Saturday, January 11, 2014

THE EMAILS OF A PATRIOT 3

We're back with another collection of emails from one of our favorite subscribers. These emails are unedited, though some information may be removed to protect identities.

Click here to email us.

9/26/13 - "Moto X phone & Republic wireless"‏
Forget about all those high fees and taxes on phone bills. Google has a phone made in Ft Worth TX that uses WiFi and Sprint 3G & 4G with a plan as low as $5/m voice!

9/20/13 - "Things I Can't Do"
Attached was a link to the following video.



8/21/13 - "Ted Radio NPR"
This weeks programs suggest it's a race against machines.

Digital age made connections and friendships from far away places. Now we expect more out of technical tools and less from people. Man’s best friend isn’t a dog it’s a social robot partner trainer in your hand.
All the computers now have the power of one human brain. Just like the steam engine that made a mockery out of the power sources that came before, droids, voice and facial recognition and computing skills will replace humans with such clear advantages to be shocking.

Thinking about what changed the world the most it was thought that religion, wars, plaques, leaders, science, discoverers made the biggest changes. Google says technology changed the world the most with steam, then cars and now hand held computers. Humans have 300 Million pattern-recognizing modules. Brain extenders connected to the cloud could lock memories on a disk so more of the brain could do deep thinking. But in 5000 days droids, robots, machines of all kinds will do the work giving hard working Americans free time to enjoy them self’s.

6/18/13 - "Wall, door and fence hitting" 
Extreme sports on TV must be the difference in how younger upset people handle there temper? Last night every one I talked to remembers lashing out at concrete walls, wood fences, sides of cars and other hard objects. As I repair walls, a replace doors I see fist size holes. I'm sure I've been more upset then most wall hitters but never had the urge to strike out at hard object. Writing letters seems the way to go.

Saturday, January 4, 2014

OUR FAVORITE ANONYMOUS VIDEO


While Op Hiroshima never went down (or did it?), but the video that accompanied it was amazing. The 1984 imagery juxtaposed against "Pure Imagination" from Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory make it utterly haunting.

Wednesday, January 1, 2014

UTOPIA: A SOCIETY BASED ON HELPING PEOPLE RATHER THAN PUNISHING THEM

What's the worst type of criminal? The drug dealer? The rapist? The murderer? The sex offender? No matter what this "criminal" has done, what is the best way to help him or her?

Many people say "lock them up" or "burn them". Let them suffer the way they've made others suffer. But does anyone step back and look at how they have already suffered?

From 1995 to 1997, the CDC conducted the Adverse Childhood Experience Study. What they found was shocking to many, but evident to anyone who stopped to think about why people do the things they do. The study found that people who had more ACEs (adverse childhood experiences) were more likely to engage in a number of anti-societal behaviors, including illicit drug use, smoking, suicide attempts, risky sexual behavior, and on and on, to the point that they would die younger.

From the CDC website.


People who had been molested or sexually assaulted as children, were more likely to commit those same acts as adults. People who had been abused and neglected were more likely to turn to drugs, alcohol, and sex as coping mechanisms. People who had been exposed to violence as children were more likely to repeat those same violent acts as adults. 

So what is the solution? What should we do to help someone who is addicted to meth because they turned to the drug due to multiple ACEs as a child? What should we do to someone who grew up poor, and remains poor, and turns to stealing as a way to meet ends meat?

Society's response has been to lock them up. Send them to convict school, where they can learn the tools of the trade from truly violent, anti-social members of society. Put the drug addicts into the prisons where drugs are just as, if not more, prevalent than on the streets. And when they're finished with that, let's get them the help they need from overworked probation officers who don't have the high-level psychiatric training or counseling skills to even start helping these people deal with their deep-seeded problems.

From the Wikipedia page on "Incarceration in the United States".

Obviously, if someone violates a child or commits murder they should face the consequences of their actions. Not all offenders want the help they need, but the fact remains that they need help. Instead of spending trillions on our prison population to send people to "time out", what if we focused that money on the underlying causes of anti-social behavior? Does the pedophile have anywhere to turn? Can s/he seek help? Can s/he talk to anyone about his/her impulses and try to understand where they stem from? Facing a society that refuses to support them, and would most likely prefer to punish them before a crime has even been committed, what should we expect these people to do?

A woman who turns to prostitution and drug use to fill the void based on trauma and/or neglect from her childhood is not a criminal. She's a victim. A man who turns his fists towards women because of abuse in his past is not a criminal. He's a victim. If addiction is a disease, then it should be treated as one, with psychological evaluation and medical treatment. Addicts shouldn't be condemned to the hell of prison. They shouldn't be quarantined like they have the plague, they should be helped, so they can go on to be productive and happy members of society. 
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