Posted on August 6, 2007 in Agnosticism
I once told a group of Christians that when it came to an afterlife or no afterlife, only atheists could be surprised. It delighted them which showed that they didn’t get it.
Posted on August 5, 2007 in Site News
Yes, I took the picture. Great luck. Check out the new theme at Vox Nortona as well.
Posted on August 5, 2007 in Negligence
REVISED
Check out this blogging which shows that only three pieces of the bridge needed to fail.
Katrina Minnesota style. For years, the Republican Congress and the Bush Administration ignored the warnings of civil engineers that bridges across the country needed refitting, replacing, and maintenance. Can you believe the audacity of John McCluelessCain to attempt to blame it on this Congress? How many bills did you sponsor to correct this problem?
There’s an awful lot to be fixed after all these years of Republican misrule. And more will die because of it.
[tags]video, bridge collapse, Republican negligence, do nothing Republican Congress, disaster[/tags]
Posted on August 3, 2007 in Bipolar Disorder Psycho-bunk
Check out this article about a fraud in the name of vitamin-based bipolar remedies committed by Truehope in Calgary.
Also see Truehope Nutritional Support’s dubious cures for mental illness.
Posted on August 3, 2007 in Anxiety Memory Reflections
Sometimes I shout at memories. Until recently, I thought this was a bad thing — a psychoses that demanded my isolation from the rest of the human race. First, I realized, that it seldom if ever happened when I was with other people. Second, the shouts didn’t draw me deeper into the bad experience, but woke me up to the present. I could see the details of the bedroom ceiling, remember that I was not in the embarassing situation. I saw the strange behavior as an ally. The mind, I now believe, strives for normality. Sometimes I shout at myself to bring myself back.
Posted on August 3, 2007 in Bipolar Disorder Celebrity Journalists & Pundits Psycho-bunk
Pop icons appear to be something we run away to when the hard questions of life threaten to upset our conservatism — when it comes to evaluating our own motivations, our own living, our own complicity in the groupthink that buries women and men in absurd and painful roleplaying. Pax Nortona, July 27, 2003
Britney, Britney. Was it that long ago when I apologized to you for calling you a whore? I stand by what I said — the bit about how everyone jumped on you for being sexually promiscuous after [[Justin Timberlake]] (who is due to have a big show on HBO this Labor Day weekend) leaked the fact that he’d pierced that private place of yours. Remember how they turned this cad into some kind of whistleblower? Now it seems that you’re the subject of a new bit of celebrity analysis and I have mixed feelings about what is being said.
CBS News 13 out of Sacramento quoted two psychological professionals who declared that Britney’s impassioned behavior indicates that she suffers from a mood disorder, maybe [[bipolar disorder]]:
Recently, Spears’ actions have rivaled even her February head-shaving melt-down. Last month she jumped into the ocean wearing nothing but her underwear, and the next day she raised many eyebrows with her conduct during a photo shoot for OK! magazine. According to the magazine, she ruined thousands of dollars worth of clothes and even made off with some. At one point she was grooving to Janet Jackson’s “Rhythm Nation” and the next she was storming off.
The analysis sounds fair to me, but why must this become a news story? I check the news on Britney: It’s the usual stuff about how she can’t get along with people and acts oddly, such as the San Francisco Chronicle’s revelation that she tried to get her son’s teeth whitened. We love to detest her almost as much as we love to detest space alien Michael Jackson. But here I ask you: does the possibility that she is bipolar take the fun out of observing her?
I suggest that this is just more icing on the cake that nega-fans of Britney savor. The question we should ask of such reports is what do they do for the potential patient? I doubt that this story will lead Britney to seek out a psychiatrist for one thing. I doubt that it will move other potential sufferers of the disease to seek help. It’s another of those hit pieces that exist only for the purposes of pseudo-intellectual masturbation. Britney is a star and a star is important, the logic goes: so we must punish her with public shame.
The Information Age brings us a heavy load of drivel such as this. The ones who pay the cost are the celebrities who, in the case of Spears, may be fragile. “Bad Mom” is the journalistic tag line for Britney stories. I doubt that any of the compassion due to her as a sufferer of bipolar disorder will be granted as she continues to be hectored by the keyboardists of the scandal follies.
The use of “bipolar” as an explanation for bizarre behavior disturbs me on another level: the actions of this star become a poster child for what we bipolar sufferers “must be like”. So it becomes safe to turn Britney into a sort of criminal, a whiner who uses mental illness as a stone for hammering others.
I imagine this exchange between the ravening journalists and her publicist:
“Britney Spears, you have been found guilty of being a ditz.”
“My client suffers from bipolar disorder.”
“Well that explains it. And we’re still going to hang her high.”
[tags]bipolar disorder, Britney Spears, mental illness, punditry[/tags]
Posted on August 2, 2007 in Anger Bipolar Disorder Blogging Psychotropics
I wonder: does my sense that I don’t have much to write about or will to charge my words with vigor come from the numbing effect that the drugs I take have on my brain or from my loss of fight, of anger, of the desire to stake my writing on deeply held aggression? At first I suspected the former, but now, I suspect the latter. Except it may be that I am just too cautious about reserving my rage? Or else do I avoid people who piss me off?
[tags]bipolar disorder, rage, anger, psychotropics, pharmaceuticals, drugs and writing, drugs, writing, brain, the brain, blogging[/tags]
Posted on August 2, 2007 in Genetics Strange
Scientists at Johns Hopkins University have managed to create schizophrenic mice for the purpose of testing pharmaceuticals. Before this advance, researchers were obliged to inject the little mousies with PCP to simulate a psychotic break.
The gene was isolated in 2001 from the DNA of a large Scottish family whose members are prone to depression and schizophrenia. Other studies found the same mutation in Finnish and American families affected by mental illness, suggesting it might play a role in many cases of schizophrenia.
Over the past two years, scientists have also discovered similar DNA mutations in strains of mice bred for scientific research. The mice exhibited symptoms common to schizophrenic people, such as poor memory and odd behavior, and the animals seemed to respond to antipsychotic drugs.
The Hopkins scientists opted to insert the human version of the DISC1 gene into mouse DNA. The results were mutant mice that exhibited behavioral problems and had structural abnormalities in their brains similar to those found in human schizophrenics.
Designer mice aren’t a new thing: many researchers rely on the “Type A” mouse, the classic white mouse. There is even a special brand of white mouse known as the AJ which is the purest of the pure and a product of Jackson Laboratories in [[Bar_Harbor_(town)%2C_Maine|Bar Harbor]] (pronounced Ba Ha Ba), Maine. Neurologically impaired mice became a fashion among hobby breeders for a time when waltzing mice became a popular, if perverse pet.
One of the great wonders of the human species is that we’ve jumped into evolution as an active participant. Our skill in first breeding and then genetically altering the [[House_mouse|house mouse]] for multiple ends is just one of the things that makes us an intellectual wonder. It may be our oddest domestication, a creature bred neither for food or labor, derived from a household pest. The mouse just sits in its plastic box waiting for the needle. “Here, experiment on me.”
Posted on August 2, 2007 in Podcasts
A new podcast has been posted at Vox Nortona.
Still not at the level of expertise that I desire, but that will come.
Posted on August 1, 2007 in Podcasts Site News
I’ve added music and moved the central focus of my podcasting to Vox Nortona.
Another podcast, recalling the disaster of the last few days that kept me offline will appear by the end of the week.