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Monday, 9 March 2015

How DNA is turning us into a nation of suspects


The year is 2025. The population is 325 million, and the FBI has the DNA profiles of all of them. Unlike fingerprints, these profiles reveal vital medical information. The universal database arrived surreptitiously. First, the Department of Defense's repository of DNA samples from all military personnel, established to identify remains of soldiers missing from action, was given to the FBI. Then local police across the country shadowed individuals, collecting shed DNA for the databank. On the way, thousands of innocent people were imprisoned because they had the misfortune to have race-based crime genes in their DNA samples. Sadly, it did not have to be this way. If only we had passed laws against collecting and using shed DNA...."—Professor David H. Kaye



DNA

© pursuitwire.com



Every dystopian sci-fi film we've ever seen is suddenly converging into this present moment in a dangerous trifecta between science, technology and a government that wants to be all-seeing, all-knowing and all-powerful.

By tapping into your phone lines and cell phone communications, the government knows what you say. By uploading all of your emails, opening your mail, and reading your Facebook posts and text messages, the government knows what you write. By monitoring your movements with the use of license plate readers, surveillance cameras and other tracking devices, the government knows where you go.


By churning through all of the detritus of your life—what you read, where you go, what you say—the government can predict what you will do. By mapping the synapses in your brain, scientists—and in turn, the government—will soon know what you remember. And by accessing your DNA, the government will soon know everything else about you that they don't already know: your family chart, your ancestry, what you look like, your health history, your inclination to follow orders or chart your own course, etc.


Of course, none of these technologies are foolproof. Nor are they immune from tampering, hacking or user bias. Nevertheless, they have become a convenient tool in the hands of government agents to render null and void the Constitution's requirements of privacy and its prohibitions against unreasonable searches and seizures.


Consequently, no longer are we "innocent until proven guilty" in the face of DNA evidence that places us at the scene of a crime, behavior sensing technology that interprets our body temperature and facial tics as suspicious, and government surveillance devices that cross-check our biometrics, license plates and DNA against a growing database of unsolved crimes and potential criminals.


The government's questionable acquisition and use of DNA to identify individuals and "solve" crimes has come under particular scrutiny in recent years. Until recently, the government was required to at least observe some basic restrictions on when, where and how it could access someone's DNA. That has all been turned on its head by various U.S. Supreme Court rulings, including the recent decision to let stand the Maryland Court of Appeals' ruling in Raynor v. Maryland , which essentially determined that individuals do not have a right to privacy when it comes to their DNA.


Although Glenn Raynor, a suspected rapist, willingly agreed to be questioned by police, he refused to provide them with a DNA sample. No problem. Police simply swabbed the chair in which Raynor had been sitting and took what he refused to voluntarily provide. Raynor's DNA was a match, and the suspect became a convict. In refusing to hear the case, the U.S. Supreme Court gave its tacit approval for government agents to collect shed DNA, likening it to a person's fingerprints or the color of their hair, eyes or skin.


Whereas fingerprint technology created a watershed moment for police in their ability to "crack" a case, DNA technology is now being hailed by law enforcement agencies as the magic bullet in crime solving. It's what police like to refer to a "modern fingerprint." However, unlike a fingerprint, a DNA print reveals everything about "who we are, where we come from, and who we will be."


With such a powerful tool at their disposal, it was inevitable that the government's collection of DNA would become a slippery slope toward government intrusion. Certainly, it was difficult enough trying to protect our privacy in the wake of a 2013 Supreme Court ruling in Maryland v. King that likened DNA collection to photographing and fingerprinting suspects when they are booked, thereby allowing the government to take DNA samples from people merely "arrested" in connection with "serious" crimes. At that time, Justice Antonin Scalia warned that as a result of the Court's ruling, "your DNA can be taken and entered into a national database if you are ever arrested, rightly or wrongly, and for whatever reason."


Now, in the wake of this Raynor ruling, Americans are vulnerable to the government accessing, analyzing and storing their DNA without their knowledge or permission. As the dissenting opinion in Raynor for the Maryland Court of Appeals rightly warned, "a person desiring to keep her DNA profile private, must conduct her public affairs in a hermetically sealed hazmat suit.... The Majority's holding means that a person can no longer vote, participate in a jury, or obtain a driver's license, without opening up his genetic material for state collection and codification."


All 50 states now maintain their own DNA databases, although the protocols for collection differ from state to state. That DNA is also being collected in the FBI's massive national DNA database, code-named CODIS (Combined DNA Index System), which was established as a way to identify and track convicted felons and has since become a de facto way to identify and track the American people from birth to death.


Indeed, hospitals have gotten in on the game by taking and storing newborn babies' DNA, often without their parents' knowledge or consent. It's part of the government's mandatory genetic screening of newborns. However, in many states, the DNA is stored indefinitely. What this means for those being born today is inclusion in a government database that contains intimate information about who they are, their ancestry, and what awaits them in the future, including their inclinations to be followers, leaders or troublemakers.


For the rest of us, it's just a matter of time before the government gets hold of our DNA, either through mandatory programs carried out in connection with law enforcement and corporate America, or through the collection of our "shed" or "touch" DNA.


While much of the public debate, legislative efforts and legal challenges in recent years have focused on the protocols surrounding when police can legally collect a suspect's DNA (with or without a search warrant and whether upon arrest or conviction), the question of how to handle "shed" or "touch" DNA has largely slipped through without much debate or opposition.


Yet as scientist Leslie A. Pray notes:




We all shed DNA, leaving traces of our identity practically everywhere we go. Forensic scientists use DNA left behind on cigarette butts, phones, handles, keyboards, cups, and numerous other objects, not to mention the genetic content found in drops of bodily fluid, like blood and semen. In fact, the garbage you leave for curbside pickup is a potential gold mine of this sort of material. All of this shed or so-called abandoned DNA is free for the taking by local police investigators hoping to crack unsolvable cases. Or, if the future scenario depicted at the beginning of this article is any indication, shed DNA is also free for inclusion in a secret universal DNA databank.




What this means is that if you have the misfortune to leave your DNA traces anywhere a crime has been committed, you've already got a file somewhere in some state or federal database—albeit it may be a file without a name. As Forensic magazine reports, "As officers have become more aware of touch DNA's potential, they are using it more and more. Unfortunately, some [police] have not been selective enough when they process crime scenes. Instead, they have processed anything and everything at the scene, submitting 150 or more samples for analysis." Even old samples taken from crime scenes and "cold" cases are being unearthed and mined for their DNA profiles.

Today, helped along by robotics and automation, DNA processing, analysis and reporting takes far less time and can bring forth all manner of information, right down to a person's eye color and relatives. Incredibly, one company specializes in creating "mug shots" for police based on DNA samples from unknown "suspects" which are then compared to individuals with similar genetic profiles.


If you haven't yet connected the dots, let me point the way: Having already used surveillance technology to render the entire American populace potential suspects, DNA technology in the hands of government will complete our transition to a suspect society in which we are all merely waiting to be matched up with a crime.


No longer can we consider ourselves innocent until proven guilty. As I make clear in my book A Government of Wolves: The Emerging American Police State , now we are all suspects in a DNA lineup until circumstances and science say otherwise.


Of course, there will be those who point to DNA's positive uses in criminal justice, such as in those instances where it is used to absolve someone on death row of a crime he didn't commit, and there is no denying its beneficial purposes at times. However, as is the case with body camera footage and every other so-called technology that is hailed as a "check" on government abuses, in order for the average person—especially one convicted of a crime—to request and get access to DNA testing, they first have to embark on a costly, uphill legal battle through red tape and, even then, they are opposed at every turn by a government bureaucracy run by prosecutors, legislatures and law enforcement.


What this amounts to is a scenario in which we have little to no defense of against charges of wrongdoing, especially when "convicted" by technology, and even less protection against the government sweeping up our DNA in much the same way it sweeps up our phone calls, emails and text messages.


Yet if there are no limits to government officials being able to access your DNA and all that it says about you, then where do you draw the line? As technology makes it ever easier for the government to tap into our thoughts, our memories, our dreams, suddenly the landscape becomes that much more dystopian.


With the entire governmental system shifting into a pre-crime mode aimed at detecting and pursuing those who "might" commit a crime before they have an inkling, let alone an opportunity, to do so, it's not so far-fetched to imagine a scenario in which government agents (FBI, local police, etc.) target potential criminals based on their genetic disposition to be a "troublemaker" or their relationship to past dissenters. Equally disconcerting: if scientists can, using DNA, track salmon across hundreds of square miles of streams and rivers, how easy will it be for government agents to not only know everywhere we've been and how long we were at each place but collect our easily shed DNA and add it to the government's already burgeoning database?


As always there will be those voices—well-meaning, certainly—insisting that if you want to save the next girl from being raped, abducted or killed, then we need to give the government all the tools necessary to catch these criminals before they can commit their heinous crimes.


It's hard to argue against such a stance. If you care for someone, you're particularly vulnerable to this line of reasoning. Of course we don't want our wives butchered, our girlfriends raped, our daughters abducted and subjected to all manner of atrocities. But what about those cases in which the technology proved to be wrong, either through human error or tampering? It happens more often than we are told.


For example, David Butler spent eight months in prison for a murder he didn't commit after his DNA was allegedly found on the murder victim and surveillance camera footage placed him in the general area the murder took place. Conveniently, Butler's DNA was on file after he had voluntarily submitted it during an investigation years earlier into a robbery at his mother's home. The case seemed cut and dried to everyone but Butler who proclaimed his innocence. Except that the DNA evidence and surveillance footage was wrong: Butler was innocent.


That Butler's DNA was supposedly found on the victim's nails was attributed to three things: one, Butler was a taxi driver "and so it was possible for his DNA to be transferred from his taxi via money or another person, onto the murder victim"; two, Butler had a rare skin condition causing him to shed flakes of skin—i.e., more DNA to spread around, much more so than the average person; and three, police wanted him to be the killer, despite the fact that "the DNA sample was only a partial match, of poor quality, and experts at the time said they could neither say that he was guilty nor rule him out."


Moreover, despite the insistence by government agents that DNA is infallible, New York Times reporter Andrew Pollack makes a clear and convincing case that DNA evidence can, in fact, be fabricated. Israeli scientists "fabricated blood and saliva samples containing DNA from a person other than the donor of the blood and saliva," stated Pollack. "They also showed that if they had access to a DNA profile in a database, they could construct a sample of DNA to match that profile without obtaining any tissue from that person." The danger, warns scientist Dan Frumkin, is that crime scenes can be engineered with fabricated DNA.


Now if you happen to be the kind of person who trusts the government implicitly and refuses to believe it would ever do anything illegal or immoral, then the prospect of government officials—police, especially—using fake DNA samples to influence the outcome of a case might seem outlandish. But for those who know their history, the probability of our government acting in a way that is not only illegal but immoral becomes less a question of "if" and more a question of "when."


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Mysterious jade artifact may have been offering to ancient gods

Jade artifact

© Professor Carl Wendt

The jade artifact, which has cleft rectangles, incisions and a cone at its top, was discovered underwater in Veracruz, Mexico.



A mysterious corncob-shaped artifact, dating to somewhere between 900 B.C. and 400 B.C., has been discovered underwater at the site of Arroyo Pesquero in Veracruz, Mexico.

Made of jadeite, a material that is harder than steel, the artifact has designs on it that are difficult to put into words. It contains rectangular shapes, engraved lines and a cone that looks like it is emerging from the top. It looks like a corncob in an abstract way archaeologists say.


It's an "extraordinary and unusual archaeological specimen made of mottled brown-and-white jadeite," the team wrote in an article published recently in the journal


Jack Hunter, a diver with the Arroyo Pesquero archaeological project, discovered the artifact in 2012 while diving with Jeffery Delsescaux about 2 to 3 meters (6.6 to 9.8 feet) below the surface of a deep stream.


"Underwater conditions were particularly challenging and included near-zero visibility and many obstructions, including large logs, smaller debris, partially decomposed leaves and other vegetation," the team wrote.


The artifact dates to a time when a civilization now called the Olmec flourished in the area. The Olmec people built stone statues of giant human heads and constructed a city now called about 10 miles (16 kilometers) northeast of Arroyo Pesquero. The city, which may have supported some 10,000 people, contained a 112-foot-high (34 m) pyramid.


Olmec Head

© Zbiq/Shutterstock.

The Olmec were an early civilization in Mesoamerica, who built a 112-foot-tall pyramid, developed a writing system (which is undeciphered) and built giant stone heads.



What is it?

The artifact, which measures 8.7 centimeters high by 2.5 centimeters wide (3.4 inches by 1 inch) at its widest point, is tricky to decipher.


"The iconography is pretty difficult to interpret; it's definitely not clear," said Carl Wendt, a professor at California State University, Fullerton who is directing the project. "It seems to be an abstract representation, I believe, of a cob of corn," he said. Corn, along with beans and squash, was an important part of the diet for people in ancient Mesoamerica.


The artifact may have had several uses. "While it certainly could have once been the handle of a bloodletter, in its current form, we argue that it probably would have been attached, as a finial, to a staff and functioned as a symbol of power and authority," the team wrote in the article.


In the end, the artifact may have been placed in the stream as an offering, Wendt said. The offering could have been connected to deities, ancestor veneration or magic, he added. Over the past 50 years thousands of artifacts have been found at the site and they may have been left as offerings, archaeologists say.


A sacred place


The site where the artifacts were found is a place where freshwater intersects with saltwater, Wendt said, noting that jellyfish from the ocean can get into the stream during heavy rain. To the Olmec, this intersection of freshwater and saltwater may have had great importance.


"While having practical importance today as a spot to collect freshwater, in Olmec times, the confluence would also have been important for symbolic and cosmological reasons, and an ideal place for a ritual hoard or votive offerings," the team wrote in the journal article.


So far, the archaeologists have found no buildings at Arroyo Pesquero that date to between 900 B.C. and 400 B.C. (when the offerings were made). Rather it is the water that is important the researchers said.


"Freshwater, so critical to daily life, was relatively scarce in a region of stagnant swamps," the team wrote. "It is no wonder that springs and other freshwater sources were sacred places, and sacrificing [objects] at them was an important part of Olmec ritual."


Wendt co-founded the Arroyo Pesquero archaeological project in 2005 so that the site could be studied scientifically. While thousands of artifacts have been found at the site over the past 50 years many lack details about their origins. Some of them were found by looters and are in private collections.


Pit bull terrier kills man trying to help owner in East Wheeling, West Virginia




A pit bull terrier



A pit bull attacked and killed a man who was trying to help the dog's ill owner in a home in East Wheeling, W.Va., authorities said.

Wheeling police and other emergency responders were called to the home late Sunday night regarding a dog attack and had to force their way into the residence, where they found both victims.


One victim was badly injured; the other person was unconscious. Both were taken to local hospitals, where they were pronounced dead, police said. Their names have not been released.


Wheeling police Lt. Phil Redford says police believe the dog's owner suffered a heart attack and that the other man was attacked by the dog as he tried to resuscitate the owner.


Animal control officers removed the pit bull from the home and it has been quarantined.


No further information was released.


The official story of Nemtsov's murder: The Muslim trail

nemtsov

Former deputy commander of the battalion regiment "North," Zaur Dadaev practically accepted the responsibility in organizing the murder of Boris Nemtsov. According to him, the crime was committed due to repeated negative statements of the politician about Muslims and their religion. The other four of those arrested were involved in the operation, because they lived in Moscow region and knew the city. Seems like no other "organizers" will be found.

The motive


At the hearings in the Basmanny court on the selection of the measure of punishment, Zaur Dudaev was declared unemployed. According to , at the time of the arrest, he was no longer a member of battalion "North". His relatives had hired a lawyer for Dudaev, but before his transfer from Ingushetia, where he was detained, Zaur refused the defender. After which he made a confession. According to the source of "Rosbalt" in law enforcement, Dadaev stated that in January 2015 he learned that Boris Nemtsov repeatedly made negative remarks about Muslims residing on the territory of Russia, about prophet Muhammad, as well as the Islam religion itself. Being a strong believer, Zaur could not tolerate it.


The investigators will not have a problem with the evidence of such a motive. In 2007 Boris Nemtsov gave an interview to the magazine , in which he stated that all the measures of President Vladimir Putin are aimed at increasing the birth rate, primarily in the regions populated by Muslims, and it is "extremely dangerous for the future of Russia". After that Nemtsov was accused by well-known representatives of the Muslim world of Islamophobia. In January 2015, the year after the execution of cartoonists from the French magazine , the politician in his blog on the website of "Echo of Moscow" had justified the actions of the cartoonists, and wrote that "Islam is stuck in the middle ages", and called recent events the "Islamic Inquisition". A few days later, Nemtsov said that "Everyone is tired of Kadyrov's threats", and "it is time to arrest him". This happened after the head of Chechnya said very unflattering things about the opposition leader Mikhail Khodorkovsky and journalist Alexey Venediktov because of their support for the cartoonists of .




"In fact, Dadaev confessed to this crime," - said the source of . Therefore, we should not expect any high-profile revelations or arrests as part of the investigation".

Ramzan Kadyrov on the evening of March 8 commented on his page in social networks, where, in fact, he confirmed the version of Dadaev: Nemtsov could be killed because of careless statements about Muslims.

The head of Chechnya stated that if Dadaev killed a man, then he "has committed a serious crime". However, he noted that Dadaev "was incapable of taking a step against Russia, for which he risked his own life". Another alleged participant in the murder of Boris Nemtsov, Beslan Shavanov, was described by Kadyrov as a "brave warrior". The head of Chechnya said that he personally knew Zaur "as a true patriot." Previously Kadyrov has repeatedly presented Dudaev with awards for participation in various operations, including the order of Courage.


"Zaur was one of the most fearless and courageous soldiers of the regiment. He especially distinguished himself in a battle near Benoy, when he carried out a special operation against a large gang of terrorists. Awarded with the order of Courage, medals "For courage", "For service for the Chechen Republic" and a letter of gratitude from the Head of the Chechen Republic etc. I firmly believe that he is sincerely devoted to Russia, was ready to give life for the Motherland. I do not understand the real causes and motives for dismissal of Zaur from the ranks of the Interior Ministry of Russia. They say it was due to the illness of his mother. The media reported that Zaur confirmed his involvement in the murder of Boris Nemtsov in court. Everyone who knows Zaur, claim that he is a deeply religious person, and that he, like all Muslims was appalled by the actions of and the comments in support of the cartoons," - said Ramzan Kadyrov.


So far the investigation have built the following picture of the crime. For more than ten years Zaur Dadaev served in the special forces of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation, in 2006 it was renamed into special battalion "North" in the name of Akhmat Kadyrov. The commander of this battalion is Alimbek Delimkhanov, the brother of Adam Delimkhanov, a State Duma Deputy and "named" brother of Ramzan Kadyrov.


Once in the circle of close friends, in particular - another former Chechen strongman Beslan Shavanov, Zaur Dadaev decided that Boris Nemtsov offended Muslims, and out of a false sense of patriotism and defense of religion decided to punish the politician. For these purposes, Dadaev involved his two nephews - Zaur and Shadid Gubashev, who for more than ten years lived in the Odintsovo district of Moscow region, worked in the capital and knew the city well. They pursued Tamerlane Exerkhanov and Khamzat Bahaev, who also lived in the Moscow suburbs next door to Gubashev's and were familiar with them.


They tried to establish surveillance of the politician, but without much success: he often left Moscow. Then the attackers began "monitoring" the Internet in search of the events with Nemtsov's participation. On February 27, at 20:00 the politician was supposed to be on the radio station "Echo of Moscow". The program with his participation was announced. The killers learned about it from the media. At least, studying the video surveillance footage, investigators found that Nemtsov was followed from the building of the radio station on the New Arbat in an unknown car.


After the appearance on the radio, Boris Nemtsov, went to GUM, where he was expected by his friend, the Ukrainian model Anna Duritskaya. Together they had supper in the cafe of the department store, and then went for a walk towards the apartment of Boris Nemtsov, located in the area of Bolshaya Ordynka. The path of Boris and Anna ran through the Moskvoretsky bridge, the killers decided that this is the right place for crime.


How the murder was uncovered


As explained by the source of in law enforcement, after finding the vehicle of Nemtsov's killers, the detectives have traced its route through the records from surveillance cameras. As a result the car was discovered. And then a video of the occupants of the car was found. As previously reported by , when zooming in, it became clear that the attackers were from the North Caucasus. At the same time the detectives found what SIM cards were used by the attackers. They were listed under other names, and only were discovered at the time of Nemtsov's shooting. However, it was established were these SIM cards were acquired by the criminals: they were the residents of Ingushetia. Further specific identities of the attackers were established.


However, by this time the main defendants in the investigation already left Moscow. They hid in Ingushetia. Dadaev was detained in the Republic on March 6, Gubashev's - a day later. On March 8 in the Moscow region law enforcement officials handcuffed Bagaev and Eskerhanov. On the same day, a group of investigators from Moscow tried to arrest Shavanov in Grozny, when he used a grenade, and was killed during the explosion.




Minsk 1 month later: Same old story

donbass

So, in about a month after signing the 2nd Minsk agreements, which led to already a 3rd "truce", we see the already quite familiar picture.

  1. There is a partial exchange of prisoners. The junta continues to use regular civilians, who are often suspected of supporting Novorossia, among the people returned into the DPR and the LPR. POWs are often returned with the traces of beatings and torture.

  2. The intensity of military action reduced significantly and currently we are seeing more of a series of local firefights and shelling instead of a burning front line. The initiative in the business of violating the cease-fire regime belongs to the junta, which regularly attempts to probe the NAF defenses at Shirokino, Peski, and Bakhmutka.

  3. The pullback of heavy artillery on the NAF side is effectively in its concluding phase. On the other hand, the junta continues to cheat, engaging in redeployment of the artillery in the area of the front line instead of its withdrawal.


So, even these three points, which were noted as the most realistic back in February, are being implemented with great difficulty; similar points of the first Minsk agreements were implemented in the same fashion.

In the questions of political nature we observe the predictable dead-end.



  1. The blockade of Donbass is not lifted and they are not going to lift it.

  2. There's no amnesty, furthermore, it is openly stated that it won't be extended to the leadership of the DPR and the LPR.

  3. The constitutional reform hasn't started.

  4. The attempts to bypass the question of the border by inviting peacekeepers expectedly failed.

  5. There is no clarity in the political future of Donbass, which would allow to solve a number of conflicting questions.


In essence, we are seeing a reissue of the first Minsk for almost a month now, which is accompanied by pretty much the same foreign policy background.

  1. Every day Russia is threatened with new sanctions and ultimatums given on the principle "Do as we say, or else..."

  2. The junta continues to prepare for war on the background of diplomatic maneuvering, both at the account of its own resources and also due to foreign aid.

  3. During the "truce" we regularly see various provocations, both in the area of the front line and also in other areas (mining bridges in Crimea, a weird explosion in Kharkov).

  4. The USA still try to build a wide anti-Russian coalition and make the conflict wider, which is served by diplomatic maneuvering around the weapon shipments to Ukraine.


Overall for now there are no drastic differences from the autumn situation for now. At this moment the third "truce" is playing the role of a temporary respite before a new stage of intensive military action as a part of spring-autumn campaign of 2015. So, it is not surprising that despite the pullback of artillery military buildup and replenishment of units that suffered losses in the spring campaign continues in Novorossia. Meanwhile, forced mobilization continues in the Ukraine, there is ongoing accumulation of reserves and replenishment of the battered units.

In general, as it was noted earlier, without achieving direct agreements between Russia and the USA there is no speaking of a quick resolution to this conflict.


America, a PTSD nation?

Our media should stop indulging in gratuitous nonstop coverage of violent events and should not intensively publicize mass murders and mass killings.
War on Terror, game

© toucharcade.com

...a game for up to 8 billion players!



It has been more than 13 years since 9/11, and some things that have become routine weren't so in those blissfully ignorant days before that trauma, when the biggest news stories focused more on cheating politicians and shark attacks. With yet another fear-mongering alert that Al-Shabaab (the latest variation on a theme) is somehow targeting every mall in the entire North American continent, our media and other public institutions have kept the war on terror going. Fueled by a changing, Internet-driven culture and shifting profits, the media and political pundits are going for the quick sell; clickbait for people stuck in a post-recession reverie. But they wouldn't be feeding us if we weren't biting. Why are we such easy prey for this kind of ongoing hysteria? What is it about constant premonitions of doom that continue to thrill and excite us as mass media consumers in America?

Post-traumatic stress disorder manifests in some individuals who experience a life-threatening trauma, but it can also show similar signs in a larger culture that has undergone mass trauma as well, such as war or genocide. One might argue that 9/11, despite relatively few casualties compared with major wars, was still a major psychological trauma for America, which had never experienced a civilian domestic attack by an outside threat in its history. And the attack was definitely dramatic in its symbolism: The tallest buildings in Manhattan destroyed, key government buildings in our nation's capital hit or nearly hit, comfortable office workers on a routine day brutally killed. The everyday, safe banality of American life seemed to be over.


Even if most people did not develop severe clinical PTSD like the first responders or the people truly exposed to danger at the scene, our country underwent a psychological reckoning afterward, one we perhaps still haven't fully processed in a healthy, self-aware fashion. Complicating matters has been the concomitant rise of social media culture and technology in the last decade, leading to an interesting mélange of influences and coping mechanisms.


Some of the symptoms of clinical PTSD include re-experiencing and flashbacks that alternate with emotional numbness and dissociation. Persons afflicted with PTSD can be stuck in a vicious cycle of continued panic attacks and hypervigilance, where they perceive a threat in every corner - their "fight or flight" responses are on standby at all times. They interpret danger on a hair trigger. Sometimes they cope by actively planning ways to avoid and/or prevent anything that reminds them of the trauma. For example, some soldiers with PTSD avoid crowded malls because it sets them on edge. They dislike driving because any discarded item on the side of the road reminds them of a roadside bomb.


Conversely, some trauma victims also exhibit paradoxical responses, like a moth to a flame. These survivors seek to revisit or obsess over the trauma in an effort to master or conquer it, or to reignite the adrenaline rush of a panic reaction. In a controlled and carefully supervised therapeutic setting, this re-exposure approach can actually be positive and forms the basis for prolonged exposure therapy (PET) and other treatment modalities designed to revisit the "scene of a crime" in a safer fashion, to redirect and redefine the mental narrative and associated physiological reactions surrounding a trauma. Ideally, the person regains a sense of control over the traumatic events, and they begin to feel safe even as they remember frightening flashbacks. But unleashed in uncontrolled or unexamined ways, this revisiting can be transformed into a toxic, almost addictive form of mental entrapment. It becomes an unhealthy obsession and the "new normal."


I worry that as a culture, America has shifted to a similar, flashback-prone mindset. The media constantly bombards us with "breaking news" (even when there isn't any), usually about something dark and violent: a crime, a shooting, a crash or, of course, a terrorist attack. It's an unfortunate coincidence that the rise of technology in this similar time period has made the news ticker even more prevalent and predominant, a means of providing easy instant gratification.


Twitter updates and social media streaming, as well as portable videos, make news more accessible and democratic, but also far too constant. The only way to break through the information flood and resultant numbing is to heighten the drama of the content, even when it comes at the cost of accuracy or truth. Stories that garner the most drama are the biggest disasters and the biggest attacks, and these in turn garner the biggest audiences. We have become easy gluttons for the addictive thrill of danger, combined with the uneasy artificial detachment of a video screen.


The other dark side of this addiction to violence is our creation of attached narrative and cognitive tropes. That is, the need to blame someone for authoring the violence, the need to assign a bogeyman that we can control and manipulate in our minds, so we can feel we are still in charge of our trauma. Interestingly, the newest diagnostic criteria added to PTSD's definition in DSM-V (the latest version of the published in 2013) involve "negative alterations in cognitions and mood associated with the traumatic event...persistent and exaggerated negative beliefs or expectations about oneself, others, or the world...persistent, distorted cognitions about the cause or consequences...that lead the individual to blame himself/herself or others."


This emphasis on the skewed cognitions and harsh negative thoughts that accompany a trauma corresponds with the way our media and politicians have continued to look for the bad guy to blame in this post-9/11 era. It was unfortunate that a small sect of psychopathic extremists succeeded so well in publicizing their cause, because they knew Americans would take the bait. We would generalize hook, line and sinker and aggrandize these killers into a global phenomenon, because who else would dare to attack our great and noble nation? The enemy of America had to be Darth Vader-scale, not the Hamburgler. It had to be Al Qaeda, Osama Bin Laden, Iraq, Saddam Hussein, the Axis of Evil, Iran, Afghanistan, the Taliban, Syria, Yemen and ISIS. The list just keeps going and going with no end in sight.




Accordingly we've perpetuated more literal trauma in soldiers and local civilians via ongoing wars. In a way, the fact that the WMDs that triggered the Iraq war were fictional makes perfect sense. It was our collective traumatic imagination projecting the worst possible enemy to explain and justify what had happened to us, even when the real answer was much more complex and nuanced, and not without our own contributions (our legacy of prior colonialism and wars, tricky Middle Eastern politics, oil money, etc.). Although certainly—and without question—9/11 itself was unconscionable.

The instant demagoguery assigned to terrorists wasn't lost on us domestically, either, as shown by the quick appearance of copycat terrorists like the anthrax killer and the DC snipers. Mass shootings have gone up in the last decade as easy access to national fame is a simple legal gun purchase and a sprinkle of random gunshots away. Various alienated losers knew Americans were all too hungry to relive the terror, the drama, the hype of another violent attack, would rerun the killer's face and images all over social media and YouTube over and over forever. Even my hometown shopping mall in Maryland was the site of a random mass shooting last year. Sadly, this type of crime has almost run its course. So jaded are many of us that we don't bother to pay attention to these crimes anymore. We've arrived at a point where the numbness after trauma is finally beginning to kick in. (It is also learned helplessness, as we fail to enact any protections such as reasonable gun control regulations.)




Our hypervigilance has also extended to creating "enemies" at home, to quickly perceive threats around us. This is obvious at our airports, but also everywhere in our society now. This environment may have even contributed to a culture of tighter domestic policing and racial profiling and tension, contributing to tragedies such as the killings of Trayvon Martin and Michael Brown, which gave rise to uncomfortable but important discussions and social movements in their wake. Perhaps the balance of policing and safety has tipped too far. We are too ready to pounce, even when people are innocent, even when the realistic terrorist threats are statistically almost nil relative to other public health threats we gladly ignore that kill tens of thousands.

So what can we as Americans do to step back and re-examine this self-destructive pattern? To avoid a continuing, repetitive cycle of retraumatization, of exhausting hyperalertness and ensuing emotional numbness to no good end?

The first step is self-awareness and education, the willingness to look at our patterns from the outside and question what is happening. Patients with PTSD get better when they gently expose themselves to perceived dangers but in a safe, supportive way. Likewise, we need to continue living our lives with some awareness of ongoing threats, but to focus on what is healthy, what is real in the relationships and people around us. Our media should stop indulging in gratuitous nonstop coverage of violent events and should not intensively publicize mass murders and mass killings when they happen. We should acknowledge the tragic loss of life, and the positive aspects of those victims' lives, but that's it. Since it's unlikely our media will begin reporting more responsibly in the near future, as viewers, we should turn away and not overexpose ourselves to this repeated retraumatizing sensationalism.




We should advocate, using whatever means we have, for ongoing reduction of our international involvement in the Middle East and stop embroiling ourselves in a never-ending cycle of para-religious conflict. Yes, the recent beheadings are tragic, but realistically, compared to all the thousands of casualties we've already sacrificed in our wars, should we bother giving sick petty criminals like ISIS an international platform of outrage? Let's stop caving to the extremists' thirst for attention. Otherwise, the anger may bubble over into the kind of chaotic, unchecked and generalized hatred that fueled the recent murders of those talented, bright students in Chapel Hill. Along those lines, we should, as individuals, monitor and question our tendencies to racially profile and blame and target anyone we feel is potentially the bogeyman in our midst. Because in reality, the bogeyman is our own fear.

Psychology Today Washington Post, Daily Beast Rumpus


Never too late: UK finally repays its 100 year old First World War debts


© Reuters



Britain's outstanding First World War debt has been repaid after the chancellor redeemed £1.9 billion from an outstanding bond - almost 100 years after the war ended.

The Treasury redeemed the outstanding £1.9 billion ($2.9bn) of debt from the 3.5 percent War Loan on Monday.


The loan was the most widely held of any UK government bond. More than 120,000 people were registered, with 97,000 of these investors holding less than £1,000 and almost 38,000 holding less than £100, according to the Treasury.


The 3.5 percent War Loan was issued in 1932 by then-chancellor Neville Chamberlain.



© ww1propaganda.com



National War Bonds were first issued in 1917 as part of a government effort to raise money for the continuing cost of the war.

The First World War bond, known as a 4-percent "Consolidated loan," was issued by Winston Churchill in 1927 as a way to refinance National War Bonds in the aftermath of the war.


The move comes as the Treasury attempts to remove all six of its remaining undated gilts in its portfolio, including some debt originally issued in the era of the South Sea Bubble in the 18th century.


In October last year, Chancellor George Osborne announced the UK would start paying off the remaining debt of around £2 billion, having until then paid £1.26 billion in total interest on the bonds.


In December, Osborne said:



"We can, at last, pay off the debts Britain incurred to fight the First World War.


"It is a sign of our fiscal credibility and it's a good deal for this generation of taxpayers. It's also another fitting way to remember that extraordinary sacrifice of the past."