David Brooks:
Five percent.
Let’s take a look at what she’s going to put her party through for the sake of that 5 percent chance…” (New York Times op-ed)
David Brooks:
Five percent.
Let’s take a look at what she’s going to put her party through for the sake of that 5 percent chance…” (New York Times op-ed)
Search boxes! With recommended search terms!
It makes sense, right? All the good domain names are gone. Getting people to a specific page in a big site is difficult (who’s going to write down anything after the first slash?). And, most tellingly, I see increasingly more users already inadvertently put complete domain names like “gmail” and “netflix” into the Search box of their browsers out of habit — and it doesn’t even register that Google pops up and they have to click to get to their destination.
But, I ask you: could this be done in the USA? Wouldn’t search spammers and/or “optimizers” ruin this within seconds? I did a few tests with major name brands and they’re almost always the top hit on Google (surprisingly, even Panic). But if Nabisco ran a nationwide ad campaign for a hot new product and told users to Google for “Burlap Thins” to learn more, wouldn’t someone sneaky get there before they do?” (cabel.name)
Anesthesia awareness – regaining some level of consciousness during surgery – is thought to occur in perhaps one or two out of 1,000 surgical patients in the United States, a total of 20,000 to 40,000 cases a year. The bulk of them do not feel pain.
Still, for some it is so disturbing that they suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder and must undergo counseling.
For general anesthesia, patients typically are given a mix of drugs – including one to “knock them out” and often another called a paralytic.
This relaxes the muscles to make surgery easier. But in the rare case that a patient starts to wake up – not able to speak – the paralytic effect can be horrifying.” (Philadelphia Inquirer)
Man regrows lost finger with powdered pig bladder. (CBS News via boing boing)
Overall US death toll in Iraq hits 4,000 (Yahoo! News)
I do not blame Dick Cheney for George W. Bush’s transgressions; the president needs no prompting to wrap himself in the cloak of a modern-day king. Nor do I believe that the vice president so enthusiastically supports the Iraq war out of a loyalty to the oil industry that his former employer serves. By all accounts, Cheney’s belief in “the military option” and the principle of president-as-decider predates his affiliation with Halliburton.
What, then, is the straw that causes me to finally consign a man I served with in the House Republican leadership to the category of “those about whom we should be greatly concerned”?
It is Cheney’s all-too-revealing conversation this week with ABC News correspondent Martha Raddatz. On Wednesday, reminded of the public’s disapproval of the war in Iraq, now five years old, the vice president shrugged off that fact (and thus, the people themselves) with a one-word answer: “So?”
‘So,’ Mr. Vice President?” (Washington Post op-ed)
Somewhere in the Middle East, Jesus Christ is strapped to a bench, his head wrapped in clingfilm. He furiously sucks against the plastic. A hole is pierced, but only so that a filthy rag can be stuffed back into his mouth. He is turned upside down and water slowly poured into the rag. The torturer whispers religious abuse. If you are God, save yourself you fucking idiot. Fighting to pull in oxygen through the increasingly saturated rag, his lungs start to fill up with water. Someone punches him in the stomach.
Perhaps this is how we ought to be re-telling the story of Christ’s passion. For ever since the cross became a piece of jewellery, it has been drained of its power to sicken. Even before this the Romans had taken their hated instrument of torture and turned it into the logo of a new religion. Few makeovers can have been so historically significant. The very secular cross was transformed into a sort of club badge for Christians, something to be proud of.
Two weeks ago, the most powerful Christian in the world vetoed a bill that would have made it illegal for the CIA to use waterboarding on detainees. “We need to ensure our intelligence officials have all the tools they need to stop the terrorists,” said George Bush in a passable impersonation of Pontius Pilate. “This is no time for Congress to abandon practices that have a proven track record of keeping America safe.”
Throughout his time in office, the president has frequently been photographed in front of the cross. Yet as his support for torture demonstrates, he has understood little of its meaning. For the story of the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus is supremely a moral story about God’s identification with victims.” (Guardian.UK)
John Lanchester on what the nose knows:
layers of cedar and raspberry strike a sharp upfront note, while clove and creamy notes add body while contributing an exotic, sumptuous character that conveys luxury in its essence. Might there also be a trace of rubber, though?
And then there’s B, with
its aroma of underripe bananas, and the way the fruitiness opens up on my tongue with a flick of bitterness that quickly fades to reveal lush, grassy tones.
Product C, on the other hand, is
fruity (with a high-profile role for the deliciously garbagey, overripe smell of guava) plus floral (powdery rosy) plus green (neroli and oakmoss).
These are descriptions of, respectively, a chocolate, an olive oil, and a perfume, but you couldn’t possibly guess that. I’ve never caught traces of red fruit in a dark chocolate, I don’t even know what neroli is, and, as for underripe bananas in olive oil, I’m more likely to catch the Sundance Kid in Bolivia. That doesn’t mean that the people who can taste these things are bluffing; rather, they have a vocabulary of specific sense references that I haven’t acquired. (To complicate matters, sometimes these people actually are bluffing.)” (The New Yorker)
Pregnant mother, tortured, dies in Ill. (Yahoo! News)
Clever restaurant and café names: A Paper Presented by
Lynn C. Hattendorf Westney (Associate Professor at The University of Illinois at Chicago)at the 35th Annual Meeting of the Congress of the Social Sciences and Humanities, Quebec 2001. (Dinersoft via kottke)
Remember that the Journal is set up to disarm its pay gate if it thinks you’re coming from Google News or Digg. In order to get free access, then, you’ve got to convince the Journal that you’ve clicked on a link on one of those sites. How to do that?
The technical name for this is ‘referer spoofing’ (with the misspelling). Spoofing is an easy thing to pull off in Firefox — all you’ve got to do is download this add-on, refspoof.
When you’ve installed that app, you’ll see a new toolbar.
Now follow these steps:
* Go to WSJ.com.
* In the refspoof toolbar’s ‘spoof:’ field, type ‘digg.com.’
* Also in the refspoof toolbar, click the R icon, and select ‘static referrer.’
* That’s it. Click around the site; the WSJ thinks each click is coming from Digg. The WSJ is now yours for free!” [via boing boing]
Pugh is almost certainly talking about children who have what are known as ‘callous-unemotional’ traits, described somewhat less politically correctly as ‘kiddie psychopathy’.
These have indeed been found to weakly predict future antisocial behaviour, but the picture is more complex than it seems and, as we’ll see, they aren’t a good basis on which to base future crime fighting efforts.” (Mind Hacks)
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“Resembling a strange creature from the deep, this rare marbled iceberg was spotted in the waters of the Antarctic by a Norwegian sailor.” (Telegraph.UK) |
Unlike almost every other dinosaur fossil ever found, the Edmontosaurus named Dakota, a duckbilled dinosaur unearthed in southwestern North Dakota in 2004, is covered by fossilized skin that is hard as iron. It’s among just a few mummified dinosaurs in the world, say the researchers who are slowly freeing it from a 65-million-year-old rock tomb. (Discovery News)
The Supreme Court denies right of appeal to a condemned man who may well be innocent, clearing the way for his execution. (He is an African American, of course, convicted of murdering a white police officer.) Most of the non-police eyewitnesses on whose testimony his murder conviction was based have recanted, some filing sworn affidavits saying they were coerced into giving the evidence which corroborated his guilt. One of the remaining witnesses is the principal alternative suspect, and there is considerable sworn testimony implicating him. Yet the Supreme Court is denying Troy Davis further appeals on procedural grounds, because the evidence of police coercion was not introduced soon enough. You can send a letter to the Georgia Board of Pardon and Paroles advocating for fair treatment for Davis, or download a petition from this advocacy site. (Amnesty International)
The Wall Street titans have turned into a bunch of welfare clients. They are desperate to be bailed out by government from their own incompetence, and from the deregulatory regime for which they lobbied so hard.” (Washington Post op-ed)
Whether it is a ‘bailout’ or not has become as much as a charged buzzword as whether it was an ‘invasion’ or not, whether it is an ‘amnesty’, or whether we are in favor of ‘choice’. Whichever side of the debate one is on, one should decry the mind-numbing use of buzzwords to replace nuanced discourse.
It is the vernal equinox for all my readers in the northern hemisphere (both of you?) and the autumnal equinox in the southern hemisphere (anyone following FmH from south of the equator?). The earth’s axis is perpendicular to its orbital plane and the north and south poles are equal distances from the sun today, so that day and night are of equal length (equi-nox) It is the pagan festival of Ostara in the north and, if there are pagans south of the equator, Mabon, observances which reflect the sense of balance inherent in this astronomical event.
…In the book Eight Sabbats for Witches by Janet and Stewart Farrar, the festival Ostara is characterized by the rejoining of the Mother Goddess and her lover-consort-son, who spent the winter months in death. Other variations include the young God regaining strength in his youth after being born at Yule, and the Goddess returning to her Maiden aspect.” (Wikipedia )
This year, we have the added exact coincidence of the full moon with the equinox. The sun and moon are, symmetrically, opposite each other, the axis of the earth and the solar-lunar axis orthogonal, and thus the coincidence with Easter, which the early Church grafted onto the pagan equinoctal observance (while removing the nod to the Goddess). Easter, and the equinox, of course, celebrate rebirth and the promise of renewal as well as balance. These are embodied in the symbol of the egg, smooth, round and full of potential ready to burst forth. Rumor has it that on the equinox you can balance an egg, pointy side up. Do it at midnight, when the moon is as close to overhead as it will get at your latitude and the tidal forces are balanced.
And with sadness, at this change of the seasons, I have to note the passing of the man for all seasons. R.I.P. Paul Scofield.
So, in the same 24-hour period, Barack Obama argues for the viability of his candidacy on the basis of the US being a post-racial society (Washington Post); and the Supreme Court strikes down by a 7-2 vote the capital murder conviction of a Louisiana man on the grounds that the prosecution’s peremptory jury challenges were blatently racist (New York Times). Oh, and Clarence Thomas writes the dissenting opinion. Could it be that he wants to keep racial bias viable in American society thinking he would not have his job but for affirmative action? [Should I fall on my sword, as Geraldine Ferraro did, for saying that? — FmH]
Moves to punish China for its handling of Tibetan protests gain momentum:
Kouchner said he wants to discuss it with other foreign ministers from the 27-nation European Union next week. His comments opened a crack in what until now had been solid opposition to a full boycott, a stance that Kouchner said remains the official government position.” (AP )
“Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.” R.I.P. Arthur C. Clarke, 90. The news has emerged in the last half-hour of Clarke’s death In Sri Lanka, his adopted home for many years. I predict that most of the obituaries will tag him primarily in two ways, as the ‘father of the communications satellite’ and the author of 2001. (CNN ) The latter should be much more closely associated with Kubrick, to my way of thinking. True visionary status, however, devolves on Clarke for work like Childhood’s End (always my favorite) and The Foundation trilogy[…just destroyed my science fiction cred in a senior moment. Of course the Foundation books were by that other late classic writer, Asimov. — FmH] and the brilliant short story “The Nine Billion Names of God”.“Well, they believe that when they have listed all His names — and they reckon that there are about nine billion of them — God’s purpose will have been achieved. The human race will have finished what it was created to do, and there won’t be any point in carrying on. Indeed, the very idea is something like blasphemy.”
“Then what do they expect us to do? Commit suicide?”
“There’s no need for that. When the list’s completed, God steps in and simply winds things up . . . bingo!”
“Oh, I get it. When we finish our job, it will be the end of the world.”
Chuck gave a nervous little laugh.
“That’s just what I said to Sam. And do you know what happened? He looked at me in a very queer way, like I’d been stupid in class, and said, ‘It’s nothing as trivial as that’.”Which other of Clarke’s work do readers cherish?
As an inveterate Stephenson fan, I had been waiting for any breaking news of his next project. I just learned about Anathem last week, and this is about all that is known so far:
One was the abrupt resignation of the person who has been the biggest obstacle to a U.S. military strike against Iran, Admiral William Fallon, the chief of Central Command which oversees U.S. military operations in the volatile region.
The second is the ugly direction that the Democratic presidential competition has taken, with Hillary Clinton’s campaign intensifying its harsh rhetoric against Barack Obama, reducing the likelihood that he can win the presidency – and thus raising the odds that the next president will be either John McCain or Sen. Clinton, both hawks on Iran.
Throughout the campaign, Clinton has mocked Obama as inexperienced for his desire to engage in presidential-level diplomacy with Iran and other adversarial states. And she recently judged him as unqualified to serve as Commander in Chief, while declaring that both she and Sen. McCain have crossed that “threshold.”
The cumulative effect of Clinton’s attacks on Obama’s qualifications – combined with her campaign’s efforts to turn many white voters against him as the “black candidate” – has buoyed Republican hopes for November.” (Consortium News)
One was the abrupt resignation of the person who has been the biggest obstacle to a U.S. military strike against Iran, Admiral William Fallon, the chief of Central Command which oversees U.S. military operations in the volatile region.
The second is the ugly direction that the Democratic presidential competition has taken, with Hillary Clinton’s campaign intensifying its harsh rhetoric against Barack Obama, reducing the likelihood that he can win the presidency – and thus raising the odds that the next president will be either John McCain or Sen. Clinton, both hawks on Iran.
Throughout the campaign, Clinton has mocked Obama as inexperienced for his desire to engage in presidential-level diplomacy with Iran and other adversarial states. And she recently judged him as unqualified to serve as Commander in Chief, while declaring that both she and Sen. McCain have crossed that “threshold.”
The cumulative effect of Clinton’s attacks on Obama’s qualifications – combined with her campaign’s efforts to turn many white voters against him as the “black candidate” – has buoyed Republican hopes for November.” (Consortium News)
Earlier in the week, several television stations played clips in which Mr. Wright, of Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago, referred to the United States as the ‘U.S. of K.K.K. A.’ and said the Sept. 11 attacks were a result of corrupt American foreign policy.” (New York Times )
In an interview with The Washington Post,
‘And her reply would be, `Maybe tomorrow,” Whipple said. ‘According to him, she did not want to leave the bathroom.’
The boyfriend called police on Feb. 27 to report that ‘there was something wrong with his girlfriend,’ Whipple said, adding that he never explained why it took him two years to call.” (Yahoo! News)
Of course it’s well documented that there are already a number of right-wing smear campaigns underway to promote this idea. But I think these numbers are evidence of the success that members of his own party have had in injecting questions about his race and religious beliefs (and tying the two together) into the primary. The Clinton camp has repeatedly and unsubtly pushed his race to the center of the campaign, and is doing their best to paint him as guilty of being a white-people-hating, Louis-Farrakhan-loving, militant by association.” (The American Prospect)
Earlier in the week, several television stations played clips in which Mr. Wright, of Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago, referred to the United States as the ‘U.S. of K.K.K. A.’ and said the Sept. 11 attacks were a result of corrupt American foreign policy.” (New York Times )
“The giant Burmese python has established itself in Southern Florida, after people released their pet reptiles, which had taken to squashing things larger than rats, before sucking them face first into their heads. They can grow up to 20 feet long, and can survive over huge tracts of the US.” (Barista)
Hendrix Drummer Dies at 60. I still go back to the Band of Gypsys‘ ‘Machine Gun’ for an energy lift. But, even apart from his work with Hendrix,I also cherish the late lamented Electric Flag, of which he was a founder. Jon Pareles eulogizes Miles in The New York Times.
“The giant Burmese python has established itself in Southern Florida, after people released their pet reptiles, which had taken to squashing things larger than rats, before sucking them face first into their heads. They can grow up to 20 feet long, and can survive over huge tracts of the US.” (Barista)
The furry Freakonomics brothers report on a Washington State proposal to mandate fluorescent yellow license plates for a year for those convicted of DUI offenses. (Ohio, readers report, already has such a system in place.) The argument is that it would alert traffic enforcement officials to the need for closer scrutiny and warn other drivers. The preponderance of responding readers think it is a bad idea. Some object to “scarlet letter” public shaming as an ineffective deterrent, others argue that family members driving the tagged vehicle should not be inconvenienced or humiliated, or that the offender can just refrain from registering a vehicle in her/his name. What about vehicles the offender rents or drives at work? License plates do not go with individuals, they go with vehicles, so why not tattoo the offender instead? Or, as one reader facetiously (I hope) suggests, put them to death or keep them preventively detained? Readers bridle at continuing to exact a penalty from an offender who has already “paid their debt to society”, to put it in clichéd terms. Parallels in this regard are drawn to the sex offender registry system, which some readers feel also exacts continued punishment, humiliation or at least inconvenience after a penal sentence has been served.
I must say that I am mixed on this issue. We are obviously headed down a very slippery slope here — one we are already way down. But, as threats to public safety go, driving under the influence and sexual offenses against minors are viewed as some of the most dramatic ways to harm or kill innocents in our society. They are, in particular, seen as moral failures, abnegations of personal responsibility and the social contract. To varying extents, these behaviors are targets of public frustration over the “I-can’t-help-myself” application of a disease model to behavior. Related to this is the compulsive quality of both behaviors. It is considered likely that, once having offended, one is likely to re-offend, which fans the flames of demand for preventive measures after punitive ones have ended. If these behaviors arise from medical conditions rather than moral failings, frustration arises at the evident failure of treatment or rehab approaches.
I am certainty discouraged about the minimal success rate and dramatic recidivism I see as someone who frequently treats alcohol dependence and abuse (although rarely sexual predation) in my hospital practice. It is an area of practice in which I have the greatest degree of difficulty with the disease model, especially with offenses committed under the influence of alcohol. FmH readers know of my objections to the medicalization of behavior, especially as it pertains to legal defenses in criminal cases. But in mental health practice it is also a struggle to keep moralistic judgments out of our work with our patients.
Because treatment works so rarely and because the public safety implications are so great, I think prevention must be the main goal of our interventions, and I do think the state is the proper instrument for this. Any objections I have about the yellow license plate approach are practical, not moralistic.
What do readers think?
Google Search top results, if you cannot guess…
The winner of the Freakonomics contest is: “Our Worst Critics Prefer to Stay.” All of the leading entries cling to such a naive faith in an ideal of democracy which, to my way of thinking, is little more .than a fairy tale. And, yet, yes, most of the time I prefer to stay.
Kabul government controls just a third of Afghanistan (Wired Dispatch)
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“In a recent story in The Nation, Chris Hayes used 2,200-plus words to argue why progressives should back Sen. Barack Obama. I’ll use only seven: Obama’s favorite TV show is The Wire. It’s certainly true, as Hayes noted, that Obama, like every presidential candidate, won’t be saying one word about the prison-industrial complex or the disastrous consequences of the ‘war on drugs.’ But it’s heartening to think that at least he’s tuning in to one of the few public forums that fiercely drags such issues into our consciousness.” — Brian Cook (In These Times)
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Thomas silent as Supreme Court talks on and on: “Two years and 142 cases have passed since Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas last spoke up at oral arguments. It is a period of unbroken silence that contrasts with the rest of the court’s unceasing inquiries.” (CNN)
I have long thought that Clarence Thomas is one of the most monumental embarrassments of our judicial system, and I certainly hope his demeanor is not mistaken for that of an impressive silent deliberator. |
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Want to keep your home? How about stopping paying your mortgage? If, as is increasingly common, your mortgage has been sold many times since you took the loan, it is possible, as this homeowner found, that the current noteholder can’t actually find the documentation of your debt. If that’s the case they may not be able to foreclose on you. [via boing boing] |
Mark Frauenfelder’s summary of what Blackmore, the author of The Meme Machine, said at TED 2008:
Language is a parasite we’ve adapted to. It may have started out being harmful, but we’ve developed a symbiotic relationship with it.
First replicators were genes. Then memes. We now have temes (tech memes) are a third repliciator on our planet.
Don’t think of intelligence, thinnk of replicators.
New Drake equation. Start with number of planets — what fraction of those get a first replicator, a 2nd replicator, a 3rd?
Getting a new replicator is dangerous. We need to pull through each time. The 2nd replicator (memes) was dangerous -= big brains are painful: kills a lot of mothers and babies. Brains uses 20% of body energy for 2% of body weight; it may have nearly killed us off.
temes are just information — they use humans to suck up planet’s resources. Don’t think we created the internet to benefit us; we are being being used by temes. It convenient for temes to piggyback on us because we replicate. But when temes can replicate without us, they will carry on without us.” [via boing boing]
WorldWide Telescope, created with Microsoft’s high-performance Visual Experience Engine™, enables seamless panning and zooming across the night sky blending terabytes of images, data, and stories from multiple sources over the Internet into a media-rich, immersive experience.” (Microsoft Research)
Coming this spring. [Lest you think this sounds like an ad for Micro$oft, it is just that this seems charming.]
A long thoughtful piece in one of my new favorite foreign policy analysis weblogs, Just World News, contrasts the position of McCain and other Republican ideologues on the simultaneous winnability of the Iraq and Afghani wars with the Democratic candidates’ tradeoff model.
Also:
Psychiatrist Margaret Spinelli’s 2004 academic review of the topic from the American Journal of Psychiatry (full text available freely).
ACM, fellow weblogger, FmH reader, and web friend, celebrates an addition to the family. My heartiest wishes. All happiness to you and yours.
And:
Ms. Medley is expecting too, in June. All the best!
Yesterday was the tenth anniversary of my daughter’s arrival on the planet. How soon the two of you will be looking back on ten years! Carpe diem.
“He ruled out the possibility that he would prevent a Democratic victory in 2008. ‘Not a chance,’ he said. ‘If the Democrats can’t landslide the Republicans this year, they ought to just wrap up, close down, and emerge in a different form.'” (New York Times ) Misguided, pitiful, arrogant man…
Also:
Psychiatrist Margaret Spinelli’s 2004 academic review of the topic from the American Journal of Psychiatry (full text available freely).
And aren’t we merely trying to slice away what is most probably an essential part of our hearts, that part that can reconcile us to facts, no matter how harsh, and that also can inspire us to imagine new and more creative ways to engage with the world?” (LA Times)
I went to the Library of Congress Website. The FACTS of what each did in the Senate last year sure surprised me. I’m sure they will surprise you, too. Whether you love or hate Hillary, you will be surprised. Whether you think Obama is the second coming of JFK or an inexperienced lightweight, you will surprised. Go check out the Library of Congress Website. After spending some time there, it will be clear that there is really only one candidate would is ready to be the next president…” (Daily Kos)
But we needn’t quarrel about all this, or deny the reality of the good news, to say that the surge has not worked yet. The test is simple, and built into the concept of a surge: Has it allowed us to reduce troop levels to below where they were when it started? The answer is no.” — Michael Kinsley (Slate)
Start with the well-known Creeley poem, ‘I Know a Man’:
As I sd to my
friend, because I am
always talking, – John, Isd, which was not his
name, the darkness sur-
rounds us, whatcan we do against
it, or else, shall we &
why not, buy a goddamn big car,drive, he sd, for
christ’s sake, look
out where yr going.
A timeline of recent campus shootings and speculation about what it is about campuses and schools that attracts deranged shooters. (The Lede, The New York Times)
Herbert Spencer (1851): “As a corollary to the proposition that all institutions must be subordinated to the law of equal freedom, we cannot choose but admit the right of the citizen to adopt a condition of voluntary outlawry. If every man has freedom to do all that he wills, provided he infringes not the equal freedom of any other man, then he is free to drop connection with the state – to relinquish its protection and to refuse paying toward its support. It is self-evident that in so behaving he in no way trenches upon the liberty of others, for his position is a passive one, and while passive he cannot become an aggressor. It is equally self-evident that he cannot be compelled to continue one of a political corporation without a breach of the moral law, seeing that citizenship involves payment of taxes; and the taking away of a man’s property against his will is an infringement of his rights.”
Bertrand Russell (1943): “To avoid the various foolish opinions to which mankind are prone, no superhuman genius is required. A few simple rules will keep you, not from all error, but from silly error.”
| Thanks, ACM, for pointing me to this fantastic gallery, although the site has relocated here. I am not tattooed but this is an appealing direction. | ![]() |
To make his quest even more challenging, he decided not to use any of his previous contacts or mention his education.
During his first 70 days in Charleston, Shepard lived in a shelter and received food stamps. He also made new friends, finding work as a day laborer, which led to a steady job with a moving company.
Ten months into the experiment, he decided to quit after learning of an illness in his family. But by then he had moved into an apartment, bought a pickup truck, and had saved close to $5,000.” (Christian Science Monitor)
In his book, Shepard takes issue with the experience of Barbara Ehrenreich, who in Nickeled and Dimed found she was not able to make ends meet or progress beyond a series of menial jobs when she tried self=imposed poverty as a social experiment. Could gender and age be making the difference? Or could it be preconceptions? I haven’t read the book (but I heard him interviewed on NPR) and he sounds vivacious and unjaded, in contrast to Ehrenreich’s well-worn and well-founded cynicism and rage against the machine.
A Guide to Using Caffeine Right. (Developing Intelligence)
…and its future in DSM-V. This editorial from the January 2008 British Journal of Psychiatry from Gerald Rosen, Robert Spitzer and Paul McHugh is music to my ears. It questions the validity and the future of the post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) diagnosis because the symptoms it describes are already covered by other depressive and anxiety disorder diagnoses. THe concept of PTSD emerged as a diagnosis with DSM-III in the context of the ’60’s feminist and antiwar movements. I believe it was an expression of the sentiment that victims of abuse and returning Vietnam veterans had experienced something more extraordinary than other sufferers, and therefore that the extremity of their reactions needed to be codified in a new diagnosis. Very quickly, then, insensitivity to the PTSD diagnosis came to seem like insensitivity to the plights of various classes of the downtrodden and oppressed. And, from the patients’ point of view, it has been a very appealing diagnosis to carry, given that it serves to remove the stigma of mental illness from the person and locate the defect in the horrendous external event that befell them.
So, since the inception of the diagnosis in the early 1980’s, there has been a momentum to apply it from both clinicians and patients. As FmH readers will be aware, this bandwagon effect is one of my pet peeves. I have opined that the diagnosis has come to be applied sloppily and indiscriminately whenever an inexperienced, earnest and naive clinician felt that something terrible, deserving of empathy, had happened to their patient. The orthodox adherents of PTSD have claimed that horrendous traumatic experience beyond the pale of what the human nervous system was designed to endure altered neurophysiological functioning in distinct and specific ways, accounting for the defining symptoms of PTSD and justifying the need for such a diagnosis. When the diagnosis was handed out nonchalantly to anyone who had suffered a stress or a loss, in contrast, it lost its specificity, as the sufferer really did not embody such a profound alteration in neurophysiological functioning. What was being described was more run-of-the-mill depression or anxiety in response to expectable stresses and losses. The indiscriminate use of the PTSD diagnosis has also reinforced rampant victim culture in our society.
But this new editorial may represent even a more profound objection to the diagnosis of PTSD than I have been making. It may not be invalidated by being applied too broadly; it may be entirely invalid in the first place. Whwere in the diagnostic pigeonholes were the PTSD sufferers before there was PTSD? They carried depression and/or anxiety diagnoses. Should they be there again? This makes sense to me for several reasons.
First, the description of PTSD involves three symptom clusters — intrusive recollections of the trauma, exaggerated emotional and physiological reactivity when triggered by memories or reminders of what has happened, and self-protective avoidance and constriction of emotion in reaction. In learning and teaching about this diagnosis, I have felt hardpressed to explain how these are different from anxiety, depression, and compensatory efforts. So, in terms of the severity of a trauma, exactly where are we to draw the line between those that merely bum one out, those that cause depression, and those that cause PTSD?
Secondly, it has long been known that resilient individuals do not necessarily develop PTSD symptoms in response to traumatic experiences similar to those that produce the syndrome in others. Since it is shaped by constitutional factors in the suffferer, the concept of a distinctive response to extreme trauma is further watered down.
Thirdly, some argue that there are depressive disorders, there are anxiety disorders, and there is the somewhat unusual fusion of the two symptom complexes in PTSD. But many psychiatrists, myself included, feel we have rarely seen a ‘pure’ depressive or anxiety disorder case, that patients always embody a combination of the two, and that the depressive and anxiety disorders are not as distinct as the diagnostic scheme would have use believe. Among other lines of evidence contributing to this impression is the fact of the overlap in efficacy of therapeutic agents for depression and anxiety. Antidepressants are good anxiolytics (perhaps better than Valium and its modern family of anti-anxiety derivatives, the benzodiazepines). Anti-anxiety medications have a venerable history for the treatment of depression. Treatment for PTSD, in any case, is little more than targeting some combination of anxiety and depressive symptoms, anyway.
Finally, most of the neurobiological explanations for the etiology of PTSD emphasize the impact of activation of the fight-or-flight response, and the bathing of the brain in stress hormones, at the time the trauma is experienced. This supposedly damages the brain and changes its emotional reactivity, its memory processing, etc. thereafter. But, increasingly, depression too has come to be understood as a syndrome of altered brain function and tissue damage from the physiological effects of stress, in a similar way. One interesting trend throughout the mental health field, as it has emphasized biological factors more and more to the exclusion of psychological and emotional, is arguably the lessening separation of heretofore distinctive diagnoses. I have recently heard theoretical speculation that schizophrenic and bipolar (manic depressive) psychoses may not be separate entities either. Indeed, the central distinction in diagnostic psychiatry between disorders of mood and of thought makes less and less sense than we have thought.
In psychiatric epistemology, there has always been a tension between the ‘lumpers’ and the ‘splitters’. Modern developments in diagnostic nomelnclature embodied in recent editions of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (“DSM”) have clearly been in the hands of the splitters, to a sometimes baroque and ridiculous extent. Distinctions have proliferated, pigeonholes have multiplied. Interestingly, one of the co-authors of this editorial, Robert Spitzer, has been the maven of the DSM process for the past several decades. The reconsideration of PTSD signified by this editorial may represent a long-overdue resurgence of lumping. As a generalist and synthesist in the field, this is very appealing to me…
So, in a sense, it may not be that all or most post-traumatic stress is really depression and anxiety; it may be that all or most depression and anxiety disorders may really be post-traumatic. Much has been written about Freud’s betrayal of the trauma concept. In early vesions of psychoanalytic theory, he had recognized the impact of external events in the etiology of neuroses, but in revising his theory he increasingly focused on internal fantasies. Critics have suggested he was avoiding his own irresolvable conflicts about his relationships with the women in his life. In any case, this was the first of two major betrayals of the patient’s reality in mental health treatment which has shaped the conception of mental disorders and the approach to treatment for the ensuing century or more; the second has been the reductionistic biological focus of the last two decades, removing us even more from the core reality of the patient’s experience. Arguably, it has gotten to the point that third party payors, in a sense, only want to pay for “endogenous” disorders that do not arise from life events, relegating “reactive” syndromes to lesser diagnostic categories which are less reimbursable. In a way, I may have been dead wrong in complaining that PTSD was diagnosed too often and arguing for the more precise use of the concept. The impact of trauma may not be recognized or acknowledged nearly enough.
Reflections from Vaughan’s ever-excellent Mind Hacks:
Psychiatry is certainly a stressful job, but research has also found that there are higher rates of mental disorder in future psychiatrists, suggesting many go into the profession precisely because of their experiences…
The reason I mention this is because Phil Dawdy has just written a powerful article on responses to a recent murder of a psychologist in New York*. Several people wrote comments to his original notice saying that the murderer was likely on a whole bunch of meds that were making him crazy; and, mental health workers hurt patients all the time, so they get what they deserve.
It is quite apparent that unlike in other areas of medicine, the mental health system has a ‘them and us’ attitude. Ironically, it is the single area of medicine where ‘them’ are most like to be ‘us’, regardless of whether you’re a patient or a professional.”
*Dawdy:
“Yesterday, I wrote about the murder of a psychologist in New York City and wondered aloud and somewhat innocently at why this nonsense happens and continues to happen in our culture. I don’t hear too many stories of Brits hacking their psychiatrists or psychologists to death–OK, I know of zero cases like that in the UK. The post received several comments that I find disturbing and unacceptable, forcing me to ponder why I am even bothering to do this blog if the best I can get out of readers is a bunch of inhumane BS and tired anti-psychiatry polemics.”
As FmH readers know, I maintain an interest in privacy and its violations, although it has largely become a lost cause. In The Anonymity Experiment, a correspondent for Popular Science attempts to obscure her tracks for just a week, in accordance with the following directives:
I heard of this from kottke, and the foregone conclusion was that it would not be very successful. His teaser left me curious about how she would measure the results. The piece is well-documented and I learned a few things about how to cover my tracks better. But her conclusion? Predictably, that you can never know how successful you have been, and that there is more information out there about you than you can ever know.
Speaking of ingrained paranoia, I recently sent out Freedom of Information Act requests to ten government agencies I thought might have records on me from my prior activities. Most wrote back that they found nothing about me, a fact to which I had a complicated reaction. I was (a) relieved; (b) surprised that my lifelong countercultural activities had apparently not attracted the attention I had expected; (c) dismayed I was being thus denied an odd sort of badge of courage; (d) of course, mistrustful of the denials; and (e) mindful of the fact that submitting FOIA requests might per se place me on a watch list or two (which I had not worried about in writing the letters, expecting that I was already on file). The Dept of Homeland Security, by the way, did not answer in the negative, saying instead that it was a matter of national security whether I was being monitored for national security purposes, and therefore declining to answer my request. By the way, don’t we think Carnivore, or some sophisticated government data mining equivalent or improvement, whatever it might be called, is monitoring this post to the internet and flagging me for further concern?
What do FmHers think? Was the whole endeavor foolish on my part?
To make his quest even more challenging, he decided not to use any of his previous contacts or mention his education.
During his first 70 days in Charleston, Shepard lived in a shelter and received food stamps. He also made new friends, finding work as a day laborer, which led to a steady job with a moving company.
Ten months into the experiment, he decided to quit after learning of an illness in his family. But by then he had moved into an apartment, bought a pickup truck, and had saved close to $5,000.” (Christian Science Monitor)
In his book, Shepard takes issue with the experience of Barbara Ehrenreich, who in Nickeled and Dimed found she was not able to make ends meet or progress beyond a series of menial jobs when she tried self=imposed poverty as a social experiment. Could gender and age be making the difference? Or could it be preconceptions? I haven’t read the book (but I heard him interviewed on NPR) and he sounds vivacious and unjaded, in contrast to Ehrenreich’s well-worn and well-founded cynicism and rage against the machine.
A neurobiological dissection of the complexities of that simplest and most natural of acts. Including speculation on why most of us tip our heads to the right instead of the left when we kiss. (Hint: it has something to do with basic human hemispheric asymmetry). (Scientific American)
Officials at the Department of Defense, seeking remedies for the radiation sickness that would follow a nuclear strike, were so taken by the research that they recently gave Tour a $540,000 grant and asked him to compress the next phase of testing into an almost unheard-of nine months.
In that time, Tour’s research group hopes to improve the drug so it works as well when given after radiation exposure as it does before.” (Houston Chronicle)
The drug is a simple concoction of the food preservatives BHA and BHT, with a novel mechanism to deliver them where they can do some good.
“Marketers spend a billion dollars a year targeting influentials. Duncan Watts says they’re wasting their money.” (Gasp) Could Gladwell have gotten it wrong? Fast Company
Maybe You Should. Psychologists have long known of what is called the Imposter Syndrome, in which people have a secret sense they are less competent than they appear to others. The idea that you’re a phony has been seen as a tormenting reflection of self-doubt in an anxious personality type. But it may be subtler than that. New research clarifies that those suffering from Imposter Syndrome, rather than being phonies, may in effect really be “phony phonies.” Adopting self-deprecation may lower others’ expectations and take pressure off one, preserving or even inflating self-serving confidence. New York Times
Long saga about one of the things that’s wrong with DRM. Fortunately, something of a happy ending. No surprises here to any of you who have thought about the issue of DRM, but it is a first-person illustration.
All of a sudden (after having to reinstall Windows XP for a reason having nothing to do with itunes) itunes tells me that 122 purchased songs (m4p’s) will not be transferred to the ipod on synchronization because I am “not authorized to play them on this machine.” This happened to me several years ago and I recall the solution was arduous, but for the life of me I no longer remember what I did back then to solve the problem (I think I should keep a log of these bedevilling Windows quirks with which I struggle and eventually solve, to recreate them in the future. Because it sseems almost certain they will recur.). Burn me once, shame on you; burn me twice, shame on me, don’t they say that? So why the heck have I continued to buy music from the itunes store???
I start at the obvious place, by DEauthorizing the machine and REauthorizing it with the itunes store, over and over again. It tells me, each time, that authorization was successful and I have now authorized 3 out of my allowed 5 machines (altho I only have ever had itunes installed on one machine). No matter, it obviously sees the machine as changed and therefore as having a different identity. That’s okay, at least I’m authorized now, I’ll deal with deauthorizing the ‘phantom’ machines later. But, even tho’ successfully authorized, I still cannot transfer those 122 tunes to the ipod and itunes still tells me I am not authorized to play them.
Oh yeah, now I remember, you’re supposed to click on one of the “disallowed” songs in itunes and try and play it, and it will get you authorized in a more enduring way. So I do that but it will not play any of the songs in the “purchased” folder no matter how I try.
The old time-honored solution to de-DRM songs, which is to burn the “purchased” playlist to a CD and then re-import the music from the CD into itunes aas plain mp3s, doesn’t work because you can’t burn music you are not authorized to play in itunes. So I research the software the freedom-lovers have made available out there to de-DRM itunes music, like TuneBites. People say it works great. I download a trial version. One fatal hitch, the clever way it works is that it plays your .m4p tune to a virtual CD device it sets up and then rips it back to itunes as an .mp3, de-DRM’ed. Great. You have to be able to play the tune in itunes in the first place to convert it. I guess that makes a twisted sort of sense, since the point of TuneBites is not to steal music but just to allow you to truly own what you bought and paid for, without DRM, to do with as you please. But it will not work for me in this situation.
More research. I look for non-itunes music software for my desktop machine that would play .m4p’s. Maybe then I can burn them or convert them somehow. There’s a plugin for Winamp that’s supposed to do that, but damned if iI can get it to work for me, despite the fact that I know what I’m doing.
Finally I come across a shareware program called m4p2mp3.exe. Download it, install it, let it loose on the 122 songs. It succeeds in converting *most* of them to unprotected mp3s (can’t for the life of me figure out what the difference is between the ones it fails at and those it succeeds with, despite several trials.) Almost good enough, I’ve freed around 100 of the 122 songs. The converted mp3s are perfect copies. Yep, they play great. So I pay for the shareware, in gratitude, and reimport the 100 mp3’s into itunes. I’m gonna “find duplicates” and remove all the DRM’ed original versions, keeping the free versions. But for some reason I click on one of the originals, just to try it one last time before erasing it now that I have a sanitized duplicate of it, and by God it plays. SO DO All THE ORIGINAL M4P VERSIONS OF THOSE 122 SONGS!! Somehow I got reauthorized to play them along the way! I can transfer them to the ipod, burn them to CD, etc etc etc.
WTF?
Still probably a good idea to free everything with my nifty new conversion software (as long as it continues to work, til Apple catches up with it). From now on, I am going to convert anything I buy from the itunes store to a plain ‘ol .mp3 and get rid of the protected .m4p version.
Have Cosmologists Lost Theirs?: “It could be the weirdest and most embarrassing prediction in the history of cosmology, if not science…” I love it. (New York Times )
I can’t believe this was posted on a humor site! (And I can’t believe I’ve blinked about both Mad and Cracked, neither of which I have thought about in more than forty years, on the same day.)
‘Why George W. Bush Is in Favor of Global Warming,’ a two-page spread that the magazine calls an exposé, has been illustrated by 10 Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial cartoonists. They try to offer reasons why environmental apocalypse might be a good thing for President Bush, with observations like, ‘His worries about how future generations will remember his presidency won’t matter if there are no future generations.'” (New York Times )
The mourners’ kaddish is one of the most powerful prayers in Jewish liturgy, recited by the grieving to reify their loss before the rest of the congregation. The writer yearned to join the other mourners and recite the kaddish for her father, but could she? He had not died, but, she felt, had been just as lost to mental illness. (Tikkun)
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“The Bush administration is nearing a decision that would officially acknowledge the environmental damage of global warming, and name its first potential victim: the polar bear.” (LA Times)
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From Mind Hacks, a description of a folk remedy for depression, probably from the 16th or 17th century:
…Bringing a sledge hammer to work tomorrow.
Philosopher Nick Bostrom argues that the pharmaceutical industry should be encouraged to develop cognition-enhancing drugs without having to tie them to a specific disease indication.
Bostrom, by the way, sounds like he works at an interesting venue, the “Future of Humanity Institute of the James Martin 21st Century School” at Oxford.
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Reading meaning in criminal tattoos: “Until fashions changed in recent decades, a tattoo was widely considered the mark of the soldier, the sailor or the criminal. The tattoos of offenders have sparked particular interest as they can be highly symbolic coded messages that have been thought to be a glimpse into the psychology of the criminal underworld.” (Mind Hacks)
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“The Bush administration is nearing a decision that would officially acknowledge the environmental damage of global warming, and name its first potential victim: the polar bear.” (LA Times)
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Potential Hazards of the Protect America Act (crypto.org pdf). One example of a generalized principle, that ill-conceived solutions are not just ineffective but often exacerbate the problems they are designed to address. This cuts across disciplines but is particularly prevalent in social policy interventions as well as the area with which I am more familiar, the practice of medicine (e.g. antibiotic use increasing the risk of virulent infections).