The Madhouse Effect Should Make Everybody Mad, and That's a Good Thing

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Back when the FDA was testing ads to discourage kids from smoking, they tried arguments based on science: smoking will give you cancer; smoking will give you emphysema; smoking will hurt your unborn child. They tried appealing to kids’ social anxieties: smoking will make your teeth yellow; smoking will give you bad breath. None of these arguments worked very well. What worked was telling kids that the tobacco companies were lying to them, tricking them into smoking so that they could make money off them for the rest of their lives. The Madhouse Effect: How Climate Change Denial Is Threatening Our Planet, Destroying Our Politics, and Driving Us Crazy, by climate scientist Michael Mann and cartoonist Tom Toles, serves the same purpose. It makes it quite clear that the “debate” about climate change has nothing to do with science and everything to do with wishful thinking, exploited by vested economic and political interests. Only when that false debate is put behind us will a productive discussion about what to do about climate change finally begin, returning scientific evidence to its rightful place as a powerful tool, not a punching bag.

It’s not only wrong, but also counterproductive, to assume that anyone who doesn’t “get it” on climate change is stupid or ignorant. What this book does is acknowledge that there is a reason people are confused about climate change and describe exactly who benefits from that confusion. It also acknowledges that it is not surprising that many people find ways to reject the science and embrace a view of the world that feels less alarming and accusatory.

In 2015, we at the National Center for Science Education conducted a national survey of middle and high school teachers to find out if and how they were teaching about climate change. What we found (PDF) was somewhat surprising: many teachers reported that they teach about climate change in science classes, but when asked what percentage of climate scientists agree that human activities are primarily responsible for climate change, fewer than half the teachers chose the correct response of greater than 80% (in fact the percentage is upward of 97%). It’s a shocking finding, and it suggests that long-standing efforts to cast doubt on climate science–funded by corporations with economic interests to protect, promoted by politicians supported by those corporations, and inadequately exposed by a media seduced by false balance–have been remarkably successful. Doubt and uncertainty about scientific findings that only grow more certain with every passing day have so permeated our society that even science classrooms are affected.

That’s why I am glad Mann and Toles wrote The Madhouse Effect. The prose is concise, and of course the cartoons are even pithier, so in just 150 pages, Mann and Toles manage to illuminate the essential absurdity of where we are, and how we got here. They cover enough of the basic science to orient the reader, and provide a useful explanation of why total certainty is neither possible nor reasonable to expect. I found this analogy useful, for example, in a discussion of whether climate change can be said to be responsible for any particular extreme weather event, like a tornado or a hurricane:

We of course can’t say that climate change “caused” a particular heat wave, flood, or storm. There is always the chance that the heat wave, flood, or storm would have happened anyway. But climate change is almost certainly making these events more frequent. There is an increased occurrence of these events because of climate change, just as there is an increased incidence of lung cancer among smokers and an increased number of home runs by steroid-using baseball players.

But as anyone who has ever tried to change the mind of a climate change denier, an anti-vaxxer, or a creationist will agree, even the clearest explication of the science is unlikely to change minds. Indeed, maddeningly, there is pretty good evidence that the more science you bring to bear, the more entrenched and defensive your science-rejecting audience will become. And that is where The Madhouse Effect is especially effective. In a chapter entitled “Why should I give a damn?” Mann and Toles describe the psychological hoops that people jump through to avoid coming to terms with a problem that is big and scary and potentially expensive and difficult to solve. In “The War on Climate Science” and “Hypocrisy, Thy Name is Climate Change Denial,” they lay out the concerted (and ongoing) effort that has gone into trashing scientists and sowing confusion in an effort to block or delay even the most preliminary civil discussion of how our society might begin to take action. Finally, they point out how truly crazy (albeit humanly comforting) it would be to pin our hopes on a magic bullet in the form of one or another of the various geoengineering schemes that promise to solve climate change without making any difficult changes in the way we generate and use energy. (You can read their chapter on geoengineering right here (PDF) on NCSE’s website!)

Returning to those science teachers I mentioned earlier, I think that we should not be surprised that so many of them are unaware of the overwhelming weight of the scientific evidence for climate change, and we certainly should not condemn them for it. Instead, maybe we should give them (and any parents who are uneasy about how climate change is being taught to their children) this book so that they can get on with the task of explaining the straightforward science of climate change to the next generation without equivocation.

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Analyzing Colin Kaepernick's Refusal To Stand For The National Anthem

San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick sat down during the playing of the National Anthem — his refusal “to show pride in a flag for a country that oppresses black people and people of color,” particularly in the form of police brutality.

My reaction was very negative. To me, he was turning his back not just on us, but on a proud heritage that many Americans had sacrificed their lives to build and maintain.

I expected him to be censured by the NFL. But I was surprised when he was supported by his teammates and the league remained silent. Then I realized the majority of NFL players are people of color.

So I stepped back, and tried to see it through their eyes.

Racial bias runs deep in America. I grew up in a publicly segregated suburb of Washington DC until 1942. Then my stepfather left the Roosevelt government and moved north to take a position that made him part of the war effort.

I was then stunned to find blacks in my school — the first realization of my own bias. Since I was taught that bias is a character weakness, I sought to make friends with blacks as a means to deal with it.

So I got a different picture seeing this act through the eyes of those supporting Colin’s protest. This is a free country, so you can’t make people treat blacks equally, even though not doing so violates America’s founding principle of equality.

But the police represent America’s system of justice. So a biased police officer is clearly unacceptable, and a rigorous effort must be made that, while biases may exist in our people, they do not penetrate our justice system, particularly our police force that deals with citizens on a day-to-day basis.

There have been a number of troubling police incidents involving people of color that have angered Black Americans, as well as those of us who are concerned about equal justice. I know how I would feel as a parent if I felt compelled to carefully explain to my children how they needed to act around policemen, while parents of another race had no need to do so with their children.

We have 800,000 policemen who are given both authority and weapons that can kill. While the vast majority can be trusted to carry out their duties fairly, we apparently have no effective screening process to eliminate biased individuals who misuse this power. This corruption is causing a national problem of mistrust.

So we need to make a dramatic national effort to try to address this situation, which would help inspire the confidence of Americans.

Here is one idea:

To date, the primary concern of police training is dealing with criminals and keeping the peace. I suspect evidence of prejudice of members is rarely dealt with.

There are simple psychological tests available that would reveal biases and indicate if further training or termination is needed. If we could expect unbiased police chiefs across our nation, we would clean up a lot of biases in our police stations pretty quickly. Then the test could be utilized for incoming recruits.

Perhaps such a plan is not feasible. Still we must recognize this black justice problem is very deep; it will divide us if it is not seriously addressed. It goes to the core of what America stands for.

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Fresh LGBT Movie Tip: Hurricane Bianca

The highly anticipated new movie from Wolfe Releasing, Hurricane Bianca is coming to theaters, DVD and digital. Check out the wildly popular trailer and look for the exclusive theatrical screenings in New York, San Francisco and Los Angeles (September 19, 20 and 21) before the film’s worldwide digital release on September 23rd and the October 18th DVD release for fans in the US and Canada.

Hurricane Bianca is a fast-paced revenge comedy starring RuPaul’s Drag Race winner Bianca Del Rio (comic Roy Haylock). When Richard, a New York teacher, can’t find work, he accepts a position in a small Texas school. Almost immediately, they suss out that he is gay, and fire him. Later, when a new friend introduces him to the underground drag scene, Richard dons a new identity as the sharp-tongued and utterly hilarious “Bianca,” and returns to the school to wreak havoc. As everyone quickly learns, this is one teacher you definitely do NOT want to cross.

Hurricane Bianca also co-stars Rachel Dratch, Alan Cumming, RuPaul, Margaret Cho, Willam Belli, Shangela, Alyssa Edwards & Bianca Leigh.

*Note: The DVD is only available for purchase in the US and Canada (visit WolfeVideo.com to order or find it at fine retailers everywhere). International customers can purchase via download to own at WolfeOnDemand.com.

See the theatrical premiere of the movie with Director Matt Kugelman & cast including Bianca Del Rio in New York City on Monday September 19 (Encore Screening Added); San Francisco on Tuesday September 20 – Tickets still available; Los Angeles on Wednesday September 21 (SOLD OUT).

Click here for more info and to buy tickets.

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DEA And Re-Scheduling: The Dream Is Over

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Note: This article first appeared in Cannabis Now.

Many marijuana activists and reformers were disappointed recently when the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) issued their long anticipated “big announcement” of the summer and marijuana wasn’t rescheduled. Rumors had been swirling for months that DEA would re-schedule marijuana, moving the prohibited substance out of Schedule I and into, well, no one really knew because there was really no substance to the rumor. As an observer of the marijuana reform movement for nearly four decades, this writer never gave the rumors any credence. DEA will reschedule marijuana the day after they pry Charlton Heston’s cold dead hands from his NRA rifle.

The DEA did take some action and it is significant. Essentially they announced the end of a monopoly. For fifty years, and perhaps longer, the University of Mississippi has been the only legal producer of cannabis in the United States. The DEA announced that will change. The National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) has awarded the contract to Ole’ Miss for decade after decade and the University has been providing researchers and a few medical patients with what passes for marijuana in the federal government’s thinking but which most legal users describe as “ditch weed.”

I once visited the Mississippi “pot plantation” and was taken aback with how small the acreage actually is. It was in September 1978 and the medical marijuana movement was picking up steam with four states enacting laws that authorized intrastate research using federal supplies of marijuana. In 1979 that number would grow to 20-plus and it was clear that the “pot plantation” could not possibly provide the amount of marijuana the states would require to make these research programs a reality. The feds were able to short-circuit the state medical marijuana research programs by releasing synthetic delta-9 THC (a.k.a., Marinol) and for the next thirty years the Ole’ Miss pot plantation just kept rolling along, servicing a handful of legal medical marijuana patients and researchers still trying to find the “harm” in marijuana.

Then the “Eureka” moment occurred. Researchers discovered the endogenous cannabinoid system (ECS) in the 1990s and cannabis research would never be the same. This discovery of an entirely unknown physiological system–found in every mammal — set the scientific community abuzz. In particular the community was excited about a little known cannabinoid, CBD, which seemed to have a multitude of therapeutic properties but none of the pesky psychoactive properties associated with THC.

Simultaneously in the U.S. there was a new round of state laws being enacted, this time via the ballot box. Medical cannabis patients found their voices and loudly demanded legal access. Entrepreneurs began growing cannabis and, most importantly, openly discussing and experimenting with different strains. Think Charlotte’s Web and you get the picture. Cultivators of legal cannabis began to conduct the experiments that NIDA and DEA should have done years before. And countries like Israel, Spain and Canada began developing strains of cannabis that gave legitimate researchers the cannabis they needed to explore the wonders of the ECS. The U.S. government had missed the boat, the golden age of cannabis research had sailed without them.

U.S. researchers, of course, were the ones who got the short end of the stick. DEA continued to play their well known game of obfuscation, NIDA continued its mantra about “only researching the abuse of marijuana, not the therapeutic aspects,” and FDA sought the moral high-ground by claiming it would treat applications for cannabis therapeutics the same as any other. Collectively it was the head-in-the-sand approach that has characterized the federal agencies from the very first days of the medical cannabis movement. This time, however, the whole world was watching, and moving ahead.

The U.S. government can no longer ignore the advances in cannabinoid science and Ole Miss is no longer adequate to meet the demands of researchers and industry. DEA had little choice but to expand the number of legal cultivators. The real question is: will any one apply to grow? The DEA has promulgated regulations regarding their new policy that will deter most, including the implication that growers with any involvement in non-legal growing of cannabis will not be considered. This is thought to include growers from legal states.

And DEA will still hold the cat-bird seat since they get to determine “the number of bulk manufacturers necessary to ‘produce an adequate and uninterrupted supply of [cannabis] under adequately competitive conditions for legitimate medical, scientific, research, and industrial purposes.'”

Ultimately, at least to my thinking, the announcement is meant to clear the way for those pharmaceutical companies who have stayed the course with year-after-year of research and are now preparing to bring a product to market. In particular G.W. Pharmaceuticals could be the big benefactor of this change in regulation. Their pediatric epilepsy drug, epidiolex, has continued to excel in Phase III studies and it is expected that a New Drug Application (NDA) will be filed in early 2017. Once approved the CBD extract will be available nationally for use in treatment of childhood seizures but off-label use of the drug is certain to occur and DEA’s August 12th announcement gives G.W., and other pharmaceuticals a way to “grow their own” in the U.S., with DEA’s blessing and oversight, of course.

As for rescheduling: don’t hold your breath. In the end it will be CBD that gets re-scheduled. Cannabis, the whole plant, will likely remain in Schedule I. Precedent for this hypocritical scheduling is already in place with delta-9 THC in Schedule III while the cannabis it is derived from is in Schedule I.

And the beat goes on….

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FBI Releases Documents Related To Its Clinton Email Investigation

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The Federal Bureau of Investigation released on Friday a summary of its July 2 interview with U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton concerning its investigation of her use of a private email server while secretary of state.

It also released a summary of its overall investigation.

(Reporting by Eric Beech and Julia Edwards; Editing by Susan Heavey)

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Dog Groomer Gets Caught Dancing With His Client

When was the last time you got your hair done and tripped the light fantastic with the stylist?

This Argentine dog groomer was recently captured on video giving his four-legged client a wash and a dance to the B-52’s hit “Love Shack.”

Nice moves, you two!

 h/t Tastefully Offensive

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Saluting Burma's Next Step And Keeping Hands Off

Saluting Burma’s Next Step and Keeping Hands Off

Susanne Dumbleton, PhD

This week, Aung San Suu Kyi will walk to the podium in an assembly hall in Myanmar (Burma) and call to order representatives of the 135 ethnic peoples who make up the population of the country. In convening this Second Panglong Conference, she is resuming the work her father, Aung San, began in 1947, and left unfinished because assassins ended his life.

This will be more than a touching event at which a heroic woman will live out the dream of her assassinated father. If all goes well, the gathering will accelerate the peaceful progress toward democracy in this critically important Asian nation.

The Second Panglong’s goal is as profound and difficult as that before the men who gathered in Philadelphia in 1789–to define, to the satisfaction of all, a way in which regions would form a union yet share power. If deliberations succeed, it will be one of the most meaningful developments on the current world political scene.

Not surprisingly, eyes in world capitals are watching closely. It is critical that hovering international interests watch but not interfere.

Just getting to this date has been an epic struggle. For more than 50 years after Aung San’s death, a military junta wielded cruel power over the people, using the premise that the multiple ethnic differences made the people so unruly that only an iron fist could keep them from falling into disarray.

The opposite was true, of course. It was the military that created chaos–executing, imprisoning, or driving into exile all elected officials, closing universities, silencing the press, forbidding assembly, and using forced labor, land seizures and crony capitalism for personal benefit.

The generals have been backing down, but even after free elections in 2015, they retain the right to reassert military rule. Chapter XI of the military-drafted Constitution gives the National Defense and Security Council the authority to impose martial law, disband parliament, and return to full control at even a hint of unrest.

Moreover, people who have survived oppressive rule over two generations are understandably short on trust. Many Burmese, especially those living far from the centers of power, are reluctant to believe central government will respect their rights and address their needs.

In this context, Aung San Suu Kyi remains an inimitable force. By virtue of her legacy, she carries sway, a sway she expanded by being willing to suffer beside and stand up for her people for decades. Interestingly, the credibility that carries most weight these weeks is what she earned on her own, going out in the country to listen to the people.

One remarkable result of her influence is that attendance will be an unprecedented, actually unexpected, 100 percent. One week before the conference was to begin, even the most resistant leaders–those in the regions most offended by the former regime–agreed to give the Second Panglong a chance. Some say the most reluctant attendees changed their minds because they cut individual deals with China. Perhaps rumors of outside interference nudged Aung San Suu Kyi to invite UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon to attend as a respected elder.

Success is not guaranteed. Even with full participation, the task is daunting. Those heading to the Conference site disagree strongly on issues, particularly regional rights versus centralized rights and the right to field militias. Hovering over all is the question of the people in Rohingya, whose citizenship is in question and who have not been included on the invitation list.

Complex compromise is the only way forward.

Aung San Suu Kyi considers the meeting’s purpose vital. “If you ask me what my most important aim is for my country, that is to achieve peace and unity among the different peoples of our union. Without peace there can be no sustained development,” she told a press conference.

This event is in President Obama’s sights because it aligns with his focus on Pacific Rim interests and because he admires Daw Aung San Suu Kyi. Leaders in Japan are watching, too, eager for power balance in Asia. Most interested of all are Myanmar’s immediate neighbors–India, China, and Thailand–who want stability on their borders and a strong trading partner.

The Burmese welcome the interest, but they want no interference. From the start they have insisted, especially on this matter, that the Burmese people must be in charge. They are right. The world should watch with interest, but keep hands off.

Susanne Dumbleton is Professor Emeritus and Former Dean at DePaul University. She is studying the work of Aung San Suu Kyi, Wangari Maathai and Helen Prejean as leaders for social justice and human rights.

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'Hump Day' Is The Feminist Masturbation Banger Of The Summer

The sex positive women’s masturbation banger of the summer has finally dropped. 

The video for Brooklyn-based rapper Miss Eaves’ latest single “Hump Day” was released on August 31, and features a diverse group of women who seem to be enjoying the pleasures of pleasuring oneself. The candy-colored video is a visual celebration of female sexuality, with Miss Eaves spitting rhymes like “My digits gonna make me squirm and scream, this is all on me.” 

Miss Eaves, who also co-directed the video, said in a press release that she wanted to “challenge the notion that women have to fit a certain mold physically to be allowed to pleasure and enjoy their bodies.”

She added: “I want women to release the shame they have around their bodies and sexuality and reclaim the power they have to create their own pleasure. I wanted to show real orgasm faces (not tropes pulled from pornography) to demonstrate pleasure can be expressed in many ways.”

While some people might be squeamish about the idea of a woman talking openly and unapologetically about masturbation, the video is a reminder that every woman, no matter what she looks like, is entitled to her own “Hump Day.”

Watch the video above.  

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One Kid's Before-And-After School Pics Truly Say It All

Like many parents, Kelly O’Brien snapped a photo of her daughter, Francine “Franky” Meyer, before she left for her first day of school. She also snapped one when she returned on the bus, and the two pics hilariously couldn’t be more different.

O’Brien took the photos in September 2015 before Franky’s first day of preschool. She shared the before-and-after photos of her daughter, who was 4 when the pics were taken and is now 5, on Imgur and Reddit on Thursday. In the first photo, Franky is all smiles.

In the second one, it looks like school “sucked the soul right outta her,” as one comical commenter put it.

Luckily, nothing at school caused the fearful look on Franky’s face as she arrived home. O’Brien told The Huffington Post she “actually had a blast at school, despite what her face says.” When she got off the bus, she couldn’t wait to tell her mom all about her day. 

“The picture was just a candid photo while she was walking down the steps that turned out hilariously,” O’Brien said. “She was so focused on walking and we just happened to snap the perfect picture.”

As of Friday, the photos have been viewed more than 1.3 million times. O’Brien said she has been “completely blown away” by the response.

“I’m glad her pictures made people smile,” she said.

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Watch One Of The World's Largest Lakes Shrink Before Your Eyes

The Aral Sea used to be the world’s fourth-largest lake, but it has been reduced to two relative puddles.

NASA shared a time-lapse video on Thursday that shows the original Aral Sea shrinking, starting in the year 2000. It has become two separate, much smaller bodies of water: the North and South Aral Seas. 

The lake has suffered since the 1960s, when the Soviet Union diverted two major rivers that supported the lake — the Amu Darya and the Syr Darya — to irrigate agricultural fields in Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan.

The aftermath, as described by NASA, was nothing short of devastating: 

As the Aral Sea has dried up, fisheries and the communities that depended on them collapsed. The increasingly salty water became polluted with fertilizer and pesticides. The blowing dust from the exposed lakebed, contaminated with agricultural chemicals, became a public health hazard. The salty dust blew off the lakebed and settled onto fields, degrading the soil. Croplands had to be flushed with larger and larger volumes of river water. The loss of the moderating influence of such a large body of water made winters colder and summers hotter and drier.

In July, Al-Jazeera reported on a small bright spot in the efforts to restore the North Aral Sea. The 2005 Kokaral dam construction project, financed by the World Bank, had led to 15 kinds of fish returning to the waters. A second phase of the dam project is slated to keep restoring the North Aral. 

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