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Alaskan man's medical condition leads to indefinite detention, forced medication

Bret Bohn_1
© Family Photo
Bret Bohn was a Alaskan field guide.
Anchorage - A young man's deteriorating health led the state of Alaska to assume full control of his medical care - against his own written will and the against the wishes of his family. Since last October he has been trapped in a hospital, isolated without visitors, on an extensive series of psychotropic drugs, in a condition that continues to diminish.

Medical Misfortune

Bret Byron Bohn is a native Alaskan who loves hunting, fishing, snowmobiling, and most outdoor activities. He lived an exemplary life receiving many awards as a youth, became a member of the National Honor Society, and achieved the distinguished rank of Eagle Scout. He had recently graduated from a program in Aviation Technology.

At 26-years-old, Bohn worked as a field guide for hunters and outdoorsmen on expeditions in the Alaskan wilderness. While otherwise healthy and athletic, his only medical issue was the development of some nasal polyps which impeded his ability to smell. He had them surgically removed, but they grew back. He was prescribed
Bret Bohn_2
© Facebook
Bret Bohn.
Prednisone - a powerful steroid and immune suppressant - to attempt to regain his sense of smell.

While on Predisone, he began suffering with the inability to sleep for a prolonged period. After a week of insomnia, his family took him to Providence Alaska Medical Center in Anchorage. They hadn't realized it at the time, but one of the listed side effects of Prednisone is sleep disturbances (insomnia).

Rather than take him off of the drug that was likely causing the sleep problem, doctors prescribed two more powerful drugs to supposedly calm him down and help him sleep. He was given Zolpidem (brand name Ambien) which treats insomnia, as well as Lorazepam (brand name Ativan) which treats anxiety, depression and insomnia.

After taking the prescribed combination of drugs at at home, Bohn had seizures - potentially because the drugs he took are known to cause seizures. His family took him back to the hospital, looking for answers, and he was given more drugs, and had more seizures. He was put into intensive care.

Attention

South Carolina city implements law that requires a $120 permit to feed homeless people

Gandhi famously noted that:
The greatness of a society and its moral progress can be judged by the way it treats its animals.
Homeless
© Galway Simon

I would agree with that, as well as the obvious observation that a society's greatness can also be judged by how it treats its most vulnerable members. This isn't to romanticize homelessness or to condemn it.

It is merely to note that the homeless are fellow human beings going through their own struggles and difficulties. You may not want to provide them food, but some people do, and there should never be an infringement upon such a basic human right as sharing food with someone who needs it.

Civil rights are often lost in societies by politicians scapegoating unpopular minorities. This happened with jews, gypsies, etc in Nazi Germany and we must be very careful the same does not happen here.

One human being should be able to voluntarily give food to another in all cases, without exception.

The concept of a permit needed that costs $120 per week is fascist, anti-human and downright evil.

Handcuffs

This 84-year-old nun is in jail for the weirdest anti-nuke protest ever

Gregory Boertje-Obed, Sister Megan Rice, and Michael Walli
© Linda Davidson/'The Washington Post' via Getty Images

Gregory Boertje-Obed, Sister Megan Rice, and Michael Walli, photographed before their federal trial in Oak Ridge, Tenn.

The government is cracking down on Americans who want better security at nuclear sites - or an end to nuclear proliferation, period.

One wouldn't imagine an 84-year-old nun and a nuclear plant's safety manager having much in common, but whistleblowers and anti-nuclear protesters have provoked harsh rebuke after shedding light on shocking security failures at U.S. nuclear sites.

On Tuesday, Sister Megan Rice was sentenced to nearly three years in prison for breaking into a federal nuclear facility in Oak Ridge, Tenn. Her fellow Catholic activists, Greg Boertje-Obed and Michael Walli, were sentenced to more than five years in prison because of their history of civil disobedience.

The protesters were also ordered to pay $53,000 for damaging federal property.

The trio doesn't deny trespassing, but most observers of the case against them agree that their actions demonstrated frightening security vulnerabilities at the Y-12 National Security Complex, where they roamed for two hours before being found. (The breach led to increased patrols and firings.)

Rice and her cohorts broke into the "Fort Knox of uranium" two years ago, cutting through fences and vandalizing a bunker that held weapons-grade uranium. The group hung banners, wrote messages such as "The fruit of justice is peace," and splashed human blood on the outside of the building, using baby bottles to "represent the blood of children" the weapons spill.

Eye 1

Echoing the IRS targeting scandal: FCC to send snooping monitors into newsrooms

Image
© tomfernandez28.com
The IRS targeting scandal is of course multi-faceted, but one of its key elements was the use of comprehensive IRS questionnaires to determine everything from tea-party donor and member lists to the actions and activities of family members and even identifying "persons or entities with which you maintain a close relationship." In other words, the Obama administration IRS was abusing its regulatory authority to essentially discern the inner workings of an entire political and cultural movement.

Last week, FCC Commissioner Ajit Pai disclosed the existence of the FCC's new "Multi-Market Study of Critical Information Needs," a study that would send FCC researchers (monitors?) into newsrooms across the nation to determine, among other things, whether news organizations are meeting citizens "actual" as opposed to "perceived" information needs. As designed, the study empowers researchers to not only ask a series of questions of news staff, it also provides (in pages 10 and 11) advice for gaining access to employees even when broadcasters and their Human Resources refuse to provide confidential employee information. The Obama administration FCC is abusing its regulatory authority by attempting to discern the inner workings of American newsrooms.

Bizarro Earth

Drinking water intakes closed after oil spill shuts down 65 miles of Mississippi River

Mississippi river
© Unknown
An oil spill has shut down a 65-mile stretch of the Mississippi River between Baton Rouge and New Orleans.

Public drinking water intakes were shut down in St. Charles Parish as a precaution, officials said, and the Port of New Orleans was also closed.

Officials assured the public that drinking water "remains safe" in St. Charles Parish, and officials in St. James Parish said intake valves there were protected within hours of the incident.

The spill came from a barge carrying light crude that was struck Saturday afternoon by a tugboat near Vacherie, reported the Baton Rouge Advocate.

Coast Guard officials said they were unsure how much oil had spilled, but they stressed that only a sheen of oil had been reported on the river's surface.

The Coast Guard is working with Louisiana's Department of Environmental Quality and ES&H, an environmental cleanup company, to clean up the spill.

They were also deploying booms to prevent the oil from spreading and using planes and helicopters to see where the oil has gone, the newspaper reported.

Eye 1

Minority report in action: Chicago's new police computer predicts crimes, but is it racist?

Chicago police say its computers can tell who will be a violent criminal, but critics say it's nothing more than racial profiling
targets
© Dylan C. Lathrop
When the Chicago Police Department sent one of its commanders to Robert McDaniel's home last summer, the 22-year-old high school dropout was surprised. Though he lived in a neighborhood well-known for bloodshed on its streets, he hadn't committed a crime or interacted with a police officer recently. And he didn't have a violent criminal record, nor any gun violations. In August, he incredulously told the Chicago Tribune, "I haven't done nothing that the next kid growing up hadn't done." Yet, there stood the female police commander at his front door with a stern message: if you commit any crimes, there will be major consequences. We're watching you.

What McDaniel didn't know was that he had been placed on the city's "heat list" - an index of the roughly 400 people in the city of Chicago supposedly most likely to be involved in violent crime. Inspired by a Yale sociologist's studies and compiled using an algorithm created by an engineer at the Illinois Institute of Technology, the heat list is just one example of the experiments the CPD is conducting as it attempts to push policing into the 21st century.

Predictive analytical systems have been tested by police departments all over the country for years now, but there's perhaps no urban police force that's further along - or better funded - than the CPD in its quest to predict crime before it happens. As Commander Jonathan Lewin, who's in charge of information technology for the CPD, told The Verge: "This [program] will become a national best practice. This will inform police departments around the country and around the world on how best to utilize predictive policing to solve problems. This is about saving lives."

But the jury's still out about whether Chicago's heat list and its other predictive policing experiments are worth the invasions of privacy they might cause and the unfair profiling they could blatantly encourage. As Hanni Fakhoury, a staff attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, told The Verge: "My fear is that these programs are creating an environment where police can show up at anyone's door at any time for any reason."

Attention

Americans rising up against government

SC protest
© Rainier Ehrhardt, AP
A protester holds a “Don't Tread on Me” flag during last month’s protest outside the statehouse in Columbia, S.C.

America's ruling class has been experiencing more pushback than usual lately. It just might be a harbinger of things to come.

First, in response to widespread protests last week, the Department of Homeland Security canceled plans to build a nationwide license plate database. Many local police departments already use license-plate readers that track every car as it passes traffic signals or pole-mounted cameras. Specially equipped police cars even track cars parked on the street or even in driveways.

The DHS put out a bid request for a system that would have gone national, letting the federal government track millions of people's comings and goings just as it tracks data about every phone call we make. But the proposal was suddenly withdrawn last week, with the unconvincing explanation that it was all a mistake. I'm inclined to agree with TechDirt's Tim Cushing, who wrote: "The most plausible explanation is that someone up top at the DHS or ICE suddenly realized that publicly calling for bids on a nationwide surveillance system while nationwide surveillance systems are being hotly debated was ... a horrible idea."

Bacon

Divorced from reality: UK butcher forced to stop displaying meat and game because 'townies' object

Image

Before the protests: A typical display at the butcher's, with pigs' heads among the meat and game on show
For more than 100 years, butchers in the market town of Sudbury have proudly displayed their meats in their shop windows.

But now one has been forced to stop hanging game such as pheasants, partridges and rabbits in his shopfront after a vicious campaign, blamed on 'townies' who have recently moved in.

Staff at JBS Family Butchers, which has sawdust on the floor and takes great pride in its link to local suppliers and the countryside way of life, spent hours every week perfecting their window displays featuring meat and game.

Comment: That people are so afraid of death, and choose to totally deny the birth/death cycle of the living system, is a sign of the times indeed. For a much more in-depth discussion on this fundamental issue, we recommend reading:
The Vegetarian Myth


Che Guevara

Hysteria in Spain: woman is convicted of inciting terror over Twitter

Image

Alba González Camacho, 21, posted messages calling for politicians to be killed.
The line between youthful rebelliousness and something more dangerous is not always clear. But in her angry musings on Twitter, Alba González Camacho, 21, who describes herself as a "very normal girl," sailed across it. After she posted messages calling for a far-left terrorist organization to return to arms and kill politicians, Spain's national court convicted her of inciting terrorism using a social media network.

It was the first verdict of its kind involving Twitter posts in Spain, and the case has touched on issues of where precisely the cultural, political and legal red lines lie in a country that not long ago lived under both the grip of Fascist dictatorship and the threat of leftist terrorism.

The case is also one of a recent handful that have pushed social media into courtrooms worldwide and raised issues of the limits of speech in the ether of the Internet. In January, two people received prison sentences in Britain for posting threatening messages against a feminist campaigner. The same month, a federal judge in the United States sentenced a man to 16 months in prison for threatening on Twitter to kill President Obama.

Headphones

Hacking trial: Rebekah Brooks acquitted on 1 of 5 charges

Image
© Sang Tan/AP
Former News of the World editor Rebekah Brooks moved from the defendants' dock to the witness stand Thursday, arguing her innocence of phone-hacking charges in public for the first time.

Almost four months into a court case that has put Britain's tabloids on trial, Brooks began her defense, claiming that while editor she had never even heard of the private investigator who has admitted prolifically hacking phones on behalf of her underlings.

Brooks, the former chief executive of Murdoch's British newspaper unit, spoke in a quiet and occasionally hesitant voice and gestured frequently with long-fingered hands as she began what is expected to be weeks of testimony.

She said that, as editor of a Sunday tabloid with a staff of 170, she had not known that phone hacking was taking place.

"It's impossible for an editor to know every source of every story," Brooks said.

She said the News of the World's investigations unit, depicted by prosecutors as a hotbed of illegal activity, used subterfuge and "investigative tools ... but always with a very good public interest."