Curbing Use of Psychiatric Drugs for Children

“…the government will

inform parents and teachers about the risks of such drugs,

the Food and Drug Administration will develop new drug

labels, the National Institutes of Health will begin a huge

nationwide study of Ritalin use in children under the age of

6, and the White House will hold a conference this fall on

the diagnosis and treatment of mental illness in very young

children.” [New York Times]

Stalking Site: Slick or Sick? “His identity isn’t known, but he says he became infatuated with a young woman named Julie when she rented a movie in the Los Angeles video store where he works. He looked up her address on her video account, broke into her apartment, where she lives alone, and installed a voyeur cam in her bedroom that streams video directly to his website, ForTheLoveofJulie.com.” But it’s apparently not what it seems…

Vignettes

“Death Row IV lists all 3,392 death row inmates, including more

than 1,000 vignettes and photos. Here is a sampling of Death

Row’s vignettes.”

[New York Times]: South Africa in a Furor Over Advice About AIDS

“President Thabo Mbeki’s

decision to seek advice from two Americans who argue

that H.I.V. does not cause AIDS has touched off an outcry at

home and abroad and raised fears that South Africa’s already

soaring infection rate will climb still further.”

Criminal Probe in Alaska Airlines Flight 261 Crash: an inquiry into the falsification of maintenance records at Alaska Airlines’ Oakland CA facility predated the disaster by more than a year. If safety were more important than profit, it would seem that publicizing substantial suspicions that an airline is lying about factors relevant to the airworthiness of its aircraft would be crucial!

$99 Netpliance I-opener Internet appliances sold out nationwide after an electronics engineer in

Las Vegas figured out

how to tweak the $99

terminal for an additional $100 so that it

works like a fancy PC.

Thoughtful About “Virtual Voting”:

“…it’s hard to avoid the conclusion that Arizonans with

home Internet access enjoyed a tremendous voting advantage

in this primary. Yes, unwired Arizonans were encouraged to

vote at libraries and other community centers scattered around

the state. But essentially none did. Several librarians told me

that not a single person came to vote by Net during the

four-day remote-voting period. By the party’s own estimate,

90 percent of the Internet votes were cast by people voting

from home or work—and that population is disproportionately

white…” [Slate]

Thoughtful About “Virtual Voting”:

“…it’s hard to avoid the conclusion that Arizonans with

home Internet access enjoyed a tremendous voting advantage

in this primary. Yes, unwired Arizonans were encouraged to

vote at libraries and other community centers scattered around

the state. But essentially none did. Several librarians told me

that not a single person came to vote by Net during the

four-day remote-voting period. By the party’s own estimate,

90 percent of the Internet votes were cast by people voting

from home or work—and that population is disproportionately

white…” [Slate]

[Salon:] Big Bouncer is watching you. “To get into the Alcazar Pleasure Village, a

nightclub in the Netherlands, you’ll have to make it past more

than just a velvet rope. A vigilant “cyber-bouncer” will scan

your fingerprint and face, refusing to let you in if you’re a

known troublemaker or waving you through if your file comes

up clean.”

[Salon:] Big Bouncer is watching you. “To get into the Alcazar Pleasure Village, a

nightclub in the Netherlands, you’ll have to make it past more

than just a velvet rope. A vigilant “cyber-bouncer” will scan

your fingerprint and face, refusing to let you in if you’re a

known troublemaker or waving you through if your file comes

up clean.”

“There seems to be no

critical culture
in America today. A critical culture is one that struggles actively over how human beings should live and what our

life means. Most of us can remember living in the critical culture of the sixties-a few of us can even remember the critical culture

of the thirties-and we can feel the difference. When a critical culture breaks down or wears out or fades away, sources of joy dry

up. What makes this happen? Why has it happened now? Is the loss permanent? Or are there traces, fragments, intimations of a new

critical culture just around the corner? Where might it come from? How can it come together? Is there anything people like us can

do to help it come?” [Marshall Berman writes in Dissent]

Mapping the Cab Driver’s Brain: The posterior hippocampus of London cabbies hypertrophies in proportion to their years of driving a cab. This area, thought to be involved in memory functioning, probably stores the detailed navigational information they learn on the job.

“There seems to be a definite relationship between the navigating they do as a taxi driver and the brain changes,” researcher Eleanor Maguire told the BBC.

Lilly Files for Approval of Once-Weekly Prozac. Faced with declining sales from competing SSRIs, and the looming expiration of its patent rights in 2003, this is one of several slightly different formulations of fluoxetine (Prozac), the first of the new generation of antidepressants, that Eli Lilly proposes to market.

“There seems to be no

critical culture
in America today. A critical culture is one that struggles actively over how human beings should live and what our

life means. Most of us can remember living in the critical culture of the sixties-a few of us can even remember the critical culture

of the thirties-and we can feel the difference. When a critical culture breaks down or wears out or fades away, sources of joy dry

up. What makes this happen? Why has it happened now? Is the loss permanent? Or are there traces, fragments, intimations of a new

critical culture just around the corner? Where might it come from? How can it come together? Is there anything people like us can

do to help it come?” [Marshall Berman writes in Dissent]

Mapping the Cab Driver’s Brain: The posterior hippocampus of London cabbies hypertrophies in proportion to their years of driving a cab. This area, thought to be involved in memory functioning, probably stores the detailed navigational information they learn on the job.

“There seems to be a definite relationship between the navigating they do as a taxi driver and the brain changes,” researcher Eleanor Maguire told the BBC.

Lilly Files for Approval of Once-Weekly Prozac. Faced with declining sales from competing SSRIs, and the looming expiration of its patent rights in 2003, this is one of several slightly different formulations of fluoxetine (Prozac), the first of the new generation of antidepressants, that Eli Lilly proposes to market.

New York Times: ‘Americans have become used to hearing nutty talk from

leaders of the National Rifle Association. But Sunday’s

outrageous assertion by the group’s executive vice president,

Wayne LaPierre, that President Clinton is “willing to accept a

certain level of killing to further his political agenda”

deserves special condemnation.

Mr. LaPierre made his sick suggestion that the president

relishes having gun tragedies to exploit in an interview on

ABC’s “This Week.” He was there to push the N.R.A.’s

demonstrably false line that the nation already has enough

gun laws on the books if only the administration would

enforce them.’

Microsoft to Back a Browser Keyword System. Companies pay RealNames Corp. hefty fees to lock up ownership of keywords; you type a keyword into your browser and are magically taken to the site that owns the keyword! RealNames gets revenue from every referral to the corporate sites as well. Microsoft takes 20% of KeyNames, which has just filed for an IPO.

“Who is Gladwell kidding?

Scientists have been harping on

so-called nonlinear effects for decades. Nonlinearity is the basis

of catastrophe theory, chaos, complexity, self-organized

criticality, punctuated equilibrium, and other scientific fads.

Everyone knows about the butterfly effect, which holds that a

butterfly flitting through Iowa can trigger a cascade of

meteorological events culminating in a monsoon in India.

Gladwell cites none of this work, and understandably so. His

utopian message is that by manipulating tipping points we can cut

down on crime, reduce teen-age smoking, and sell lots of

sneakers without massive efforts. But the lesson of nonlinear

research is that many phenomena are unpredictable, and

especially the complex social phenomena upon which Gladwell

focuses. Our culture is awash in potential tipping points. When we

try to tip events in one direction, they activate other tipping points

and careen down the wrong path. This is the law of unintended

consequences, about which you have written so eloquently, Ed.” [Slate]

New York Times: ‘Americans have become used to hearing nutty talk from

leaders of the National Rifle Association. But Sunday’s

outrageous assertion by the group’s executive vice president,

Wayne LaPierre, that President Clinton is “willing to accept a

certain level of killing to further his political agenda”

deserves special condemnation.

Mr. LaPierre made his sick suggestion that the president

relishes having gun tragedies to exploit in an interview on

ABC’s “This Week.” He was there to push the N.R.A.’s

demonstrably false line that the nation already has enough

gun laws on the books if only the administration would

enforce them.’

Microsoft to Back a Browser Keyword System. Companies pay RealNames Corp. hefty fees to lock up ownership of keywords; you type a keyword into your browser and are magically taken to the site that owns the keyword! RealNames gets revenue from every referral to the corporate sites as well. Microsoft takes 20% of KeyNames, which has just filed for an IPO.

“Who is Gladwell kidding?

Scientists have been harping on

so-called nonlinear effects for decades. Nonlinearity is the basis

of catastrophe theory, chaos, complexity, self-organized

criticality, punctuated equilibrium, and other scientific fads.

Everyone knows about the butterfly effect, which holds that a

butterfly flitting through Iowa can trigger a cascade of

meteorological events culminating in a monsoon in India.

Gladwell cites none of this work, and understandably so. His

utopian message is that by manipulating tipping points we can cut

down on crime, reduce teen-age smoking, and sell lots of

sneakers without massive efforts. But the lesson of nonlinear

research is that many phenomena are unpredictable, and

especially the complex social phenomena upon which Gladwell

focuses. Our culture is awash in potential tipping points. When we

try to tip events in one direction, they activate other tipping points

and careen down the wrong path. This is the law of unintended

consequences, about which you have written so eloquently, Ed.” [Slate]

Today is the anniversary of Jack Kerouac’s (1922-69) birth, Charlie Parker’s (1921-55) death, and Paul McCartney and Linda Eastman’s wedding (1969).

Sociologists launch online journal to study the mundane: ‘”The idea is to sort of step back from everything that we take for granted and say, `What’s really going on here, anyway?”‘ said William Roy of the

University of California, Los Angeles. “A fish is the last creature to ever notice water.” (…)

The idea sprang from a 1998 article published in the journal Sociological Theory. Wayne Brekhus of the University of Missouri complained that there were

many journals devoted to extreme behavior but nothing concentrating on the mundane. (…) Brekhus’ half-joking call for a journal to study the mundane caught the attention of Schaffer and Orleans. They sent out e-mail notices six months ago

requesting papers and launched the Web site, www.mundanebehavior.org .

They received a handful of e-mails wondering if it was a hoax. They also got three times as many submissions as they could use for the debut issue.’ The table of contents from the first issue includes:

  • Myron Orleans, Why the Mundane? or, “The Unassailable Advantage”: Reflections on Wiseman’s Belfast,

    Maine

  • Terry Caesar, In and Out of Elevators in Japan
  • Andy Crabtree, Remarks on the social organisation of space and place
  • Devorah Kalekin-Fishman, Constructing Mundane Culture: “Plain Talk”
  • Michael John Pinfold, “I’m sick of shaving every morning”: or, The Cultural Manifestations of “Male” Facial

    Presentation

  • Today is the anniversary of Jack Kerouac’s (1922-69) birth, Charlie Parker’s (1921-55) death, and Paul McCartney and Linda Eastman’s wedding (1969).

    Sociologists launch online journal to study the mundane: ‘”The idea is to sort of step back from everything that we take for granted and say, `What’s really going on here, anyway?”‘ said William Roy of the

    University of California, Los Angeles. “A fish is the last creature to ever notice water.” (…)

    The idea sprang from a 1998 article published in the journal Sociological Theory. Wayne Brekhus of the University of Missouri complained that there were

    many journals devoted to extreme behavior but nothing concentrating on the mundane. (…) Brekhus’ half-joking call for a journal to study the mundane caught the attention of Schaffer and Orleans. They sent out e-mail notices six months ago

    requesting papers and launched the Web site, www.mundanebehavior.org .

    They received a handful of e-mails wondering if it was a hoax. They also got three times as many submissions as they could use for the debut issue.’ The table of contents from the first issue includes:

  • Myron Orleans, Why the Mundane? or, “The Unassailable Advantage”: Reflections on Wiseman’s Belfast,

    Maine

  • Terry Caesar, In and Out of Elevators in Japan
  • Andy Crabtree, Remarks on the social organisation of space and place
  • Devorah Kalekin-Fishman, Constructing Mundane Culture: “Plain Talk”
  • Michael John Pinfold, “I’m sick of shaving every morning”: or, The Cultural Manifestations of “Male” Facial

    Presentation

  • The disclosure of several new heretofore secret Justice Department memos [New York Times editorial] shows the lengths to which Janet Reno went to protect Al Gore and other senior administration officials from a thorough-going independent inquiry into alleged campaign finance improprieties. And all the time you watched the administration fretting about the impeachment inquiry, its senior members were probably laughing up their sleeve that that’s all the country was agonizing over. And now the only choice you have beyond Dubya is their poster boy?? (It’s getting to that quadrennial point where I begin to toy with the idea of emigrating again…but where?)

    U.S. Sets Another Record for Winter Warmth: the average winter temperature in the 48 contiguous states was the warmest in 105 years. Twenty of the last thirty years have been above the century’s average; and each of the past three years has seen a briefer warmer winter than the last. [New York Times]

    The disclosure of several new heretofore secret Justice Department memos [New York Times editorial] shows the lengths to which Janet Reno went to protect Al Gore and other senior administration officials from a thorough-going independent inquiry into alleged campaign finance improprieties. And all the time you watched the administration fretting about the impeachment inquiry, its senior members were probably laughing up their sleeve that that’s all the country was agonizing over. And now the only choice you have beyond Dubya is their poster boy?? (It’s getting to that quadrennial point where I begin to toy with the idea of emigrating again…but where?)

    U.S. Sets Another Record for Winter Warmth: the average winter temperature in the 48 contiguous states was the warmest in 105 years. Twenty of the last thirty years have been above the century’s average; and each of the past three years has seen a briefer warmer winter than the last. [New York Times]

    A searing, riveting film I just watched: Bryan Singer’s 1998 Apt Pupil with Ian McKellen as the ex-Nazi war criminal next door and Brad Renfro as the high school student who attempts to control him with the knowledge of his identity. Except for a spluttering performance by the risible David Schwimmer…

    Someone pointed me to this gentleman’s main webpage, which documents his collection of chopsticks. However, the real gem is this sidelight, the Gallery of the Absurd: “This site is dedicated to exposing absurdity hiding in such obvious places that nobody seems to notice!…These are all my own photographs* taken in public places mostly in the Boston area. They are 100% real and

    not digitally manipulated. I’ve been capturing images like this for many years, to document things that strike

    me as odd or bizarre, or just plain stupid.”

    Chrissie Hynde and three others were arrested for protesting in the window of a Gap clothing

    store against what she said was the clothing chain’s use of leather from cows slaughtered in India, where cattle are

    sacred. Despite the company’s claims that the “Made in India” labels in its leather jackets did not mean that the leather originates in India, Hynde stated “India does not import leather, and it is the largest exporter of leather in the world….So it seems highly unlikely that the Gap buys its leather from America, where the slaughterhouse practices are considered humane

    and legal, and send the leather to India, stitch up the jacket and send it back to America.”

    PETA director Dan Mathews said Gap was buying its leather ”from a black market … where it’s illegal to kill cows. And they have

    assumed no responsibility.”

    Clues to sleep disorders may lie in the flies: Recent research by Dr. Giulio Tononi and colleagues at The Neurosciences Institute in San Diego suggests that flies must rest to perform their biological functions, like higher animals. The rest periods of flies share important attributes with mammalian (and human) sleep. This finding provides ‘…“the opportunity to employ fly genetics to figure out the function of sleep and

    to develop new, safe drugs for improving sleep as well as vigilance,” Tononi explained.

    The fruit fly apparently “shares a sophisticated brain function with us,” Tononi said. “However, the

    difference between what goes on in the brain of a fly and a human when they are asleep, is probably as

    large as the difference between what they think when they are awake,” he added wryly.’

    Unheeded warnings: Predictions by a climatologist from the University of Zululand in South Africa of floods in Mozambique were ignored. Flood damage could have been reduced if dam managers in the region had begun to empty their reservoirs sooner.

    A searing, riveting film I just watched: Bryan Singer’s 1998 Apt Pupil with Ian McKellen as the ex-Nazi war criminal next door and Brad Renfro as the high school student who attempts to control him with the knowledge of his identity. Except for a spluttering performance by the risible David Schwimmer…

    Someone pointed me to this gentleman’s main webpage, which documents his collection of chopsticks. However, the real gem is this sidelight, the Gallery of the Absurd: “This site is dedicated to exposing absurdity hiding in such obvious places that nobody seems to notice!…These are all my own photographs* taken in public places mostly in the Boston area. They are 100% real and

    not digitally manipulated. I’ve been capturing images like this for many years, to document things that strike

    me as odd or bizarre, or just plain stupid.”

    Chrissie Hynde and three others were arrested for protesting in the window of a Gap clothing

    store against what she said was the clothing chain’s use of leather from cows slaughtered in India, where cattle are

    sacred. Despite the company’s claims that the “Made in India” labels in its leather jackets did not mean that the leather originates in India, Hynde stated “India does not import leather, and it is the largest exporter of leather in the world….So it seems highly unlikely that the Gap buys its leather from America, where the slaughterhouse practices are considered humane

    and legal, and send the leather to India, stitch up the jacket and send it back to America.”

    PETA director Dan Mathews said Gap was buying its leather ”from a black market … where it’s illegal to kill cows. And they have

    assumed no responsibility.”

    Clues to sleep disorders may lie in the flies: Recent research by Dr. Giulio Tononi and colleagues at The Neurosciences Institute in San Diego suggests that flies must rest to perform their biological functions, like higher animals. The rest periods of flies share important attributes with mammalian (and human) sleep. This finding provides ‘…“the opportunity to employ fly genetics to figure out the function of sleep and

    to develop new, safe drugs for improving sleep as well as vigilance,” Tononi explained.

    The fruit fly apparently “shares a sophisticated brain function with us,” Tononi said. “However, the

    difference between what goes on in the brain of a fly and a human when they are asleep, is probably as

    large as the difference between what they think when they are awake,” he added wryly.’

    Unheeded warnings: Predictions by a climatologist from the University of Zululand in South Africa of floods in Mozambique were ignored. Flood damage could have been reduced if dam managers in the region had begun to empty their reservoirs sooner.

    I found it hard to believe that Morphine would survive Mark Sandman’s death, but it appears to be reborn, joyously.

    I found it hard to believe that Morphine would survive Mark Sandman’s death, but it appears to be reborn, joyously.

    Time Cube

    “I will give $1,000.00 to any person who can disprove 4 days in each

    earth rotation. It’s

    a pity that religious and academic word is a

    crime against Nature and enslaves Children.

    4-cornered Truth is ineffable by man or god.

    Until Word is Cornered, all Math is Fiction.”

    The Decline and Fall: “Baby Bank” for Unwanted Newborns

    “HAMBURG, Germany (Reuters) – Social workers in Hamburg have opened a controversial “baby bank”

    where new mothers can leave their unwanted newborns.

    The center, which is near the “Reeperbahn” red light district, was set up to reduce the number of

    newborns abandoned on the streets of the city.

    A woman can anonymously pass her child through a “letter box” and into a crib. An alarm alerts staff

    that a new child has been left.”