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Topics - AtomicAnt

Pages: [1] 2
1
Feed Your Head / Mental Illness or Political Philosophy?
« on: June 16, 2013, 02:50:04 PM »
Are the Young People That Shrinks Label as Disruptive Really Anarchists with a Healthy Resistance to Oppressive Authority?

http://http://www.alternet.org/personal-health/anarchists-oppressed-psychiatry-and-underground-resistance

2
Thought Reform / Mental Illness or Political Philosophy
« on: June 16, 2013, 02:48:45 PM »
Are the Young People That Shrinks Label as Disruptive Really Anarchists with a Healthy Resistance to Oppressive Authority?

http://http://www.alternet.org/personal-health/anarchists-oppressed-psychiatry-and-underground-resistance

3
Feed Your Head / Behaviorism and Consumerism
« on: November 11, 2012, 05:47:07 PM »
I haven't logged into Fornit's in a very long time, but I came across this article and had to post the link.

http://www.salon.com/2012/10/13/why_are_americans_so_easy_to_manipulate/

4
Feed Your Head / More Addiction "Cures"
« on: August 06, 2009, 09:56:40 PM »
Chinese Teen Beaten to Death in Internet Addiction Clinic
Wednesday, August 05, 2009
PrintShareThis
His parents hoped their teenage son would be home in a month, cured of his addiction to the internet. They never thought that within 10 hours of taking him to an addiction clinic they would receive a telephone call notifying them that he was dead.

Deng Senshan, 16, was addicted to playing on the internet, like tens of millions of other young Chinese. He was the latest teenager to be sent by his parents to one of the clinics being set up across China to cure youngsters of their obsession with online gaming.

His parents took their son to the Guangxi Qihuang Survival Training Camp in southern China on Saturday.

Deng Fei, his father, told supervisors that his son was shy and introverted and they should avoid putting too much pressure on him during the first couple of days.

They agreed.

Instead, the boy was placed in solitary confinement shortly after his arrival and then beaten by his trainers who scolded him for running too slowly when he was ordered to go jogging.

He was pronounced dead in the early hours of Sunday morning.

"My son was very healthy and was not a criminal," his father said. "He just had an internet addiction when I left him at the camp. We can't believe our only son was beaten to death.

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,537076,00.html

5
Open Free for All / Dash Snow Dies
« on: July 25, 2009, 10:58:36 AM »
“As a mother, watching Dash self-destruct through addiction has been the most devastating experience of my life,” she wrote. “My efforts seemed only to create a painful rift between us, a rift that adds to my sadness over his senseless death.”

"...when Mr. Snow was 15, his parents (his father was Christopher Snow, a musician) sent him to the Hidden Lake Academy, a therapeutic boarding school in Georgia (“a little boot-campish,” Mr. Thurman said). "

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/26/nyreg ... ss&emc=rss

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/26/nyreg ... now&st=cse

It is always a tragedy when someone dies young. The death garners publicity when the young is talented and comes from a wealthy family. The story shows the complexity in the mix of a strong rebellious spirit,  freedom of ideals, family dynamics, and the tragedy of drug abuse. Was his end inevitable?

6
Open Free for All / Traveling Magazine Crews
« on: February 22, 2009, 06:12:25 PM »
A teenager came to my door today. He said he was selling magazines for his 'media class' and named a high school in a nearby community. He said he lived in my neighborhood. That sent up a red flag. I know the kids in my neighborhood and I did not know him. I know the kids in my neighborhood do not attend the named high school. It is a different district. There were other red flags (his aggressiveness and the prices) and I sent the boy packing. Maybe I should not have. I looked on the internet and found:

http://www.travelingsalescrews.info/mag ... 0offs.html

For Youths, A Grim Tour on Magazine Crews
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/21/us/21 ... nd&emc=rss

It's not the troubled teen industry, but is another way that unsuspecting teens are exploited with little recourse. It just made me angry.

7
The Troubled Teen Industry / Judges Jail Kids for Cash
« on: February 11, 2009, 09:33:35 PM »
Another example of the throw away your kids attitude in the USA:

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29142654/

WILKES-BARRE, Pennsylvania - In one of the most shocking cases of courtroom graft on record, two Pennsylvania judges have been charged with taking millions of dollars in kickbacks to send teenagers to two privately run youth detention centers.

Prosecutors say Luzerne County Judges Mark Ciavarella and Michael Conahan took $2.6 million in payoffs to put juvenile offenders in lockups run by PA Child Care LLC and a sister company, Western PA Child Care LLC. The judges were charged on Jan. 26 and removed from the bench by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court shortly afterward.

The link has full story.

8
Open Free for All / Depression: Finally some common sense.
« on: April 08, 2007, 12:46:32 PM »
Found this in the Charlotte Observer:

http://www.charlotte.com/162/story/72296.html

STUDY SUGGESTS SYMPTOMS CAN BE NORMAL
Definition of depression is challenged
SHANKAR VEDANTAM
Washington Post

WASHINGTON --Up to 25 percent of people whom psychiatrists would currently diagnose as depressed may only be reacting normally to stressful events like divorces or losing a job, according to a new study.

The finding could have far-reaching consequences for the diagnosis of depression, the growing use of symptom checklists in identifying people who might be depressed and the $12 billion a year U.S. market for antidepressant drugs.

Patients are currently diagnosed on the basis of a constellation of symptoms that include sadness, fatigue, insomnia and suicidal thoughts. The diagnostic manual used by psychiatrists says that anyone who suffers from at least five such symptoms for as little as two weeks may be clinically depressed. Only in the case of someone grieving over the death of a loved one is it normal for symptoms to last as long as two months, the manual says.

The new study, however, found that extended periods of depression-like symptoms are common in people who have been through other life stresses such as divorce or a natural disaster and don't necessarily constitute illness.

The study also suggested that drug treatment may often be inappropriate for people who are going through painful -- but normal -- responses to life's stresses. Supportive therapy on the other hand, might be useful.

The researchers, who included Michael First of Columbia University, the editor of the authoritative diagnostic manual, based their findings on a national survey of 8,098 people.

9
The Troubled Teen Industry / A More Mainstream View
« on: December 17, 2006, 10:33:54 AM »
Dear Prudie,
I work with a woman who talks frequently at lunch and in group settings about the problems she's having with her children. She claims they are just unruly, then discusses some rather dysfunctional behavior that seems like a cry for help. She casually talks about how they've been kicked out of every day care they've been enrolled in for fighting, biting, spitting, and threatening graphic, personal harm on teachers. The most recent story involved one child trashing the house while she and her husband slept. Her solution was to lock her children in their rooms at night, but now she doesn't know what to do with the one who has taken to defecating in the corners during the night. It breaks my heart to hear these types of stories, so much so that if she starts telling me about the latest mishap, I try to steer the conversation in another direction. My spouse thinks I should stay out of the situation, but my heart feels for these children, and I have toyed with the idea of anonymously calling the local social services office to report the situation. Do I have a moral and ethical responsibility to step in and report possible neglect? Or should I keep steering the conversation off the topic and keep my mouth shut?

?Heartbroken and Torn

Dear Heart,
Make the call. That's the advice of both Caren Kaplan of the Child Welfare League of America and Dr. Keith G. Hughes, a consultant to the North American Child Welfare Resource Center, after I read each of them your letter. Hughes said these children are exhibiting signs of serious emotional distress, and that parents who lock children in their rooms to keep them under control need intervention to help them learn how to properly deal with their kids. He said most states allow people who suspect child abuse to call the authorities anonymously and be held harmless for making the call. While it's generally best to stay out of the personal lives of the people at the lunch table, your heart is telling you there is something very wrong in this woman's life and that you need to do what you can to stop it.

?Prudie

http://www.slate.com/id/2155291/

I found this interesting because it is not a blame the kids, let's BM the kids article, but a focus on improper parenting. It also illustrates a desparate parent that does not know what to do with her out-of-control chilren. She is a potential program customer. Note that the experts don't mention any intervention with the 'bad' kids who are making 'poor choices.' They focus on the parents.

I was speaking to my dear Sister (PHD Child/Adolescent Psychology) who has worked in the field for over 20 years. She said, "If you can fix the parents, the kids will usually be okay." She said the frustrating part of working with kids is that often she knows she is treating the wrong person. She just does her best to give the kid a good reality perspective and get them through it.

She told me a couple of horror stories about kids who went through much worse at the hands of their own parents than anything the programs dish out; real gothic novel stuff. Made my skin crawl.

10
The Troubled Teen Industry / Charges in Martin Anderson Case
« on: November 28, 2006, 11:31:41 PM »
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/15934786/

8 charged in teen boot camp death
Medical examiner says boy suffocated; rough handling caught on videotape
The Associated Press
Updated: 11:12 a.m. ET Nov 28, 2006
Seven former juvenile boot camp guards and a nurse have been charged with aggravated manslaughter in the death of a boy whose rough handling by the guards was videotaped, a special prosecutor said Tuesday.

Martin Lee Anderson, 13, collapsed on the exercise yard at the Bay County sheriff?s camp in Panama City on Jan. 5. Guards said he was uncooperative and refused to continue participating in exercises that were part of the camp?s intake processes.

He died early the next morning in Pensacola.

Benjamin Crump, the attorney for Anderson?s parents, was in Panama City with the family Tuesday and didn?t immediately return a call for comment.

The boy?s death sparked protests in the state capital, the elimination of the military-style boot camp system and the resignation of the state?s top law enforcement officer.

An initial autopsy by medical examiner Dr. Charles Siebert found Anderson died of complications of sickle cell trait, a usually benign blood disorder.

A second autopsy by Dr. Vernard Adams, the medical examiner for Hillsborough County, found Anderson?s death was caused by suffocation due to the actions of the guards.

He said the suffocation was caused by hands blocking the boy?s mouth, as well as the ?forced inhalation of ammonia fumes? that caused his vocal cords to spasm, blocking Anderson?s upper airway.

The guards had said in an incident report that they used ammonia capsules five times on Anderson to gain his cooperation.

Siebert has consistently stood by his findings.

© 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/15934786/

11
The Troubled Teen Industry / Licensing
« on: October 11, 2006, 11:11:32 PM »
Extracted from a New York Times article describing how faith based groups evade laws that apply to private businesses:

In 1997, George Bush, who was the governor, pushed through legislation that exempted faith-based day care centers and addiction treatment programs from state licensing, allowing them to be monitored instead by private associations controlled by pastors, program directors and other private citizens. Other laws enacted on his watch steered more state financing to these ?alternatively accredited? institutions.

Fewer than a dozen child care centers and about 130 addiction treatment programs took advantage of this new alternative, according to subsequent studies. But several of these later became the focus of state investigations into complaints of physical abuse. A study by the Texas Freedom Network Education Fund, a nonprofit research organization that opposed the faith-based initiatives, found that ?the rate of confirmed cases of abuse and neglect at alternatively accredited facilities in Texas is more than 10 times that of state-licensed facilities.?

In spring 2001, the Texas Legislature quietly allowed the alternative accreditation program for day care centers to lapse.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/08/busin ... &th&emc=th

12
Feed Your Head / The Birth of Soft Torture
« on: November 20, 2005, 05:24:00 PM »
http://www.slate.com//id/2130301/

The Birth of Soft Torture
CIA interrogation techniques?a history.
By Rebecca Lemov
Updated Wednesday, Nov. 16, 2005, at 5:07 PM ET


In 1949, Cardinal Jószef Mindszenty appeared before the world's
cameras to mumble his confession to treasonous crimes against the
Hungarian church and state. For resisting communism, the World War
II hero had been subjected for 39 days to sleep deprivation and
humiliation, alternating with long hours of interrogation, by
Russian-trained Hungarian police. His staged confession riveted the
Central Intelligence Agency, which theorized in a security
memorandum that Soviet-trained experts were controlling Mindszenty
by "some unknown force." If the Communists had interrogation weapons
that were evidently more subtle and effective than brute physical
torture, the CIA decided, then it needed such weapons, too.

Months later, the agency began a program to explore "avenues to the
control of human behavior." During the next decade and a half, CIA
experts honed the use of "chemical and biological materials capable
of producing human behavioral and physiological changes" according
to a retrospective CIA catalog written in 1963. And thus soft
torture in the United States was born.

In short order, CIA experts attempted to induce Mindszenty-like
effects. An interrogation team consisting of a psychiatrist, a
lie-detector expert, and a hypnotist went to work using combinations
of the depressant Sodium Amytal and certain stimulants. Tests on
four suspected double agents in Tokyo in July 1950 and on 25 North
Korean prisoners of war three months later yielded more noteworthy
results. (Relevant CIA documents do not specify exactly what, but
reports later claimed that the special interrogation teams could
hold a subject in a "controlled state" for a long period.)
Meanwhile, the CIA opened the door to pre-emptive psychosurgery: In
a doctor's office in Washington, D.C., one unfortunate man, his name
deleted from documents, was lobotomized against his will during an
interrogation. By the mid-to-late 1950s, experiments using "black
techniques," as the agency called them, moved to prisons, hospitals,
and other field-testing sites with funding and encouragement from
the CIA's Science and Technology Directorate*.
One of the most extreme 1950s experiments that the CIA sponsored was
conducted at a McGill University hospital, where the world-renowned
psychiatrist Dr. Ewen Cameron had been pioneering a technique he
called "psychic driving." Dr. Cameron was widely considered the most
able psychiatrist in Canada?his honors included the presidency of
the World Psychiatric Association?and his patients were referred to
him from all over. A disaffected housewife, a rebellious youth, a
struggling starlet, and the wife of a Canadian member of Parliament
were a few of the more than 100 patients who became uninformed,
nonconsenting experimental subjects. Many were diagnosed as
schizophrenic (a diagnosis since contested in many of the cases).
Cameron's goal was to wipe out the stable "self," eliminating
deep-seated psychological problems in order to rebuild it. He
grandiosely hoped to transform human existence by opening a new
gateway to the understanding of consciousness. The CIA wanted to
know what his experiments suggested about interrogating people with
the help of sensory deprivation, environmental manipulation, and
psychic disorientation.
Cameron's technique was to expose a patient to tape-recorded
messages or sounds that were played back or repeated for long
periods. The goal was a condition Cameron dubbed "penetration": The
patient experienced an escalating state of distress that often
caused him or her to reveal long-buried past experiences or
disturbing events. At that point, the doctor would offer "healing"
suggestions. Frequently, his patients didn't want to listen and
would attack their analyst or try to leave the room. In the 1956
American Journal of Psychiatry, Cameron explained that he broke down
their resistance by continually repeating his message using "pillow
and ceiling microphones" and different voices; by imposing periods
of prolonged sleep; and by giving patients drugs like Sodium Amytal,
Desoxyn, and LSD-25, which "disorganized" thought patterns.
To further disorganize his patients, Cameron isolated them in a
sensory deprivation chamber. In a dark room, a patient would sit in
silence with his eyes covered with goggles, prevented "from touching
his body?thus interfering with his self image." Finally "attempts
were made to cut down on his expressive output"?he was restrained or
bandaged so he could not scream. Cameron combined these tactics with
extended periods of forced listening to taped messages for up to 20
hours per day, for 10 or 15 days at a stretch.
In 1958 and 1959, Cameron went further. With new CIA money behind
him, he tried to completely "depattern" 53 patients by combining
psychic driving with electroshock therapy and a long-term,
drug-induced coma. At the most intensive stage of the treatment,
many subjects were no longer able to perform even basic functions.
They needed training to eat, use the toilet, or speak. Once the
doctor allowed the drugs to wear off and ceased shock treatments,
patients slowly relearned how to take care of themselves?and their
pretreatment symptoms were said to have disappeared.
So had much of their personalities. Patients emerged from Cameron's
ward walking differently, talking differently, acting differently.
Wives were more docile, daughters less inclined to histrionics, sons
better-behaved. Most had no memory of their treatment or of their
previous lives. Sometimes, they forgot they had children. At first,
they were grateful to their doctor for his help. Several Cameron
patients, however, later said they had severe recurrences of their
pretreatment problems and traumatic memories of the treatment itself
and together sued the doctor as well as the U.S. and Canadian
governments. Their case was quietly settled out of court.
By the late 1950s and early 1960s, CIA experts thought they
understood the techniques necessary for "breaking" a person. Under a
strict regime of behavioral conditioning, "the possibility of
resistance over a very long period may be vanishingly small,"
several researchers concluded in an analysis used in the CIA's 1963
manual Counterintelligence Interrogation. At the agency, pressure
increased to field-test coercive interrogation tools. The task, as
CIA second-in-command Richard Helms urged, was to test the agency's
techniques on "normal" people. At times, this imperative made the
agency reckless. As part of the now notorious MK-ULTRA program?"one
of the seamiest episodes in American intelligence," according to
journalist Seymour Hersh?the CIA set up a safe house in San
Francisco where its agents could observe the effects of various drug
combinations on human behavior. They were in search of a "truth
serum" and thought LSD might be it. Prostitutes were hired to bring
unwitting johns back to the house, where the women slipped acid and
other strong psychoactive substances into the men's drinks. From
behind a one-way mirror, investigators watched, notebooks and
martinis in hand. Sometimes the men took the drugs and managed to
carry on. Sometimes they babbled or cried. An internal CIA review
condemned these high jinks in 1963, but Congress didn't investigate
them until 1977, after a post-Watergate crisis of confidence in the
agency.
At least officially, the CIA ended its behavioral science program in
the mid-1960s, before scientists and operatives achieved total
control over a subject. "All experiments beyond a certain point
always failed," an operative veteran of the program said, "because
the subject jerked himself back for some reason or the subject got
amnesiac or catatonic." In other words, you could create a vegetable
or a zombie, but not a robot who would obey you against his will.
Still, the CIA had gained reliable information about how to derange
and disorient a person who was reluctant to cooperate. An enemy
could quickly be made into a confused and desperate human being.
Since 9/11, as government documents and news reports have made
clear, the CIA's experimental approach to coercive interrogation has
been revived. Last week, as the Washington Post revealed the
existence of secret CIA-run prisons?"black sites"?in Eastern Europe,
Vice President Dick Cheney continued to campaign to ensure that the
agency will not be prevented from using "cruel, inhumane, and
degrading" methods to elicit intelligence from detainees. The
operatives of the 1940s would approve.
Correction, Nov. 18, 2005: The article originally referred to the
CIA's Technology and Science Directorate. The correct title is the
Science and Technology Directorate. Return to the corrected
sentence.
Related in Slate

Dahlia Lithwick explained the legal definitions of torture here in
2001, and Brendan I. Koerner addressed the issue three years later
here. Information extracted by torture is not very reliable. Is
humane torture possible? In January, Chris Suellentrop wrote about
senators getting testy as they questioned Alberto Gonzales about
torture.
Rebecca Lemov, a recent Woodrow Wilson fellow, is the author of
World as Laboratory: Experiments with Mice, Mazes and Men, to be
published next month.

13
Open Free for All / The Birth of Soft Torture
« on: November 20, 2005, 04:59:00 PM »
http://www.slate.com//id/2130301/

The Birth of Soft Torture
CIA interrogation techniques?a history.
By Rebecca Lemov
Updated Wednesday, Nov. 16, 2005, at 5:07 PM ET


In 1949, Cardinal Jószef Mindszenty appeared before the world's
cameras to mumble his confession to treasonous crimes against the
Hungarian church and state. For resisting communism, the World War
II hero had been subjected for 39 days to sleep deprivation and
humiliation, alternating with long hours of interrogation, by
Russian-trained Hungarian police. His staged confession riveted the
Central Intelligence Agency, which theorized in a security
memorandum that Soviet-trained experts were controlling Mindszenty
by "some unknown force." If the Communists had interrogation weapons
that were evidently more subtle and effective than brute physical
torture, the CIA decided, then it needed such weapons, too.

Months later, the agency began a program to explore "avenues to the
control of human behavior." During the next decade and a half, CIA
experts honed the use of "chemical and biological materials capable
of producing human behavioral and physiological changes" according
to a retrospective CIA catalog written in 1963. And thus soft
torture in the United States was born.

In short order, CIA experts attempted to induce Mindszenty-like
effects. An interrogation team consisting of a psychiatrist, a
lie-detector expert, and a hypnotist went to work using combinations
of the depressant Sodium Amytal and certain stimulants. Tests on
four suspected double agents in Tokyo in July 1950 and on 25 North
Korean prisoners of war three months later yielded more noteworthy
results. (Relevant CIA documents do not specify exactly what, but
reports later claimed that the special interrogation teams could
hold a subject in a "controlled state" for a long period.)
Meanwhile, the CIA opened the door to pre-emptive psychosurgery: In
a doctor's office in Washington, D.C., one unfortunate man, his name
deleted from documents, was lobotomized against his will during an
interrogation. By the mid-to-late 1950s, experiments using "black
techniques," as the agency called them, moved to prisons, hospitals,
and other field-testing sites with funding and encouragement from
the CIA's Science and Technology Directorate*.
One of the most extreme 1950s experiments that the CIA sponsored was
conducted at a McGill University hospital, where the world-renowned
psychiatrist Dr. Ewen Cameron had been pioneering a technique he
called "psychic driving." Dr. Cameron was widely considered the most
able psychiatrist in Canada?his honors included the presidency of
the World Psychiatric Association?and his patients were referred to
him from all over. A disaffected housewife, a rebellious youth, a
struggling starlet, and the wife of a Canadian member of Parliament
were a few of the more than 100 patients who became uninformed,
nonconsenting experimental subjects. Many were diagnosed as
schizophrenic (a diagnosis since contested in many of the cases).
Cameron's goal was to wipe out the stable "self," eliminating
deep-seated psychological problems in order to rebuild it. He
grandiosely hoped to transform human existence by opening a new
gateway to the understanding of consciousness. The CIA wanted to
know what his experiments suggested about interrogating people with
the help of sensory deprivation, environmental manipulation, and
psychic disorientation.
Cameron's technique was to expose a patient to tape-recorded
messages or sounds that were played back or repeated for long
periods. The goal was a condition Cameron dubbed "penetration": The
patient experienced an escalating state of distress that often
caused him or her to reveal long-buried past experiences or
disturbing events. At that point, the doctor would offer "healing"
suggestions. Frequently, his patients didn't want to listen and
would attack their analyst or try to leave the room. In the 1956
American Journal of Psychiatry, Cameron explained that he broke down
their resistance by continually repeating his message using "pillow
and ceiling microphones" and different voices; by imposing periods
of prolonged sleep; and by giving patients drugs like Sodium Amytal,
Desoxyn, and LSD-25, which "disorganized" thought patterns.
To further disorganize his patients, Cameron isolated them in a
sensory deprivation chamber. In a dark room, a patient would sit in
silence with his eyes covered with goggles, prevented "from touching
his body?thus interfering with his self image." Finally "attempts
were made to cut down on his expressive output"?he was restrained or
bandaged so he could not scream. Cameron combined these tactics with
extended periods of forced listening to taped messages for up to 20
hours per day, for 10 or 15 days at a stretch.
In 1958 and 1959, Cameron went further. With new CIA money behind
him, he tried to completely "depattern" 53 patients by combining
psychic driving with electroshock therapy and a long-term,
drug-induced coma. At the most intensive stage of the treatment,
many subjects were no longer able to perform even basic functions.
They needed training to eat, use the toilet, or speak. Once the
doctor allowed the drugs to wear off and ceased shock treatments,
patients slowly relearned how to take care of themselves?and their
pretreatment symptoms were said to have disappeared.
So had much of their personalities. Patients emerged from Cameron's
ward walking differently, talking differently, acting differently.
Wives were more docile, daughters less inclined to histrionics, sons
better-behaved. Most had no memory of their treatment or of their
previous lives. Sometimes, they forgot they had children. At first,
they were grateful to their doctor for his help. Several Cameron
patients, however, later said they had severe recurrences of their
pretreatment problems and traumatic memories of the treatment itself
and together sued the doctor as well as the U.S. and Canadian
governments. Their case was quietly settled out of court.
By the late 1950s and early 1960s, CIA experts thought they
understood the techniques necessary for "breaking" a person. Under a
strict regime of behavioral conditioning, "the possibility of
resistance over a very long period may be vanishingly small,"
several researchers concluded in an analysis used in the CIA's 1963
manual Counterintelligence Interrogation. At the agency, pressure
increased to field-test coercive interrogation tools. The task, as
CIA second-in-command Richard Helms urged, was to test the agency's
techniques on "normal" people. At times, this imperative made the
agency reckless. As part of the now notorious MK-ULTRA program?"one
of the seamiest episodes in American intelligence," according to
journalist Seymour Hersh?the CIA set up a safe house in San
Francisco where its agents could observe the effects of various drug
combinations on human behavior. They were in search of a "truth
serum" and thought LSD might be it. Prostitutes were hired to bring
unwitting johns back to the house, where the women slipped acid and
other strong psychoactive substances into the men's drinks. From
behind a one-way mirror, investigators watched, notebooks and
martinis in hand. Sometimes the men took the drugs and managed to
carry on. Sometimes they babbled or cried. An internal CIA review
condemned these high jinks in 1963, but Congress didn't investigate
them until 1977, after a post-Watergate crisis of confidence in the
agency.
At least officially, the CIA ended its behavioral science program in
the mid-1960s, before scientists and operatives achieved total
control over a subject. "All experiments beyond a certain point
always failed," an operative veteran of the program said, "because
the subject jerked himself back for some reason or the subject got
amnesiac or catatonic." In other words, you could create a vegetable
or a zombie, but not a robot who would obey you against his will.
Still, the CIA had gained reliable information about how to derange
and disorient a person who was reluctant to cooperate. An enemy
could quickly be made into a confused and desperate human being.
Since 9/11, as government documents and news reports have made
clear, the CIA's experimental approach to coercive interrogation has
been revived. Last week, as the Washington Post revealed the
existence of secret CIA-run prisons?"black sites"?in Eastern Europe,
Vice President Dick Cheney continued to campaign to ensure that the
agency will not be prevented from using "cruel, inhumane, and
degrading" methods to elicit intelligence from detainees. The
operatives of the 1940s would approve.
Correction, Nov. 18, 2005: The article originally referred to the
CIA's Technology and Science Directorate. The correct title is the
Science and Technology Directorate. Return to the corrected
sentence.
Related in Slate

Dahlia Lithwick explained the legal definitions of torture here in
2001, and Brendan I. Koerner addressed the issue three years later
here. Information extracted by torture is not very reliable. Is
humane torture possible? In January, Chris Suellentrop wrote about
senators getting testy as they questioned Alberto Gonzales about
torture.
Rebecca Lemov, a recent Woodrow Wilson fellow, is the author of
World as Laboratory: Experiments with Mice, Mazes and Men, to be
published next month. [ This Message was edited by: AtomicAnt on 2005-11-20 14:00 ]

14
The Troubled Teen Industry / Reasons for Parents to Steer Clear of RTCs
« on: October 15, 2005, 10:33:00 PM »
http://www.thejournalnews.com/apps/pbcs ... 20383/1018

Another 'safe' place for a teenager.

Westchester faces abuse suit

By TIMOTHY O'CONNOR
THE JOURNAL NEWS
 (Original publication: October 12, 2005)

 WHITE PLAINS ? The boy who said he was sexually assaulted two years ago by a fellow Children's Village resident while a counselor held him down is suing Westchester County, the residential treatment center and his two accused abusers in a federal court.

The boy asks for at least $40 million in damages in the lawsuit that says his civil rights were violated.

A jury acquitted the counselor, Jason Brown, of 138 Archer Ave., Mount Vernon, of all charges. Elliot Perryman, then a 16-year-old resident of the treatment center in Dobbs Ferry, pleaded guilty to second-degree assault, admitting he injured the boy with a broomstick on the night of Nov. 20, 2003, but not admitting to any sexual assault.

The boy filed suit earlier this year in U.S. District Court in Manhattan. A federal judge ordered the case sealed, and the public was not privy to filings in the case. The case was eventually moved to U.S. District Court in White Plains, where Judge Charles Brieant ordered it unsealed, but allowed the boy to file anonymously under the pseudonym John Doe.

In the lawsuit, the boy, who was 14 at the time of the incident, says the Nov. 20 assault was not the only time he was abused.

"This attack was the culmination of a series of abusive acts that were inflicted upon John Doe while he was at Children's Village by Brown, Perryman and others," his attorney, Alan Vinegrad, wrote in the complaint.

In the Nov. 20 incident, the boy said Brown and Perryman chased him into a shower room at Wolfe Cottage. The boy said Brown held him down while Perryman sexually assaulted him with the broomstick.

Vinegrad did not return calls seeking comment on the case.

In court papers, the county and Children's Village have denied any wrongdoing. Brown and Perryman have not filed any response to the complaint.

The county will not be held liable if any damages are awarded in the case, said Susan Tolchin, chief adviser to County Executive Andrew Spano. Tolchin said by the terms of a contract the county has with Children's Village, the treatment center is responsible in case of any lawsuit.

Linda Stutz, the vice president for institutional advancement at Children's Village, declined to comment on the case, saying the treatment center does not speak about pending litigation.

Brown could not be reached for comment. Perryman, now 18, is in Downstate Correctional Facility in Fishkill, where he is serving a sentence of one to three years, said Carter Perryman, his uncle and guardian. Carter Perryman said his nephew was a victim in the case, just like the boy. Perryman had been sexually abused as a boy, his uncle said, and should have received better treatment at Children's Village.

"All this was in his history. They should have foreseen this," he said. "The suit should be addressed to the people in charge there, not my nephew."

The complaint lists five other incidents of alleged abuse by Brown, Perryman, and another unnamed resident against the boy and other residents.

Lawyers for both sides are due back in court Nov. 10.

15
The Troubled Teen Industry / What happened to CAICA?
« on: August 13, 2005, 03:01:00 PM »
I just went to visit http://www.caica.org and it is gone! Anyone know what happened?

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