Thursday, December 10, 2009

Treatment Module- what were they thinking?


Evidence of Trephination dates back as far as half a million years ago. An instrument probably stone was used to cut away a circular section of the skull. It is proposed that this was done to alleviate people who suffered from behavior that wasn't deemed normal.
Possession is a worldwide phenomenon still used to explain mental illness. Demonic possession of a person's body was believed by European and American Christians, Egyptians, Chinese and Native Americans. Exorcism of various kinds were used as treatment for it. Skulls as shown above can be found from all over the world.

Hippocrates considered the father modern medicine, created the idea that all abnormal behavior can attributed to physical problems. To him brain disease was the culprit of afflictions, an imbalance of the body four body fluids: yellow ile, black bile, blood and phlegm. Accordingly, a patient was treated by practices like bloodletting.

In the 1500s European hospitals and monasteries were converted into asylums. Overpopulation of these public facilities created overcrowding and patients were treated cruelly in filthy, deplorable conditions. These places became tourist attractions where people paid admittance to walk through areas where patients were chained to walls.

Moral Treatments

In the 1800s Phillipe Pinel sought to change treatment of people with mental disorders allowing patients to walk freely and live in well-lit rooms. Music therapy and was also introduced during this time. Benjamin Rush required that hospitals employ intelligent and gentler people to work with patients.
Boston schoolteacher Dorthea Dix relentlessly worked (1841-1881) to change state legislature by communicating the horrible treatment the mentally ill received. Dix also helped establish 32 state hospitals that offered moral treatment of patients.
Despite these leaps and bounds bizarre methods of therapy were used without success like: tooth extractions, tonsillectomies, hydrotherapy and bindings in blankets, baths, straitjackets.

Psycholanalysis was introduced later in 1800s and early 1900s as a type of treatment used to soothe a patient, this form of talk therapy helped a patient discuss their unconscious roots of problems.

Inhumane treatment continued

Little was know about mental illnesses and disorders even in the early 1900s there continued to be cruel methods of treatment for the mentally ill. The worst treatments were lobotomies, insulin therapy where patients were given shots of insulin and induced into seizures and insulin comas and electro-shock therapy. In the beginning of the 1920s to late as the 1970s patients considered mentally incompetent were given forced sterilizations.

Deinstitutionalization

Deinstitutionalization created partly by the introduction of anti-psychotic drugs, released thousands of people from live-in state hospitals. In 1955 nearly 600,000 patients lived in state hospitals currently there are only 60,000. In the 1960s and 1980s cutting funding from state hospitals also precipitated deinstitutionalization releasing thousands of people into the streets quite literally, many of them now homeless.

History Module


View Mental Health and Psychiatric Hospitals in US in a larger map
This map shows where there are hospitals that currently treat patients with mental illnesses and disorders in the United States.

Abbreviated history of psychology
In the Stone Age mental illnesses and disorders were treated with trephination (holes drilled into skulls), human skulls were found.
Ancient Egyptian remains also attest that trephination was their practice as well.
430-337 B.C. Ancient Greek philosopher Hippocrates believed the brain to be the source of mental disorders.
500-1450 Middle Ages, western society decides that possession by demons were the source of mental disorders and illnesses.
1547 A hospital is established in London for the mentally ill called an asylum.
1693 Witch hunting begins in the US, this had been going on decades previous in Europe. Thousands would be killed in witch trials, some even suggest more people killed than in the Holocaust (see film Burning Times).
1793 Phillipe Pinel is credited with treating asylum patients more humanely.
1842 Dorthea Dix spearhead movement to reform mental hospitals in the United States.
1883 Emil Kraeplin likens mental disorders to physical diseases in published textbook.
1892 American Psychological Association is founded.
1900 Sigmund Freud publishes book about dream interpretation.
1948 Alfred Kinsey publishes report about the sexuality of American males and females.
1949 First medication used for mental disorder, lithium is given to patients with bipolar disorder.
1952 Diagnostic Statistical Manual published to help diagnose patients with specific disorders. Originally begins with only 40 disorders, most recent edition has over 300.
1965 Aaron Beck publishes book proscribing therapy and cognitive theory for depression treatment.
1973 DSM stops listing homosexuality as a mental illness.
1987 Prozac approved for treatment of depression in the US.

Monday, December 7, 2009

Name Dropping Module

Mental Illness in the United States

There are millions of people who live with a mental illness or disorder. I have compiled a basic list of well-known Americans, authors, celebrities and men of letters.

Names of people who live(d) with bi-polar disorder:
The most famous example of a well-known person is Edgar Allan Poe. Judging from published letters, he would have been diagnosed with bi-polar disorder. Producing incredible work when not experiencing major depression during which he would frequently abuse alcohol. Meriwether Lewis of the famous Lewis and Clark expedition also was documented to experience severe problems with depression when not active. Lewis' major depressions were published in letters and eye-witness accounts by the likes of Thomas Jefferson. Lewis also died by suicide. Kay Redfield Jamison, Jane Pauley, Linda Hamilton, Carrie Fisher, Maurice Bernard, Vivien Leigh, Margot Kidder, Ernest Hemingway, Alvin Ailey, Ned Beatty, Art Buchwald, Stephen Fry, Richard Dreyfuss, Mel Gibson Brian Wilson, and Mike Wallace.

Names of people who live(d) with schizophrenia (surprisingly a lot of musicians):
John Nash, Lionel Aldridge- Green Bay Packers football player from the 1960's, was even homeless after experiencing intense paranoid schizophrenic breakdowns. Charles "Buddy" Bolden, Jack Kerouac, James Beck Gordon, Peter Green, Tom Harrell, Skip Spence, Bob Mosley, Roger Kynard and Rose (sister of Tennessee) Williams.

Names of people who live(d) with depression:
Abraham Lincoln suffered from serious suicidal depressions. John Quincy Adams, Shawn Colvin, William Styron, Eugene O'Neill, Charles Schultz, Tennessee Williams, Buzz Aldrin, Pat Conroy, Sting, Diane Arbus, Drew Carey, Jose Canseco, Dave Matthews, Halle Berry, Harrison Ford, Billy Joel, Amy Tan, Billy Corgan, Dick Cavett, Jim Carrey and Brooke Shields.

Names of people who live(d) with obsessive compulsive disorders:
Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson, Howard Hughes, Donald Trump, Harrison Ford, Leonardo Di Caprio, Jessica Alba, Cameron Diaz, Michael Jackson, Billy Bob Thornton, Howard Stern, Penelope Cruz, Howie Mandel, Charlie Sheen, Marc Summers, Joey Ramone, Martin Scorsese, Stanley Kubric, Warren Zevon, Fred Durst, Rose McGowan, Kathie Lee Gifford and Justin Timberlake.

Sunday, December 6, 2009

Statistics Module

Mental Illness in the United States

According to the National Institute of Mental Health one in four adults in the United States have a diagnosable mental illness or disorder. In clearer terms the 2004 US census translates this to mean 57.7 million people live with a mental illness or disorder.
Mood Disorders in United States
There are 20.9 million adults (9.5 percent of the US population) live with a mood disorder like Bi-Polar Disorder and Major Depressive Disorder. The usual onset is at 30 years of age.
Anxiety Disorders in United States
This grouping includes Panic Disorder, Obsessive Compulsive Disorder and Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. In a given year 40 million adults (18.1 percent of population) have a form of a diagnosable anxiety disorder. Three quarters of these adults experienced their first episode by the age of 21.
Suicides in the United States
Generally suicides are as a rule under reported. That doesn't make their numbers any less shocking: 33,000 people die every year by suicide, that's enough people to populate a town. 90 percent of suicides are by people who have a diagnosable disorder or substance abuse related disorder.

Sunday, November 29, 2009

Gregory McNamee lecture 11-18-2009 unfinished



Gregory McNamee's lecture Wednesday, November 18 was described as entertaining on the posters. That was a good idea because, in smaller script he was also described as a contributing editor to the Encyclopaedia Britannica. However boring that sounds to college kids he managed to fill the entire Pima Community College West Campus Santa Rita student lounge to capacity. Hats off to profs for all that extra credit.

Lame Truthiness
McNamee began by illustrating a series of lame half-truths and flat out lies that were accepted as truth.The most interesting for me was the story about the creator of Raggedy Ann- Johnny Bruell a fierce advocate against vaccination. Bruell's daughter Marcela originally recovered from an early type of swine flu and later died after given a vaccination in a weakened condition.
Bruell used Raggedy Ann and Andy as powerful tools for the anti-vaccination movement, typically the characters were running in fear from "the people with the needles". McNamee then began dispelling his favorite popular anecdotes of misinformation, first declaring that there is not a shred of evidence that vaccinations cause autism. He said that people were willing to disregard facts because things make them uncomfortable.
There is no actual occurance that protestors of the Vietnam War ever spat on returning veterans. A large rumor has recently circulated that the pay differential of CEOs to their company's average worker pay is 400 times. The differential is actually 337 times and as recently as 1980 the pay differential was only 40 times the average worker's pay rate.
McNamee also cited other examples of popular misnomers like avian flu coming from Asia, which side actually started the Civil War, the brontosaurus dinosaur lived in arid desert locations not swamps, Einstein not flunking out of classes. It became clear to me that these were most frustrating only to someone who edits an encyclopedia.

The Point
To be blunt those examples and many more were a long and winding road to McNamee's chief complaint: Wikipedia is more popular than an encyclopedia whose accuracy is always correct. Wikipedia's 70 percent accuracy rate further incensed a man who edits encyclopedias and is angry that the public spreads gossip and most of it is bad. OMG.
McNamee was most irritated that we live in a time when expert opinion is mistrusted. "You'd be angered at how little people know about this world." He said that we all have to consult with experts: structural engineers, neurosurgeons and Indian chiefs. For instance one wouldn't want brain surgery performed by a doctor whose success rate or knowledge is only 70 percent right?
McNamee suggested to stay away from Wikipedia, interrogate sources of information read or heard. He seemed specifically to address journalism students when he said to gather information the old fashioned way from books in libraries. "Facts are stupid things. What makes them smarter or stupider is how they are used."
I think this lecture was a dumbed down version of what he really felt and was frustrated by the spread of bad information to wit: "When crowds have the chance to be wrong they usually are wrong." Perhaps since I just watched "Religioulous" by Bill Maher I felt a salty, scathing book about that topic should be written to send the literary world a-twitter. But I supposed McNamee didn't want to reveal possibly controversial and outright condescending opinions and beliefs he could verify with some well-chosen facts.
However since he had said, "You have to be unafraid to offend people if you're going to talk about facts" early in the lecture, maybe this lecture was all the ammunition he had. I enjoyed the lecture and was glad I spent an hour of my time there. I think he is just going to be that guy, the guy that gets offended by misinformation. Not a rocker, shocker, or anything profound or dramatic. I'm glad he's out there holding people accountable, holding b.s. to proper scrutiny and keeping the colors bright in this weird rainbow of life.

Gregory McNamee is available for lectures and can also check out his photography at: http://www.gregorymcnamee.com/

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Sierra Russell

People come to the American Southwest from all over the world for very romantic reasons. The desert is a fascinating and exotic place that deserves all the attention and mysticism projected onto it.

Sierra Russell is one of those people who came to the southwest for very romantic reasons, speaking to her you can hear the very faint influence of a Tennessee accent betraying her origins. She has adopted and prescribed for herself Tucson as home.

I ask her where she was born expecting maybe a hospital name in any American city, her reply surprised me, "The flatlands of Illinois. At home. My parents were hippies they had all of us at home."

It surprised me that she was raised so unconventionally by non-religious parents in the Christian bible belt, I appreciate because I had been myself. "We moved to Colorado when I was a baby. To cabin with no running water or electricity. Then we moved to east Tennessee." Russell replied.

I ask Russell how her parent's being hippies had any influence in her life. She smiles, "Absolutely, we certainly have more of an appreciation of nature because we were raised in the country."

Having such a great background I wondered what would bring her all the way from Tennessee away from her parents, "I love the desert. I love living among the outlaws. and I wanted to finish school. I spent two years at University of Tennessee. I was undecided. I knew I loved writing but I resisted it. Now that's all I want to do."

Here is her great blog, I think it shows that her dreams of becoming a environmental journalist are right on:
http://sirenasierra.blogspot.com/

Monday, November 16, 2009

MLA Citations

1. Entire Website:

Close, Sandy. New American Media. Pacific News Service, 1996. Web. 16 November 2009.

2. A page on a Website:

"Guide to Lock Picking for Beginners" Greg Miller. Greg Miller's Guide to Lock Picking for Beginners, 1999. Web. 16, November 2009.

3. An Image:

Richardson, Terry. Terry Richardson is our favorite, 1994. Vice Magazine, New York. Vice. Web. 16, November 2009.

4. An Article:

Greider, William. "The Money Man's Best Friend". The Nation Mag. Novem. 11, 2009. Web. 16 November 2009.

5. A blog posting:

vanden Huevel, Katrina ed. Nichols, John. "Democrats to Obama: Get Out of Afghanistan." The Nation Mag Web. 16 November 2009.

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Ad for Pima Community College students

Student Life App for Iphone

Trying to keep track of assignments keeping you down? Forgetting important projects and due dates making your grades suffer? Well suffer no more. The Student Life app for the new Iphone is a service that keeps track of your assignments for you and reminds you when rough drafts are due, quizzes are posted and tests are up.

The way Student life App works

Your student success is based on the quality of your work right? Well, if post-its don't work for you this feature is like an interactive calendar. You can type in homework assignments, upload pages, upload the syllabus and keep in touch with a professor's email with the touch of the screen. You can even record audio, video to play back for note-taking.

Student Life reminders

Student life provides you the option of free texts and emails for reminders. We even have a built in alarm clock to go off for your different assignments. You can even receive scheduling conflict updates for your appointments and classes. Why let your grade suffer for something you can control with the power of your phone and the touch of a finger?

Student Life app syncs up with Word
You can also write papers with the help of Word and its incredible editing features that work with MLA, AP Style and Webster's Dictionary and Thesaurus. Student Life app will send your papers through several email accounts to make sure you can hand in everything on time every single time.

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Commerical website

The website I reviewed was for the Target corporation.

Purpose

The purpose of the website is to show the viewer their wide variety of products for marketing. The purpose is achieved because the website shows several products at once and groups them together to appeal to parents and single people. The author has not misjudged the audience, because it is appealing to young shoppers and established shoppers with families. The author understands the conventions of the web because the website is set up for people to look at different products while they shop.

Audience

The audience is for experienced web young web shoppers, probably female because they feature more female specific products like house decorations, beauty products, children's toys and female specific clothing. There are some gadgets, and electronic devices featured like Ipods, flat-screen televisions that are more masculine in appearance. Since Halloween is past they are already pushing for Christmas and are offering Christmas delivery. The advertisement for delivery features a woman and child opening their door to receive a shipment of target products.

Content

The Target website is designed for hit and run, because a viewer can go to the store and get the items or order them online. There are also features of the website that can show you the availability of a product at a Target store near you. When one clicks on the chosen product, information is given about it, and underneath it one can scroll down to view a "Related Items" menu bar and "Guests who bought this item also bought". Each product has reviews that others wrote about their experiences with the product that I found very helpful. The text is clear and well-written. But I found the site could be better organized, it looks too busy.

Appearance

I like Target products in general because of their overall graphic sensibility. The website graphics are designed with three colors: black, white and red which would seem to simplify but it does not. There are four menu bars first offering one to sign in and create a profile, the others offer more products to choose from in different categories. Then on the sidebar more products are offered in a menu called "Similar items". This makes the page crowded and overwhelming to read, decreasing interest in concentration of one product at a time.

Accessibility

The page loads pretty well, some products take more time to load than others. It also is incredibly fast at finding products available at Target locations near the viewer, an improvement from past years.

Organization

The website is organized well for how much content they have and how many different products they offer. It is not overloaded with flash features. The other ads on their website are very subtle and in smaller script, I had to look to find them because they are in solid black lettering and use no coloring. These ads are off to the left side or down on the bottom. The ads are for similar products that the viewer clicks on or is interested in. There is no link rot and it is fairly easy to navigate, however I wouldn't think that I would find many older people or men using the Target website, it looks a little overwhelming and shows more female products than male products.

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Multi-media topic

A. The multi-media topic I've chosen is mental illness and what I'd like people to learn is the prevalence of mental illness in society.

B.
1.) Introduction of the brief history of mental illness as a condition. I would like to inform the viewer of the development of psychology into an organized science and who were the thinkers that influenced psychological thought and what their concepts and observations were. This brief history will provide some background to people familiar with figures like Freud.

2.) Statistics will serve as the basis for science and data to the reader to look at. I would inform the reader to look at the percentages of the population in the (United States and Europe) who have mental illnesses or have been treated for mental illness. The statistics portion will serve to increase awareness of how many people are affected in our society.

3.) Introduction of different treatments to mentally ill patients throughout western history up to current methods with medication therapy. I would use this area to inform to the viewer how relatively new these methods are and how humanely they were carried out.

4.) Care for mentally ill patients. I would use this area to inform the reader how people who suffer from mental illness area treated in society, how they are cared for in the public health system and address issues including homelessness.

5.) This portion will serve to address future issues facing people with mental illnesses. Future concerns addressed will be cost of effectiveness in drug therapy and changing attitudes in mainstream society about mental illness.

C.)

1.) The brief history of mental illness would best be explained through the media of graphics in a time line. I chose graphics because reading the history of anything can be trying for the casual reader.
I plan to obtain that information by using pictures and making a timeline would help explain the history in a series of events more comprehensible than a long body of words. I would use available pictures of philosophers, doctors and book covers in the time line to break up the text into chunks of digestible information snippets.

2.) The statistics module would be explained through the media of text and video. Text would recite the statistics I've learned and read into smaller chunks. There is wealth of short videos available on the Internet concerning different mental illnesses that are concise and show real people living with illnesses. This area is ideal for video because it makes the viewer feel a human element to it rather than dryly reading information or case studies.

3.) The treatment module would be explained with text since therapies have changed so much over time and would necessitate description. Photos of drawings of treatment in history would also be effective to break up text, however copyright might make this difficult.

4.) The care module would benefit from personal audio clips, I could have links to different sites for videos and short personal stories from sources like "This American Life" where mental illnesses have been featured.

5.) The future concerns/changing attitudes module would include some text and include links to many films that have featured mental illnesses throughout the previous century and the current one. I would like to compare those films with the mainstream attitude towards mental illness and how they can illustrate how the attitudes have changed.

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Map

New Post for maps:
View Navajo Times in a larger map

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Something I feel strongly about: friend break-ups

Breaking up is hard to do
Recently I broke up with a good friend. Breaking up with friends is harder because they know you well. A best friend knows your thoughts and feelings about experiences and people. Ultimately I have felt more pain and frustration with ending friendships than I ever had breaking up with a boyfriend.
I wanted the friendship to last for years, potentially into the unforeseeable future. But that is not what happened. What happened was rather human, we had a disagreement. I want to say that I was right but I think I had just had enough: countless unanswered texts, emails, and then a dozen stand ups. She always had an excuse for them and would return most communications days or weeks later.
After almost a year of this behavior I felt disrespected, often getting ready and left waiting for hours with no call until I gave up. The only I ever got phone call was to help her through another drama or hear another story about her life that she was unwilling to change to make better.
Reading the article "Best-Friend Breakups" by Amy Sohn at New York magazine reiterated my belief about the importance and prevalence of breaking up a frienship. The fact that Amy Sohn and her friend are slightly older, single professional women was interesting.
I was gutless for many months unable to change the dynamic between us until I realized that I had some strong feelings about the way I was being treated. Instead of acting passive-aggressive I decided to make a change and address the issues I had with her.
It was difficult to for me to tell a person that I felt my good nature was being taken advantage of. I had to realize that in most adult relationships love is conditional. Also if I did not address the situation I was telling her and myself that my time was not valued.
I was met with total hostility and she balked at my presentation of facts about her behavior. It was nothing I was going to break up over but she demanded it. I stayed friendly and casual in our last communications just to see how she would respond, if I was participating in the correct action. All of her communications were hostile and used expletives, it was then I felt the break up was the correct thing to do.
In break ups, I've always said that people reveal their true nature to you. I was disappointed that she chose to act so crudely to someone who was so close to her. Since I had not seen her very much for the past year and a half I did not even feel an absence.
If you ever have to break up with a friend do it, you'll show more respect for yourself than they will for you.

Monday, October 12, 2009

Arizona News Event: Sweat Lodge Deaths in Sedona


Unintentional Life-Changing Event
Last Thursday authorities recieived a 911 call from Angel Valley Retreat on Sedona's Oak Creek where two people were reported not to be breathing after participating in a recreated Native American ceremony. A structure was built similar to Native American sweat lodges that enclosed 64 adults participating in the final day of "Spiritual Warrior" a five-day program hosted by James Arthur Ray spiritual and self-help guru. Spiritual Warrior was an annual event at Angel Valley that cost nearly $10,000 dollars to attend.
Nurse Unable to Revive
Associated Press and The Arizona Republic writers contributed a thorough article describing Ray's background and the traditional Native American uses of a sweat lodge ceremony. CPR was performed on site by a hired nurse on the two victims later pronounced dead at Verde Valley Medical Center. 19 other participants were also hospitalized, four were released and one remained in critical condition at Flagstaff Medical Center as of Friday.
Indian Country spin
Another article by AP writers Felicia Fonesca (of Prescott) and Dinesh Ramde details the victims lives, Ray's reaction and how the sweat lodge ceremony was misused that could possibly explain the deaths. One victim a 38-year old woman was in great physical shape the other victim was a 40 year old man. The other nineteen hospitalized people suffered from dehydration, breathing problems, burns, elevated body temperatures and kidney failure. Ray and his staff are being investigated by Yavapai County Sheriff department to determine if the deaths were caused by criminal negligence. Sheriff Steve Waugh said that Ray would not speak to authorities and left the state.
Words that Come Back to Haunt You
The seventh Spiritual Warrior retreat rented to Ray at Angel Valley promised to "absolutely change your life." Ray's twitter account has also come under scrutiny since his last post before the deaths that read: "Still in Spiritual Warrior... for anything new to live something first must die. What needs to die in you so that new life can emerge?" That along with two other tweets were also deleted shortly after. Despite James Ray International publicist Howard Bragman declining further comment, Ray released a tweet, “My deep heartfelt condolences to family and friends of those who lost their lives,” he wrote. “I am spending the weekend in prayer and meditation for all involved in this difficult time; and I ask you to join me in doing the same.”
Misuse of Spiritual Practice
Traditional Native American uses of the sweat lodge which is basically a sauna made by heating rocks and pouring water over them do not permit more than 12 people to participate for practical reasons like possible suffocation in a hot enclosed space. 64 people in a sweat lodge is unheard of and most shocking for the Native community. Taking frequent breaks outside and drinking water are also part of the ceremony. Results of the autopsies reveal that carbon monoxide was not a cause of the deaths. The new age movement is criticized for co-opting many cultural practices and ethnic traditions for profit. Ray was no different, his website offers a sundry of culture specific practices for his guide to spiritual and personal empowerment.

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

photo

smaller dive

video

High dive

Natalie McGee "TUSD discipline plan holistic not racist"

The entry did not specify that TUSD had been under a federal court order for 30 years. The entry did not also specify that the order was placed because of racial inequities and imbalances at Tucson schools. Nor was the name of the plan mentioned called Post Unitary Status Plan. The plan aims to figure out why minority students are punished at higher rates than their Anglo classmates in Tucson Unified School District. McGee also did not mention the statistics of the editorial article which were crucial because the district numbers state the imbalance of disciplinary action toward minority students.

The links McGee used in New Approach section didn't go to anything specific and there were over 200 articles about Crime and Punishment to search through, but it was a good source for free articles and information. In the Criminal Research section the link www.ncpa.org there was again "link rot". The article used from www.journals.democraticunderground.com was too brief and didn't meet my desire for statistics. However I liked the fact that she looked for objective studies from universities or criminal institutions. I also agree that discipline should be used but that not all problems with students of a school district can be solved using one approach.

Sunday, September 27, 2009

Sentencing for Burress.

Celebrity preferential treatment was certainly evident in the case of Plaxico Burress a 32-year old former New York Giants professional football player who shot himself in the thigh while carrying a Glock in a nightclub in New York City in November 2008.

Burress began serving a two-year sentence September 24th, 2009 at Ulster County Correctional Facility in Napanoch, NY.

Considering New York State's mandatory 3.5 year setencing for gun possession, Burress was lucky to have walked away with a 2 year sentence. Burress was charged with two counts of second-degree criminal possession of a weapon and one count of second-degree reckless endangerment all of which could total up to 15 years in prison if convicted.

Registration on said weapon was in Florida and eight months expired. Another fact to consider even if his weapon was registered Burress would not have been allowed possession in New York state. Not mentioned by many articles was the fact that the bullet trajectory narrowly missed a security gaurd in the nightclub.

Burress is placed in voluntary protective custody while incarcerated, he is separated from the rest of the inmate population at all times and gets a single cell to himself. Burress also has hired a consultant to teach him how to use his jail time productively.

After Burress serves his jail time he will he reinstated by the NFL since his suspension following the arrest. If Burress serves with good behavior he'll get released in June 2011.

The arguments presented by King James 711 did confirm my own beliefs that celebrities get preferential treatment. It is interesting to note that this light sentencing is unusual for a black man in the United States.

AP article written for MSNBC NBC sports: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/32965811/ns/sports-nfl/

NY Times Blog City Room by John Eligon copy and paste web address into into browser since this article is not allowed to be linked: http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/08/20/burress-expected-to-plead-guilty-in-weapons-case/

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Position against Health Care Reform Bill

Health Care Reform threatens 80% of Americans, (roughly 130 million people) who receive insurance through their employer through their current insurance. In contrast to the 50 million uninsured who need a government-run system. And the 25 million underinsured Americans.

Reform is considered threatening because it would in effect persuade employers to stop buying private insurance and opt out for a less expensive and lower quality insurance for employees.

A loss of control has been identified because government run health insurance policy would take decision-making from physicians and patients and give it to government bureaucracy regardless of individual needs.

Health Care Reform will also take funds from other successful programs like Medicare serving seniors dependent on coverage for their expensive prescription drug medications to fund it. The worry is that this will result in reduced benefits from Medicaid.

Physicians fear that a government-sponsored program will reimburse them at rates equal to the Medicare program rates (very low) and has not been updated for inflation rates and the recession.


To read further on GOP Solutions for Health Care Reform please read Missouri Congressman Roy Blunt's News.


Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Hyperlink

The new 4th Avenue underpass is visually appealing and great for distributing traffic downtown.

Hyperlinks

The new 4th Avenue underpass is visually appealing and distributes traffic well.

The Christian Science Monitor website review.

The purpose of the The Christian Science Monitor website is for information and archival sources. The purpose is achieved by making everything the site has to offer available in the basic layout. The author has somewhat misjudged the conventions of the web by making the person viewing it scroll down a couple of times. The audience is experienced with computers and older, likes to read the news and will scroll down for a story. As a woman I find the layout appealing, small but colorful photos of people. The content of the page is information rich, it is archival if you need it for that purpose. But the articles are set up in a manner of well-portioned chunks. The text is very clean and well organized, the lettering isn’t too difficult to read either. The graphics are tasteful and arranged well, nothing over the top to distract the reader from news. The loaded very quickly which I liked. The site is well organized into issues and into U.S or abroad. The Christian Science Monitor does require a lot of scrolling that might turn off some reader with less patience. No link rot that I’ve come across because I can’t find any links! I enjoy the design and layout of this website, it is fun.

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Won't you take me to chunky town?

My family is cool. I like spending time with them but at some point my good natured, innocent facade starts to crack and I just want to sip a glass of wine over a cigarette after two days of non-stop hanging out. Some people have those families that they can really relax with and be themselves by family- mine not so much.
I was getting irritated with my Dad, his brother and my Dad's friend by the end of the third day. They wanted to get something to eat so we were leaving my apartment trying to figure out where when my stomach started to turn from stress. I was tired. My Dad turns to me and says, "You're always up for eating aren't ya? Where should we go?" I told them I wasn't feeling well and let them go. There is a threshold of tolerance for my good-nature and pops just crossed it.
I didn't say anything about his comment or react to it. I could've explained that I'd gained weight that year because of a medication and could've told him not to tell women everywhere, in or out of his life, anything, ever about their weight. As I get older, I've stopped lecturing and save the experiences to share with my friends and let the b.s. roll off my back.