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Author: TriSec    Date: 05/27/2014 10:28:53

Good Morning.

Today is our 4,615th day in Afghanistan.

We'll start this morning as we always do; with the latest casualty figures from our ongoing war, courtesy of Antiwar.com:

US Military Deaths - Afghanistan: 2,319
Other Military Deaths - Afghanistan: 1,120

We find this morning's Cost of War passing through:

$ 1, 537, 097, 125, 000 .00


I've had a couple of short weeks as of late, so I'm afraid our queue of stories has gotten a little short. Nevertheless, we'll still clean out what we have here today.


We'll start with the tale of two drugs. One is readily available throughout the US military. Many soldiers, sailors, and airmen use it recreationally with the full sanction of the authorities; it's even available on ship and on base throughout the military. The other drug is a dangerous mind-altering drug that can be addictive, poisonous, or otherwise unhealthy for anyone. So, the military is looking into banning one outright, and surprisingly enough there has been some promising news with the other regarding PTSD.

First...of course it's tobacco. The military used to include cigarettes in their rations, and throughout wartime they've been used as a form of currency or barter. But the US Navy has decided the health risks are too great, and they moved to stop selling these items on land bases and on board ships. Naturally, Congress had other ideas.


House lawmakers moved Wednesday to protect tobacco sales on military bases and ships, prohibiting Navy plans to drop the problematic products in the name of force health.

As part of its annual defense authorization bill mark up on Wednesday, the House Armed Services Committee added language forbidding defense officials from enacting “any new policy that would limit, restrict, or ban the sale of any legal consumer product category” on military installations.

Amendment sponsor Rep. Duncan Hunter, R-Calif., said the measure was in direct response to reports that the Navy is working to eliminate tobacco sales at exchanges and on ships. Commissaries on Navy bases currently do not sell tobacco products.

The move would be the most dramatic so far among military officials trying to keep servicemembers from picking up or continuing the habit. In 2012, Navy Secretary Ray Mabus labeled tobacco as “the most avoidable public health hazard in the Navy and Marine Corps.”

The push had been a priority for Mabus, who said it would promote health — and ultimately readiness.

“We demand that sailors and Marines be incredibly fit, and we know that tobacco hurts that fitness,” Mabus said in a March 27 interview with Navy Times. “We know that the cost for health care far exceeds any profit that we could possibly make selling that. We know that it brings bad health-care results and fitness results.”

But Hunter and members of the House panel argued that the anti-smoking efforts amount to unneeded hand-holding of troops who are responsible adults and can make their own life choices.

“Just because you joined the service doesn’t mean you can’t live comfortably,” said Hunter, a Marine Corps veteran. “If your goal is to make the military healthy, let’s outlaw war. That’s as unhealthy as you can get.”


Then there's MDMA, or "Molly".


A small but important study that has shown remarkable results using a combination of the drug MDMA - known on the street as ecstasy or "Molly" - and conventional therapy to treat post-traumatic stress disorder could be of significant value to thousands of veterans in Texas.

The South Carolina study, performed by Dr. Michael Mithoefer and his wife, Ann, under the auspices of the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies, or MAPS, involves the short-term use, under close psychiatric care, of the drug 3,4-methylenedioxy-N-methylamphetamine, known medically as MDMA.

If approved for psychiatric use, the treatment could offer relief for the thousands of PTSD sufferers in Houston and San Antonio, which have among the largest concentrations of veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars in the country. Of the 130,000 veterans registered in the Houston area, 9,695 have been treated for PTSD, according to the Department of Veterans Affairs.

The study began in 2001 and is currently in its second phase. If a third phase is approved, the therapy almost certainly would be available in Texas in a few years.

"For quite some time we've known the potential of MDMA to help with psychological problems," said Jane C. Maxwell, a senior research scientist in the school of social work at the University of Texas at Austin who studies MDMA, "We've begun to understand that some banned drugs may have special potential. I welcome the fact that we are able to go back and look at these drugs. This is a small study, but it has significant potential."

Most of the study's subjects were victims of child sexual abuse and rape who hadn't found relief through other therapies. They were given eight to 10 sessions of psychiatric counseling, and in two of the sessions were given a dose of MDMA. They were then allowed, of their own volition, to bring up the memories that had tormented them.

In 83 percent of the 21 cases, according to Mithoefer, the subjects were found to be symptom-free for up to four years later.

"It's tricky talking about a cure, but it is a sustained remission," said Mithoefer.



I'll finish up this morning with a story from deep inside the Air Force. With everything going on in combat, on the budget front, and everything else that the military has to deal with, the Air Force Chief of Staff has identified the biggest problem facing the service today. "[It's] the perception that somehow there is religious persecution inside the United States Air Force".


WASHINGTON — The Air Force’s top general appeared to be losing his cool. But it wasn’t over a controversial plan to scrap an aircraft prized for protecting ground troops or billions of dollars in cuts that are straining a service striving to recover from the grind of 12 years of war.

“The single biggest frustration I’ve had in this job is the perception that somehow there is religious persecution inside the United States Air Force,” Gen. Mark Welsh III told a House Armed Services Committee hearing earlier this spring. “It’s not true.”

Welsh’s irritation underscored the pressure the Air Force is under from Republicans in Congress, evangelical Christians and conservative advocacy groups to end what they allege is the service’s suppression of religious freedom. Their charge isn’t new, but the target is: a regulation designed to prevent religious bias by barring commanders and other leaders from “the actual or apparent use of their positions to promote their religious convictions to their subordinates.”

The controversy represents the latest chapter in the Air Force’s yearslong struggle to balance the constitutional right of freedom of faith with the Constitution’s prohibition on the governmental promotion of religion.

“It’s when the commander becomes the preacher that we have a problem,” said a former senior defense official who dealt with the issue but requested anonymity in order to speak freely. “It’s commanders turning to subordinates and saying, ‘Here’s what makes my life worthwhile. It’s going to my church and subscribing to my views.’ ”

Opponents counter that the regulation is constitutionally questionable and contravenes provisions Congress inserted into the Pentagon’s last two budgets requiring the military to “accommodate individual expressions of belief” unless “it could have an adverse impact on military readiness, unit cohesion and good order and discipline.”

“The Air Force religious freedom regulations and practices are inconsistent with the Constitution and with current law,” 20 House of Representatives Republicans wrote in an April 15 letter to Air Force Secretary Deborah Lee James. The regulation “introduces a subjective and unworkable restriction on a leader’s ability to speak about their faith.”

The Air Force defends the regulation as a measure that “seems to make good sense.” Yet the pressure — legislation, congressional hearings, meetings, letters, media statements and online appeals — to revise or dump it is having an impact.

Late last month, James and Welsh convened a “Religious Freedom Focus Day” conference of senior chaplains and legal and manpower officials to discuss the policy. An Air Force spokeswoman, Rose Richeson, declined to make the results of the April 28 meeting public, saying it would be “too premature to provide an interview.”

But Tony Perkins, the president of the Family Research Council, a Christian conservative policy institute that leads a coalition of organizations that are fighting the regulation, said that based on what he’d heard from people at the meeting he expected the Air Force to “make a policy change shortly.”

The prospect alarms supporters of the policy, who say a pro-Christian bias in the Air Force remains overwhelming and that the regulation provides an avenue of relief to service members who object to being regaled with their superiors’ religious views or who worry that declining invitations to “voluntary” Bible classes might jeopardize their fitness reports and chances of promotion.


And having been proselytized myself recently, I'll have more to say on this subject come Saturday.
 

54 comments (Latest Comment: 05/27/2014 20:09:55 by Raine)
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Comment by wickedpam on 05/27/2014 12:55:53
Morning

Comment by wickedpam on 05/27/2014 13:15:46
Steph's talking about the Friday shooting - I really do call bullshit on this asshole. Look no guys seem to want to date me either but I"m not picking up a fucking gun to shoot people.

Why do we seem to think guns will solve our problems? Or violence in any way will be okay if were mad at the world about something?

I'm so tired of it.

Comment by Raine on 05/27/2014 13:33:12
good morning!

Comment by Raine on 05/27/2014 13:35:48
Quote by wickedpam:
Steph's talking about the Friday shooting - I really do call bullshit on this asshole. Look no guys seem to want to date me either but I"m not picking up a fucking gun to shoot people.

Why do we seem to think guns will solve our problems? Or violence in any way will be okay if were mad at the world about something?

I'm so tired of it.
There was something seriously wrong with this guy long before he became an emancipated adult. I would like to know if his parents got him the help he needed when his was in puberty. HE had a feeling of entitlement from a very early age, it would appear.

I read his manifesto this weekend and
I want to see how his story jives with those of his family and friends.

Comment by Raine on 05/27/2014 13:46:04
The anguish and anger in that fathers voice just makes me cry.

Comment by wickedpam on 05/27/2014 13:48:10
Quote by Raine:
The anguish and anger in that fathers voice just makes me cry.



Its just heartbreaking to hear.

Comment by wickedpam on 05/27/2014 13:49:24
Quote by Raine:
Quote by wickedpam:
Steph's talking about the Friday shooting - I really do call bullshit on this asshole. Look no guys seem to want to date me either but I"m not picking up a fucking gun to shoot people.

Why do we seem to think guns will solve our problems? Or violence in any way will be okay if were mad at the world about something?

I'm so tired of it.
There was something seriously wrong with this guy long before he became an emancipated adult. I would like to know if his parents got him the help he needed when his was in puberty. HE had a feeling of entitlement from a very early age, it would appear.

I read his manifesto this weekend and
I want to see how his story jives with those of his family and friends.


It would be interesting to hear if they did, but part of me just thinks he was a self-entitled douche bag.

Comment by Scoopster on 05/27/2014 14:05:20
Mornin' all..

How's everyone's weekend?

Comment by TriSec on 05/27/2014 14:13:22
Speaking of self entitled douche bags, I wish somebody would just kill Jared Remy in jail and spare us the trouble of another 'celebrity' trial...

Comment by Scoopster on 05/27/2014 14:15:29
Quote by TriSec:
Speaking of self entitled douche bags, I wish somebody would just kill Jared Remy in jail and spare us the trouble of another 'celebrity' trial...

I don't think a rope exists that's long enough to get around his neck.

Comment by Raine on 05/27/2014 14:21:21
Quote by wickedpam:
Quote by Raine:
Quote by wickedpam:
Steph's talking about the Friday shooting - I really do call bullshit on this asshole. Look no guys seem to want to date me either but I"m not picking up a fucking gun to shoot people.

Why do we seem to think guns will solve our problems? Or violence in any way will be okay if were mad at the world about something?

I'm so tired of it.
There was something seriously wrong with this guy long before he became an emancipated adult. I would like to know if his parents got him the help he needed when his was in puberty. HE had a feeling of entitlement from a very early age, it would appear.

I read his manifesto this weekend and
I want to see how his story jives with those of his family and friends.


It would be interesting to hear if they did, but part of me just thinks he was a self-entitled douche bag.
No question about that. None at all. I don't think that led to his mental instability.

Comment by wickedpam on 05/27/2014 14:24:39
Quote by Raine:
Quote by wickedpam:
Quote by Raine:
Quote by wickedpam:
Steph's talking about the Friday shooting - I really do call bullshit on this asshole. Look no guys seem to want to date me either but I"m not picking up a fucking gun to shoot people.

Why do we seem to think guns will solve our problems? Or violence in any way will be okay if were mad at the world about something?

I'm so tired of it.
There was something seriously wrong with this guy long before he became an emancipated adult. I would like to know if his parents got him the help he needed when his was in puberty. HE had a feeling of entitlement from a very early age, it would appear.

I read his manifesto this weekend and
I want to see how his story jives with those of his family and friends.


It would be interesting to hear if they did, but part of me just thinks he was a self-entitled douche bag.
No question about that. None at all. I don't think that led to his mental instability.


Oh, most likely not.


Comment by wickedpam on 05/27/2014 14:32:41
Oh, btw, I've gone out and helped the economy in a big way this weekend.

After 13/14 years - I've bought myself a new car.

Comment by Mondobubba on 05/27/2014 14:41:50
Quote by wickedpam:
Oh, btw, I've gone out and helped the economy in a big way this weekend.

After 13/14 years - I've bought myself a new car.



Oh congrats! Whajaget?

Comment by wickedpam on 05/27/2014 14:44:04
Quote by Mondobubba:
Quote by wickedpam:
Oh, btw, I've gone out and helped the economy in a big way this weekend.

After 13/14 years - I've bought myself a new car.



Oh congrats! Whajaget?



2014 Hyundai Tuscon GLS - splurged for the bells and whistles too

Comment by Raine on 05/27/2014 14:46:57
Quote by wickedpam:
Quote by Mondobubba:
Quote by wickedpam:
Oh, btw, I've gone out and helped the economy in a big way this weekend.

After 13/14 years - I've bought myself a new car.



Oh congrats! Whajaget?



2014 Hyundai Tuscon GLS - splurged for the bells and whistles too
Congratulations Mala! that's wonderful!


Comment by BobR on 05/27/2014 14:47:26
Quote by wickedpam:
Quote by Mondobubba:
Quote by wickedpam:
Oh, btw, I've gone out and helped the economy in a big way this weekend.

After 13/14 years - I've bought myself a new car.

Oh congrats! Whajaget?

2014 Hyundai Tuscon GLS - splurged for the bells and whistles too

Excellent - I know you'll be happy to not have to worry about car problems

Comment by wickedpam on 05/27/2014 14:50:10
Quote by BobR:
Quote by wickedpam:
Quote by Mondobubba:
Quote by wickedpam:
Oh, btw, I've gone out and helped the economy in a big way this weekend.

After 13/14 years - I've bought myself a new car.

Oh congrats! Whajaget?

2014 Hyundai Tuscon GLS - splurged for the bells and whistles too

Excellent - I know you'll be happy to not have to worry about car problems


Very much so! My car's got 204,000+ miles on it - she's been a great car. Could not have asked more from her, but this past year I spent more in repairs and car rentals then she's worth.


Comment by Mondobubba on 05/27/2014 14:50:44
http://www.autorightwheel.com/images/hyundai-tucson-gls_brown_0.jpg


Fancy, Mala! Fancy!

Comment by wickedpam on 05/27/2014 14:51:16
Quote by Raine:
Quote by wickedpam:
Quote by Mondobubba:
Quote by wickedpam:
Oh, btw, I've gone out and helped the economy in a big way this weekend.

After 13/14 years - I've bought myself a new car.



Oh congrats! Whajaget?



2014 Hyundai Tuscon GLS - splurged for the bells and whistles too
Congratulations Mala! that's wonderful!



Thanks! You guys get to see her at the end of the month too

Still completely recommend the Hyundai products.

Comment by wickedpam on 05/27/2014 14:52:54
Quote by Mondobubba:
http://www.autorightwheel.com/images/hyundai-tucson-gls_brown_0.jpg


Fancy, Mala! Fancy!



IKR! Got the happy blue one.

http://pictures.dealer.com/f/fbmchyundaisuzukilang/1896/688e93d2c455e51ab5156704b27b5210x.jpg


Comment by wickedpam on 05/27/2014 14:53:36
The White one was nice to - just kinda had my heart set on blue this time.

Comment by Raine on 05/27/2014 14:55:06
Quote by wickedpam:
The White one was nice to - just kinda had my heart set on blue this time.
I knew you get the blue one!


Comment by wickedpam on 05/27/2014 15:00:30
Quote by Raine:
Quote by wickedpam:
The White one was nice to - just kinda had my heart set on blue this time.
I knew you get the blue one!





Comment by wickedpam on 05/27/2014 15:12:19
This guy is reading.

Comment by wickedpam on 05/27/2014 15:13:16
So its Hollywood's fault?

Ijit

Comment by Raine on 05/27/2014 15:16:47
Quote by wickedpam:
This guy is reading.

I thought so as well.

Selfish pricks.

Comment by wickedpam on 05/27/2014 15:18:06
Quote by Raine:
Quote by wickedpam:
This guy is reading.

I thought so as well.

Selfish pricks.



They kept messing him up and he had to start from the beginning each time. Probably an NRA paid caller.

Comment by BobR on 05/27/2014 15:35:13
Quote by wickedpam:
Quote by Raine:
Quote by wickedpam:
This guy is reading.

I thought so as well.

Selfish pricks.

They kept messing him up and he had to start from the beginning each time. Probably an NRA paid caller.

Did he mispronounce any of the words he was reading?

Comment by wickedpam on 05/27/2014 15:36:45
Quote by BobR:
Quote by wickedpam:
Quote by Raine:
Quote by wickedpam:
This guy is reading.

I thought so as well.

Selfish pricks.

They kept messing him up and he had to start from the beginning each time. Probably an NRA paid caller.

Did he mispronounce any of the words he was reading?


they seemed to be all small words until he got to the point of we all need be more "introspective"

Comment by Raine on 05/27/2014 15:57:49
That gun store is right here in Virgina.

Comment by wickedpam on 05/27/2014 15:59:52
Quote by Raine:
That gun store is right here in Virgina.



Lots of guns travel from Virginia it seems. Which gun are we talking about?

Comment by Raine on 05/27/2014 16:05:57
Quote by TriSec:
Speaking of self entitled douche bags, I wish somebody would just kill Jared Remy in jail and spare us the trouble of another 'celebrity' trial...
HE just plead guilty. No trial.


Comment by Raine on 05/27/2014 16:06:17
Quote by wickedpam:
Quote by Raine:
That gun store is right here in Virgina.



Lots of guns travel from Virginia it seems. Which gun are we talking about?

Hold on. let me find the story.

Comment by Raine on 05/27/2014 16:10:48
Quote by Raine:
Quote by wickedpam:
Quote by Raine:
That gun store is right here in Virgina.



Lots of guns travel from Virginia it seems. Which gun are we talking about?

Hold on. let me find the story.

My bad, it was Maryland

Comment by wickedpam on 05/27/2014 16:14:39
Quote by Raine:
Quote by Raine:
Quote by wickedpam:
Quote by Raine:
That gun store is right here in Virgina.



Lots of guns travel from Virginia it seems. Which gun are we talking about?

Hold on. let me find the story.

My bad, it was Maryland



oh yeah, I'd heard about that. Its sad that guy was trying to do the right thing and have it as an option for his shop. Seems to be the NRA freaks are interfering with the free market.

Comment by Mondobubba on 05/27/2014 16:24:28
Quote by Raine:
Quote by wickedpam:
The White one was nice to - just kinda had my heart set on blue this time.
I knew you get the blue one!



Second that!

Comment by wickedpam on 05/27/2014 16:26:02
Quote by Mondobubba:
Quote by Raine:
Quote by wickedpam:
The White one was nice to - just kinda had my heart set on blue this time.
I knew you get the blue one!



Second that!





Comment by wickedpam on 05/27/2014 17:13:01
wait this the guy on with Thom just call the Rogers family pornographers?

Comment by wickedpam on 05/27/2014 17:14:10
Yeah an MP you asshole - MP as in Military Police.

Comment by wickedpam on 05/27/2014 17:17:36
And this is one of the reasons I stopped listening to Thom - the guests that consistently piss me off

Comment by Scoopster on 05/27/2014 17:18:12
SCOTUS rules that Florida's policy of executing the intellectually disabled must stop.

I could make the obvious joke here about half of Florida having been eligible for execution... ohwai Imma bad boi!

Comment by Raine on 05/27/2014 17:34:40
Quote by wickedpam:
wait this the guy on with Thom just call the Rogers family pornographers?
oh dear. I was not listening.

Comment by wickedpam on 05/27/2014 17:45:36
Quote by Raine:
Quote by wickedpam:
wait this the guy on with Thom just call the Rogers family pornographers?
oh dear. I was not listening.



good thing - you'd be just as PO'd. It was some gun rights guy.

Comment by wickedpam on 05/27/2014 17:57:00
"I don't know karate but I know crazy." This should be a t-shirt

Comment by Raine on 05/27/2014 17:58:41
Quote by wickedpam:
"I don't know karate but I know crazy." This should be a t-shirt
That's the same Toni that calls in the SMS show! I love her!


Comment by wickedpam on 05/27/2014 18:09:13
Quote by Raine:
Quote by wickedpam:
"I don't know karate but I know crazy." This should be a t-shirt
That's the same Toni that calls in the SMS show! I love her!



was it! She's so awesome XD

Comment by Raine on 05/27/2014 18:14:40
Quote by wickedpam:
Quote by Raine:
Quote by wickedpam:
"I don't know karate but I know crazy." This should be a t-shirt
That's the same Toni that calls in the SMS show! I love her!



was it! She's so awesome XD
Yes, she brought up white privilege this morning on why the cops didn't take rodgers in when they visited. She is correct, if he were black, I think he would have been further questioned.

Comment by wickedpam on 05/27/2014 18:37:17
Quote by Raine:
Quote by wickedpam:
Quote by Raine:
Quote by wickedpam:
"I don't know karate but I know crazy." This should be a t-shirt
That's the same Toni that calls in the SMS show! I love her!



was it! She's so awesome XD
Yes, she brought up white privilege this morning on why the cops didn't take rodgers in when they visited. She is correct, if he were black, I think he would have been further questioned.



agreed, she is correct.