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Messages - N.I.

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16
Thanks Wes and froderik13!

this is the text of the amendment:
[The link that was here does not work, I am looking for a good one.]

I had said above that it was a proposed amendment, however, it passed in both the House and the Senate, and I also found a report that President Bush signed it into law in October. The amendment goes with the Defense Authorization bill, s.2400. I am trying to find a good source to verify that the pres. signed it.[ This Message was edited by: N.I. on 2005-01-05 19:10 ]

17
http://fornits.com/wwf/viewtopic.php?to ... &forum=7&3

I am not yet sure what became of Senator Durbin's amendment.

18
But that Senate report on The Seed came out in '74, right? So, the people who went over from The Seed to the brand new Straight had to know... (I have only begun researching this one.)

19
Thanks for the information, Antigen and Wes. I have not looked into OperationPAR to see what their treatment model is. If there have been no cases of child abuse, they must be a different model altogether. DFAF and the activities of former Straight & DFAF execs and board members bears further scrutiny.

20
If anyone would like to specifically comment on any of the abuses mentioned in the article, please do, especially "position abuse", which I don't think has been discussed much in regards to Straight. Was anyone marathoned by being forced to stand?

21
from the Amendment mentioned above, regarding position abuse:

"Another example is "position abuse.'' In 2002, in a case called Hope v. Pelzer, the Supreme Court addressed this issue. Hope, a prisoner, was handcuffed to a "hitching post'' for seven hours in the sun and not allowed to use the bathroom. The Court held that this violated the 8th Amendment prohibition on cruel and unusual punishment. The Court said:

The obvious cruelty inherent in this practice should have provided [the prison guards] with some notice that their alleged conduct violated Hope's constitutional protection against cruel and unusual punishment. Hope was treated in a way antithetical to human dignity--he was hitched to a post for an extended period of time in a position that was painful, and under circumstances that were both degrading and dangerous."

22
http://http://www.americanprogress.org/site/pp.asp?c=biJRJ8OVF&b=91568

Floor Statement of Sen. Richard Durbin On the Durbin Torture Amendment June 16, 2004

[this is just an excerpt, the whole (proposed) amendment at the link above is worth reading, as it goes into sleep deprivation and position abuse, and also mentions public humiliation]
"Army regulations that implement these treaty obligations state:

Inhumane treatment is a serious and punishable violation under international law and the Uniform Code of Military Justice. All prisoners will receive humane treatment without regard to race, nationality, religion, political opinion, sex, or other criteria. The following acts are prohibited: murder, torture, corporal punishment, mutilation, the taking of hostages, sensory deprivation, collective punishments, execution without trial by proper authority, and all cruel and degrading treatment. All persons will be respected as human beings. They will be protected against all acts of violence to include rape, forced prostitution, assault and theft, insults, public curiosity, bodily injury, and reprisals of any kind This list is not exclusive."

23
http://www.forejustice.org/write/mental ... soners.htm

The Mental Torture of American Prisoners

Cheaper Than Lab Rats, Part II

by Hans Sherrer
written in March 1999

Prison Legal News cover article April 1999

The use of prisoners in medical experiments didn't begin or end with the radiation experiments conducted on them from the 1940's to the 1970's. [See: Part I - Can Prisoner?s Glow in the Dark?, PLN, March 1999]. As thinly dis_guised psychological laboratories, supermax prisons and other forms of iso_lating prisoners from the outside world continue the tradition of using prison_ers as "lab rats."

Psychological experimentation on prisoners raises serious cultural, legal, political, and ethical questions for the same reasons that human radiation and biochemical experiments on them did. Also, just as the radiation experiments conducted on prisoners was for the pur_pose of understanding the effects of radiation on military personnel and the general population, psychological experi_ments conducted on prisoners have a larger purpose than finding more effective ways to torment them. One of those pur_poses is to determine how political authorities can affect, manipulate, and/or control the behavior and responses of people in the general population under various conditions.

One of the fathers of today's mental experimentation on prisoners is M.I.T. psy_chology professor Dr. Edgar Schein. He became one of the western world's fore_most authorities on psychological coercion by studying the methods used by the Communist Chinese and North Koreans on American prisoners during the Korean War. 1

At a 1962 M.I.T. seminar attended by psychologists and prison wardens from around the country, Dr, Schein explained how physical, psychological, and chemi_cal techniques of coercion inflicted on American prisoners of war, could be used on prisoners of law in American prisons. 2Dr. Schein told his audience that they shouldn't be squeamish about using mind control techniques on American prison_ers perfected by the Russians and Communist Chinese because:


?These same techniques in the service of different goals may be quite acceptable to us. ... I would like to have you think of brainwashing not in terms of politics, ethics, and morals, but in terms of the deliberate changing of human behavior and attitudes by a group of men who have relatively complete control over the environment in which the captive population lives.? 3


The centerpiece of Dr. Schein's techniques of coercive manipulation is the psychological isolation of prisoners by the fraying or outright destruction of social bonds and their emotional support structure. This includes relationships between prisoners on the inside, as well as their family and friends on the outside. The reason he keyed on this as a powerful coercive mechanism, is that to varying degrees we all perceive our existence as human beings from what is reflected back to us by those living beings we come into contact with. Psychologist Nathaniel Branden named this phenomenon the Muttnik Principle. 4In the 1960's he realized from his response to his dog Muttnik, that all living beings contribute to our mental health who make us feel real by accurately reflecting our treatment of them back to us.

Dr. Schein learned from studying the successful techniques of totalitarian regimes, that isolation and other forms of sensory deprivation, psychological disorientation, and pervasive surveillance have a significantly negative effect on the human psyche. By reducing the sensory feedback that Dr. Branden identified as vital to someone's well-being, they can be used as a weapon to induce cracks in that person's mental defense system. Dr. Schein believed this predictable human response to sensory deprivation could be utilized for purposes of affecting the behavior of men and women in American prisons. He thought these mental cracks could be filled with ideas of the government's choosing.

Some of Dr. Schein's colleagues went beyond him by identifying the use of powerful psychoactive drugs as a practi_cal way to biochemically isolate prisoners from their normal influences, without the expense of physically isolating them. 5

Beginning in the late 1960s, Dr. Schein's ideas on human experimentation were put into action and overseen by fed_eral prison psychiatrist Dr. Martin Groder. He was instrumental in the transfer of "agitators, suspected militants, writ-writ_ers, and other troublemakers" to remote prisons in an effort to sever family ties by making visits difficult. 6After being moved, these prisoners were put in isola_tion and deprived of mail and other sensory stimulations. Every effort was made to weaken their internal defenses and heighten their susceptibility to influ_ences controlled by prison authorities. If a prisoner responded by abandoning his attitude of individuality, he was granted privileges. If not, his psychological tor_ture continued indefinitely.

University of Michigan psychologist Dr. James V McConnell was an enthusi_astic supporter of Dr. Groder's work. In an April 1970 Psychology Today article entitled: Criminals Can Be Brainwashed - Now , Dr. McConnell favorably com_pared the human psyche to that of rats and flatworms. 7He even thought people could be manipulated with behavioral techniques he perfected while training flatworms to navigate a maze.

Harvard psychologist B. F. Skinner tried to resolve the ethical concerns that arose from the scientific treatment of the human mind like a pliable blob of Play-_Doh in his 1971 book -Beyond Freedom and Dignity. However, he chose to do so in a book with a title that neatly sums up the twisted Orwellian attitude of every_one involved in experimenting on prisoners and other human beings.

Make no mistake about it, the millions of prisoners who have been subject in various ways to sensory deprivation and isolation techniques are viewed by the scientific and correctional community as human guinea pigs. They are ?lab rats? who only differ in the type of experiments they are subjected to, from the inmates poked, prodded, and zapped during the radiation and hormone experiments that occurred from the 1940's until the 1970's.

Dr. James V Bennett, who was then the director of the U. S. Bureau of Pris_ons, made this crystal clear at the same 1962 conference where Dr. Schein made his presentation. He made the observation that the federal prison system presented ?a tremendous opportunity to carry on some of the experimenting to which the various panelists have alluded.? 8He wasn't idly talking. In July 1972, prisoners at Marion Federal Penitentiary smuggled out details to U. N. emissaries of psychological experiments that were being conducted on them. 9The use of psychological torture techniques in prisons was already widesspread enough in the early 1970's, that Jessica Mitford wrote about them in a remarkable August 1973, Harper's magazine article entitled: The Torture Cure: In Some ,American Prisons, It Is Already 1984. Among other things, the revelations in that article are credited with contributing to the end of the radiation and hormone experiments on prisoners in Oregon. 10 However, Ms. Mitford's main thrust was exposing the use of prisoners as ?lab rats? testing the effectiveness of sophisticated forms of mental coercion and powerful psychoactive drugs. In her article she wrote about the results of a laboratory experiment designed to test the effects of isolation on the human mind:


?The exciting potential of sensory deprivation as a behavior modifier was revealed through an experiment in which students were paid $20 a day to live in tiny, solitary cubicles with nothing to do. The experiment was supposed to last at least six weeks, but none of the stu_dents could take it for more than a few days: Many experienced vivid hallucinations - one student in particular insisted that a tiny spaceship had got into the chamber and was buzzing around shooting pellets at him. While they were in this condition, the experimenter fed the students propaganda messages: No matter how poorly it was presented or how illogical it sounded, the propaganda had a marked effect on the students' attitudes - an effect that lasted for at least a year after they came out of the deprivation chambers.? 11


Ms. Mitford expanded on her Harper's article in Kind and Usual Pun_ishment: the Prison Business (1973). In the chapter detailing psychological ex_periments on prisoners, she quotes a 1970 prophecy Dr. Bennett made about prisons in the year 2000 AD: ?In my judgment the prison system will increasingly be valued, and used, as a laboratory and workshop of social change.? 12

Supermax prisons and other experi_mental forms of mind control exercised on prisoners are a part of today's reality that Dr. Bennett envisioned almost thirty years ago.

Remarkably, authorities in the federal government recently let the cat out of the bag they are aware of their potential li_ability for conducting psychological experiments on prisoners. This was re_vealed in The Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA) enacted in 1996. Its provi_sions contribute to the legal disenfranchisement of prisoners by effec_tively limiting their ability to redress wrongs and grievances through the fed_eral court system. One of its provisions specifically prevents prisoners from suc_cessfully suing prison officials for ?mental or emotional harm unless they can also prove physical injury.? 13 Almost diabolical in its design, this provision of the PLRA effectively prohibits lawsuits stemming from the psychological torture rampant in America's prisons.

It is significant that isolation experi_ments involving prisoners at Dachau were among the vivisection experiments conducted by Nazi doctors. 14 Needless to say, the work of these discredited Nazi doctors is being continued daily in the laboratories of physical and mental tor_ture masquerading as American prisons.

Non-consenting prisoners are experi_mented on in many dehumanizing ways. Yet their systematic mistreatment is openly condoned by political, judicial, and bureaucratic authorities in the United States who view them in the same way the Nazis viewed the inmates at Dachau and Auschwitz. They don't believe they are really people.


END


Endnotes for: The Mental Torture of American Prisoners - Cheaper Than Lab Rats, Part 11 . This essay was originally published in Prison Legal News, April 1999, Vol. 10, No. 4., pp. 1-3.


1?Coercive Persuasion: a Socio-psychological         Analysis of the ?Brainwashing? of American Civilian         Prisoners by the Chinese Communists,? Edgar H. Schein with         Inge Schneier and Curtis H. Barker, W. W. Norton, New York, 1961.

2?The Torture Cure: In some American         pris_ons, it is already 1984,? Jessica Mitford, Harper's,         August, 1973, pp. 16-30, 18.

3Ibid., p. 18 (emphasis added).

4?The Psychology of Self-Esteem: a new         concept of man's psychological nature,? Nathaniel Branden,         Ph.D., Nash Publishing, Los Angeles, 1969, pp. 184-188. Dr. Branden         also refers to this principle as psychological         visibil_ity.

5?The Torture Cure,? p. 18.

6?Kind and Usual Punishment: the Prison         Business,? Jessica Mitford, Alfred A Knopf, N. Y. 1973, pp.         123-125.

7?Criminals Can Be Brainwashed - Now,? Dr. James V.         McConnell, Psychology Today, April, 1970, pp. 14-16.

8?The Torture Cure,? p. 18 [9] ibid.,         p. 18.

9Ibid., p. 18.

10 ?Psychologist pays price to stop         experi_ments,? Karen Dorn Steele, The Spokesman-Review,         Spokane, WA, June 19, 1994, p. A8.

11 ?The Torture Cure,? p. 25. (emphasis         added).

12 ?Kind and Usual Punishment,? p. 130,         quot_ing Bennett's book, I Chose Prison (1970).

13 ?Criminal Injustice: Confronting the Prison         Crisis,? Ed. Elihu Rosenblatt, South End Press,

Boston, 1996, p. 83.

14 Ibid., p. 325. Vivisection is the         scientific ritual of experimenting on animals in ways that are known         to be painful to them. When human beings are involved, an important         part of this ritual is redefining them as a form of non-hu_man         animal so they can be mistreated with a clear conscience. For         example, the Nazis re_ferred to Jews as lice and rats, because         ruthlessly rooting out and exterminating disease carrying vermin is         considered to benefit society as a whole. (See: ?Dominating         Knowledge,? ed. Frederique Apffel Marglin and Stephen A.         Marglin, Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1990, pp. 163-169.) Similarly, the         criminal justice pro_cess in the U.S. is a ritualistic procedure         that among other things, serves the function of re_defining         someone convicted of a crime as something less than a whole human         being. Once officially dehumanized and accorded the legal status         approaching that of a 19th century plan_tation slave, men and         women labeled as criminals are ?legally? permitted to be         treated with con_scienceless disregard.

24
I found some interesting things in this article:

http://www.unhchr.ch/huricane/huricane. ... endocument

25
At the following link:
http://www.askquestions.org/details.php?id=209

I found this statement:
"The Drug Free American Foundation (DFAF) has different financial and operational affiliations with several private drug treatment centers including Teen Challenge, Growing Together, and Kids Helping Kids."

Can anyone provide evidence to support this statement?

Thanks.

26
Straight, Inc. and Derivatives / springfield 89-91
« on: December 30, 2004, 03:10:00 PM »
I did not witness the event I mentioned a few posts back. If anyone was there in late '87 they could give a more accurate eyewitness account. It involved the extreme humiliation of a male prisoner.

27
Straight, Inc. and Derivatives / Mike Patterson (Midland Tx)
« on: December 30, 2004, 02:48:00 PM »
I agree that it is possible that law enforcement might look the other way with regards to many abuses at places like Straight. However, the most heinous crime of child sexual abuse is intolerable, and, at least these days, a law enforcement official who failed to take the crime seriously in any form -- including the failure to report the crime -- would be a fool, who would eventually be outed and have to face the press and a public that no longer tolerates such crimes.


(from the website of the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services -- http://http://www.tdprs.state.tx.us/Child_Protection/About_Child_Protective_Services/reportChildAbuse.asp):

"Child abuse and neglect are against the law in Texas, and so                  is failure to report it.

             
If you suspect a child has been abused or mistreated, you are                  required to report it to the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services or to a law enforcement agency.

             
You are required to make a report within 48 hours of the time                  you suspected the child has been or may be abused or neglected"

28
Straight, Inc. and Derivatives / The Buildings
« on: December 29, 2004, 10:38:00 PM »
Thanks, I might just do that this weekend!

29
Straight, Inc. and Derivatives / Mike Patterson (Midland Tx)
« on: December 29, 2004, 10:36:00 PM »
I found a guy by that name on the registered sex offender list in Alaska. It is probably a different guy but you could check it out, it has a photo. (I didn't keep the creepy link, sorry.)

If he is still around it might be worth it to report the crime just because other people might be reporting him too, but ask the police not me.

Also, I wonder what the criminal ramifications are for the people in charge of Straight of repeatedly failing to report sex abuse against children. It might be worth calling your local FBI agent. Who knows, Texas might someday repeal the SOLs on felonies.

My advice comes with the usual caveat.

30
Straight, Inc. and Derivatives / Mike Patterson (Midland Tx)
« on: December 29, 2004, 03:59:00 PM »
That is a good post. Hold every criminal accountable by name.

Do you know where that guy is now? Does he have access to minors?

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