pleas for attention.

Guess what, Pam Callahan? You got it.

We "think pink" during Breast Cancer Awareness Month in October, but did you know that we first observe Childhood Cancer Awareness Month in September?

The News Bulletin has reported numerous childhood cancer stories, but it doesn't hurt to raise the issue one more time.

According to the American Childhood Cancer Organization's website:

•15,780 U.S. children under age 21 annually are diagnosed with cancer.

•Approximately 1/4 of them will die.

I've learned much more about cancer since serving as Relay For Life Crestview's publicity chairperson, and have witnessed cancer's effect on parents and their children. (And, thankfully, I witnessed the recovery of those children. More on that in the video below.)

But I didn't know those statistics.

So, what can be done about this? Well, knowledge is power, and the Childhood Cancer organization purportedly is the "largest provider of childhood cancer books in the country," its website states.

Parents of children with cancer can order 10 free books about the issue.

Otherwise, check out acco.org for more information on this issue.

What's your view? Write a letter to the editor or tweet News Bulletin Editor Thomas Boni.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: EDITOR’S DESK: September is Childhood Cancer Awareness Month (VIDEO)

WORD ON THE STREET: Where were you on 9/11?

Editor's Note: Today marks the 13th year since the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. Our Facebook fans shared where they were on that tragic day.

NAS New Orleans on a combat search and rescue exercise. We were gearing up and pre-flighting for a day flight with several other units. Someone initially came out to the flight line and mentioned a plane had flown into one of the World Trade Center buildings.

We figured it was a Cessna or something so we kept prepping for the mission.

Later, they came out and told us to seal it up and get off the flight line. Once we saw what was happening on TV, we all were shocked. Everyone wanted to get back home (and to our base).

It was troubling but also we knew we should be packing and getting ready to go overseas somewhere. There was an element of, "How dare they attack us on our own soil?!”

They shut the exercise down, of course. When they did let us fly back home, we felt like we were behind already because anyone at home had already packed and were ready to go.

I’d been to Panama in 89, Desert Shield/Storm/Northern and Southern Watch, Bosnia, and several other places over the past 20+ years. While I’ve never “enjoyed” going to a war zone, we signed up to protect our country and do our jobs and all those things we trained to do.

So most of us were driven to get over there and get to work.

It was nice to see the country patriotic and together for a while at least. It’s a shame it took something like that to get us there.

Virgil Poulsen

Working at the Crestview airport. Very surreal. The day the "earth stood still."

John Kiger

I was in Germany. I came home from school and the news of what had happened was all over German TV. There wasn't any channel that didn't cover it!

I'm not an American and I wasn't affiliated with any Americans at the time, but I cried when I saw the disaster on TV.

And 13 years later, I still get sad every year. It's just so unbelievably sad!

Nicole M. Pettay

In the Pentagon. After I got my 4 employees off of the floor and able to walk, I was thinking we need to get out of the building before the next plane hit. Pretty scary.

George Wallace

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: WORD ON THE STREET: Where were you on 9/11?

HUBBUB: City government isn't a business; taxpayers provide funding

Featured comments from our discussion at facebook.com/crestview.bulletin:

City government isn't a business

It seems that we have asked the employees to provide a service that we are not willing to do.

Is it unreasonable to pay our public safety personnel a salary that is commensurate to the risk and danger they face every day they go on shift?

What most people do not know is that in the last year, the (fire department) has given up their incentive pay, a stipend for holding specialty certifications that the citizens … benefit from and, trust me, a mere 4 percent increase will not make up for what was taken away…

Now, some of you out there like to compare the city to a business. The city is a public sector entity. Therefore, they do not produce a product for profit as you would find in the private sector.

The fire chief tried to provide an avenue for the city to fund capital assets, seeing that, according to the tax rolls, less than 50 percent of the tax base is paying property taxes.

Could this idea work?

Yes, but it needs to be presented way before the budget hearings start and it needs to be marketed to show why it is feasible.

…Another thing people do not realize is that majority of the people that live in the greater Crestview area are military affiliated. They enjoy the benefits of the commissary, (Base Exchange) and, more importantly, inexpensive health care.

Have you asked to see what a police officer or firefighter has to pay just to cover his or her family under the city plan?

Stop complaining that they are asking for a raise; you have it made compared to them.

The question you ask is, "What have we asked of them?" Looks like … we are asking a lot from them for very little compensation.

We should be ashamed.

Neal Ferguson

Sounding like Washington D.C.

(Crestview City Council members) Robyn (Helt) and Tom (Gordon) are right: The city is writing checks it can't cash.

Any other business doesn't give raises when faced with a deficit.

… It sounds just like Washington spending more than they take in!

Andy Wilson

Tax payers provide tax dollars

"Buy a loaf of bread to go with the meat we've been giving," (Crestview City Council President Shannon Hayes says.)

We isn't the council. It's the taxpayers! We pay enough!

Sara Smith

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: HUBBUB: City government isn't a business; taxpayers provide funding

EDITOR'S DESK: Remember, united we stand…

Today, we observe the 13th year since the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.

I almost said "13th anniversary," but I think we associate that word with positive experiences. At least, that's the case for most News Bulletin articles. The word pops up in Special Occasions, our section for wedding and engagement announcements. It's in our feature stories about devoted couples whose union stood the test of time.

Perhaps since I associate this word with strong relationships, couples and unions, it's difficult to use a term that's correct by Merriam-Webster's Dictionary standards, but wrong on so many other levels.

Initially, destruction, rather than union, occurred on Sept. 11, 2001. And one strong national couple, the Twin Towers —  represented in numerous motion pictures and on CD covers as an American icon —  crumbled.

Hatred escalated to extreme acts that reportedly claimed more than 2,000 lives and forever changed countless others. 

Let us never forget this day, one of many on which we should express appreciation for our military: women and men who make untold sacrifices to protect our freedoms.

Additionally, let us remember the importance of community —  working together despite religious, political or cultural differences —  and forgiveness. 

When it comes to these values, this saying rings true: "United we stand; divided we fall."

What's your view? Write a letter to the editor or tweet News Bulletin Editor Thomas Boni.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: EDITOR'S DESK: Remember, united we stand…

COMMENTARY: Minorities and women in STEM: Part 2

Editor's Note: This is part 2 of a series of perceived disparities among women and minorities in science, technology, engineering and mathematics fields. Part 1 of the series is here. 

STEM jobs are increasing at staggering rates, meanwhile the amount of minorities and women graduating with degrees in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics remains alarmingly low.  This leads to a lack of intellectual capital causing wages in the field to be comparatively high, while also encouraging outsourcing and the growth of racial and gender income disparities.  In order to prevent such effects and increase the supply of much needed STEM educated individuals, more minorities and women must be brought into the STEM field.

As mentioned, in my article “Minorities in STEM: Part 1,” part of the problem is that minority and female STEM majors are not being employed at near the rate of their white male counterparts. This disincentivizes minority and female students from selecting STEM majors as they find the industry to be unwelcoming towards them.  Another cause of the lack of minorities and women and STEM is the undersupply of them.  While this makes sense considering the unwelcome environment, it hinders the growth of females and minorities in STEM advocacy groups, making it likely for the continuation of gender and racial discrimination within the STEM fields. 

Therefore, the questions must be asked, “How can the amount of minority and female students graduating be increased?”  The problem is two-fold. First recruitment efforts must be made to increase the enrollment of minorities and women in STEM educational programs; second they must find the support and guidance needed to graduate with STEM degrees, as opposed to changing to non-STEM majors or worse, not graduating at all. 

While the marketplace may be averse to hiring women and minorities in STEM that does not mean that the educational system must also be averse to them.  There is no reason that the advancements made to the education of females and minorities should not extend to the STEM field.  Places of learning must acknowledge the unwelcoming environments they project towards certain communities and counteract the responsible behaviors with rules and initiatives that encourage both the recruitment and retention of minority and female students. 

In addition, females and minorities must also be able to envision themselves in STEM occupations.  The current lack of female and minorities in STEM occupations, as represented by the media often leads minorities and female viewers to assume by the absence of representation that they are not suited for both STEM education and employment.  Therefore, the media should make an effort to increase the representation of minorities and females in STEM positions.  As long as potential STEM graduates, continue to not even consider STEM fields as an option for them, the percentage of men and women in these industries will remain low.

The lack of minorities and females in STEM is a socially constructed phenomenon.  It originates from the lack of representation and discrimination towards female and minorities.  However, to accept the victim role without making efforts to advocate for ones’ community will only lead to further victimization in the form of continued and potentially increasing discrimination towards ones’ groups.  Women and minorities must decide for themselves, that obtaining an education and employment in STEM is attainable and worth fighting for.  To not do so, will potentially lead to these communities being financially, “left out in the cold."

Jeremy Bamidele is a nationally syndicated journalist. 

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: COMMENTARY: Minorities and women in STEM: Part 2

EDITOR'S DESK: A closer look at the ALS ice bucket challenge

It seems like everyone is taking the ALS ice bucket challenge.

Video clips of friends, family, scientists, professional athletes, musicians, actors and others taking a bucket of ice-cold water over the head fill our social media feeds.

People in these clips are supporting research for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, also called Lou Gehrig’s disease, a neurodegenerative condition that is crippling and often terminal, according to the ALS Association, a nonprofit organization.

Here is how it works: Someone calls out three people’s names on social media. Those people can accept the ALS ice bucket challenge — by donating any amount to ALSA, recording a video of the challenge and calling out three other people — or they can donate $100 to ALSA, which supports global research and lobbying.

The ice bucket challenge is a social media phenomenon, raising $94.3 million since July 29, according to ALSA’s website.

Donations will help fund research and clinical trials in the ongoing fight against the disease. The goal is to supplement the organization’s milestones, which include discovering a genetic abnormality that causes ALS, and linking certain genes with inherited ALS cases.

ALSA’s mission and past findings are promising to approximately 5,600 people annually diagnosed with the disease, according to the organization’s website.

However, when it comes to the ice bucket challenge, it is important to look past the trend and explore this fundraiser further.

PHILANTHROPY, SOCIAL MEDIA STYLE

Last week, while thinking aloud, I asked a coworker whether he thought the News Bulletin should have an ice bucket challenge.

After all, it is for a good cause, it is  social media’s latest craze — everyone with a Facebook or Twitter account and a digital camera seems to be doing it — and, well, it might be fun.

Later that day, I realized I wouldn’t have asked the question if not for the ubiquitous ice bucket challenge videos.

Then I wondered: Should charity be a challenge?

On Friday, United Way of Okaloosa and Walton Counties representatives presented a short video to our staff and provided forms for opting in or out of payroll deductions to support the nonprofit and its partner agencies.

It allowed us to learn more about Shelter House, which supports domestic violence survivors and their children; the American Red Cross of Northwest Florida; Ronald McDonald House of Northwest Florida; and other organizations that do good work in our area.

The video inspired this busy news editor, who learned he could help far more people than he could imagine, in some small way, despite very limited boundaries of time and space.

Moreover, I appreciated that the form submission process was private — no pressure.

Conversely, ice bucket challenges — philanthropy, social media style — unnecessarily pressure people to do two things: create a viral video to spread the message of an organization they may or may not support or give $100 they may not have.

Meanwhile, the whole message of the cause could be lost in the process.

Comedian Kathy Griffin made headlines when she did the ice bucket challenge naked. YouTube user Ian Stuart “one upped” friends by taking the “ice bong challenge.” (You can imagine how that turned out.) Chemist Muhammad Qureshi took the “ALS Liquid Nitrogen” challenge, a painful-to-watch twist.

I don’t question these users’ support for the cause, but do question the point of turning up the shock factor. At some point, the headlines become more about the person doing the challenge and less about the nonprofit they’re supporting.  

Because of this, I wonder how many people actually know what ALS is; most people in these videos don't describe the disease; the viral clips are largely about the spectacle of being doused.

A FAITH MATTER

No one disputes the goal of helping people with ALS, but after the ice bucket challenge went viral, news organizations started reporting on where ALSA’s money goes.

The results gave some people pause.

The nonprofit’s researchers study the disease process, environmental factors and genetics, according to ALSA’s website. The work involves the use of stem cells; most come from skin cells, but ALSA sometimes uses fertilized embryos less than a week old. 

Though ALSA representatives have said donors can restrict their gifts, embryonic stem cell research concerns a number of Christians who don’t believe in using fertilized eggs as a means to an end, and who don't want to support an organization that offers the option.

Some people get around this inconvenient truth by taking the ice bucket challenge and donating money to the John Paul II Medical Research Institute in Iowa City, Iowa. The institute supports ALS research without using embryonic stem cells, according to its website.

Knowing the concerns, and that there are alternative organizations with similar aims, doesn’t the ALS ice bucket challenge seem more complicated than it did before?

WHICH CAUSE IS GREATER?

Another concern is the simple fact that residents' disposable income, if they have any, is limited, so should social media trends with significant celebrity endorsement be the first and only choice? Or should we research the issues first?

Vox Media recently released a chart that shows the causes we donate to aren't necessarily the ones with the highest mortality rates.

For instance, people annually donate $22.9 million to motor neuron diseases including ALS, which has 6,849 annual deaths, according to the chart. Meanwhile, causes like suicide prevention, diabetes, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and HIV/AIDS receive just $3.2 million, $4.2 million, $7 million and $14 million while claiming 39,518, 73,831, 142,942 and 7,683 lives, respectively.

Of course, this isn't to say we shouldn't donate to ALSA or other organizations that support ALS research, but it does put the issue into perspective.

Social media is a game changer. It changes how we communicate, how we date and even how we donate to worthy causes.

But before you support the next fad, it's worth looking a little closer at the issue.

What's your view? Email tboni@crestviewbulletin.com or tweet @cnbeditor.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: EDITOR'S DESK: A closer look at the ALS ice bucket challenge

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