Invisible Child Trust

I posted recently about Andrea Elliot’s New York Times feature on Dasani, one of thousands of homeless children existing in New York City. Like many who read the story, I was angered and saddened and left feeling hopeless. I wondered how I could help.

Luckily, my friend Roxane knew a way:

A trust is being set up on behalf of the children in the “Invisible Child” series of articles. Monetary donations can be made out to The “Invisible Child” Family Trust and be sent to:

Invisible Child Trust
c/o The Legal Aid Society
199 Water Street
New York, NY 10038

The linked-to site also has a link to where you can donate online, although that will involve a 5% processing fee.

Want to help keep Christ in Christmas? Act like him—and help someone in need.

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Radiolab Live: Apocalyptical

Dinosaurs, death, and destruction—a thought-provoking and laughter-inducing dance on the grave of our inevitable demise.

I’m a huge Radiolab fan and the only reason I didn’t go to see this was because I couldn’t make the date in my area. However, and in a Radiolab-appropriate vein, I think, in the age of easily accessible HD streaming video and throw-it-on-the-big-screen options like AirPlay, I’m not really sure that that even matters. Set aside two hours and watch this.

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A Warrant For Planting Food

Ron Finley:

L.A. leads the United States in vacant lots that the city actually owns. They own 26 square miles of vacant lots. That's 20 Central Parks. That's enough space to plant 725 million tomato plants. Why in the hell would they not okay this? Growing one plant will give you 1,000, 10,000 seeds. When one dollar's worth of green beans will give you 75 dollars' worth of produce. It's my gospel, when I'm telling people, grow your own food. Growing your own food is like printing your own money.

If The American Dream still exists—this is what it looks like.

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‘That was not an acceptable way to evaluate and conclude that the patient has A.D.H.D.’

Alan Schwarz, writing for The New York Times:

Few dispute that classic A.D.H.D., historically estimated to affect 5 percent of children, is a legitimate disability that impedes success at school, work and personal life. Medication often assuages the severe impulsiveness and inability to concentrate, allowing a person’s underlying drive and intelligence to emerge.

But even some of the field’s longtime advocates say the zeal to find and treat every A.D.H.D. child has led to too many people with scant symptoms receiving the diagnosis and medication. The disorder is now the second most frequent long-term diagnosis made in children, narrowly trailing asthma, according to a New York Times analysis of C.D.C. data.

Behind that growth has been drug company marketing that has stretched the image of classic A.D.H.D. to include relatively normal behavior like carelessness and impatience, and has often overstated the pills’ benefits. Advertising on television and in popular magazines like People and Good Housekeeping has cast common childhood forgetfulness and poor grades as grounds for medication that, among other benefits, can result in “schoolwork that matches his intelligence” and ease family tension.

A 2002 ad for Adderall showed a mother playing with her son and saying, “Thanks for taking out the garbage.”

The Food and Drug Administration has cited every major A.D.H.D. drug — stimulants like Adderall, Concerta, Focalin and Vyvanse, and nonstimulants like Intuniv and Strattera — for false and misleading advertising since 2000, some multiple times.

The game is rigged, folks. There's a tiny group of people making the money, who have all of the influence, and then there's everyone else. And if you have to stop and think about which group you're in, you're everyone else.

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Apocalypse, New Jersey

Matt Taibbi, writing for Rolling Stone:

But in Camden, chaos is already here. In September, its last supermarket closed, and the city has been declared a "food desert" by the USDA. The place is literally dying, its population having plummeted from above 120,000 in the Fifties to less than 80,000 today. Thirty percent of the remaining population is under 18, an astonishing number that's 10 to 15 percent higher than any other "very challenged" city, to use the police euphemism. Their home is a city with thousands of abandoned houses but no money to demolish them, leaving whole blocks full of Ninth Ward-style wreckage to gather waste and rats.

It's a major metropolitan area run by armed teenagers with no access to jobs or healthy food, and not long ago, while the rest of America was ranting about debt ceilings and Obamacares, Camden quietly got pushed off the map. That was three years ago, when new governor and presumptive future presidential candidate Chris Christie abruptly cut back on the state subsidies that kept Camden on life support. The move left the city almost completely ungoverned – a graphic preview of what might lie ahead for communities that don't generate enough of their own tax revenue to keep their lights on. Over three years, fires raged, violent crime spiked and the murder rate soared so high that on a per-capita basis, it "put us somewhere between Honduras and Somalia," says Police Chief J. Scott Thomson.

"They let us run amok," says a tat-covered ex-con and addict named Gigi. "It was like fires, and rain, and babies crying, and dogs barking. It was like Armageddon."

Most people are going to read this article and compare it to The Wire. But this isn’t a TV show; this is real life. What is the answer here?

And on a tangential note, as Chris Christie is embroiled in his first major scandal as a Likely Republican Presidential Nominee, does the fix for the issues in this piece—Big Brother-esque security details—seem feasible? Scalable? Right?

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‘Hi, Bennett! What did you break?’

Heidi Thaden-Pierce:

A bit of background for those not familiar with his story – you can read a tiny snippet here and see some photos of Ben just after he was born. He was a little bit premature… like 17 weeks too early.  (We make jokes about it which is probably inappropriate – but in these life or death situations sometimes laughter is the only thing helping you stay sane.) We decided he was just eager to join the party! He developed an eye condition because of his early entrance which has caused him to be visually impaired. Thankfully he can still see relatively well from one eye (enough that he can read print up close and uses a magnifier) but his vision will continue to deteriorate over time. We learned in November his eyesight has changed to the point that he’s considered legally blind. Not that it slows him down at all!

We were encouraged to give him lots of visual memories before he loses more eyesight, and he made up a wish list. We were amused he asked to go see the Apple Store – we told him we weren’t sure when we could make that happen but we would try someday. One morning we woke them up early to “run an errand” and this is what happened next.

I just—I can’t. My heart.

Also—as a father who spent a week in the NICU with his newborn, I’ve become well-accustomed to telling the story. And what always gets people is when I tell them how the experience made me realize how lucky my wife and I were to have the birth that we had. Because while we were in the NICU, we saw babies in far worse situations—situations similar to what Ben went through. It’s amazing—and oddly reassuring—to see the strength and family bond that came out of it for the Thaden-Pierce’s.

What I’m trying to say is, unless you’re in need of a good cry, do not watch the ‘His First Year’ video mentioned on this page.

/via MacStories

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An Inside View of the NSA

Loren Sands-Ramshaw:

I was a spy for the US government. Not the Bond/Alias type of agent, but the electronic type – a cyber spy. I helped build small pieces of the global systems that gather electronic intelligence. And I am one of the few people whose former employment at the NSA you can verify: I appeared in a recruitment video, which is displayed on their career website. (Pardon my halting speech – I was declassifying on the fly.) You can match my face to the photo on my Kickstarter page.

I was a civilian employee of the NSA for two years starting in mid-2010. I worked at the Agency's Fort Meade headquarters for the first year. It was a dramatic time in the intelligence world, encompassing Stuxnet (the first known example of cyberwarfare resulting in a physical effect, reportedly made by the NSA and Israel), the first major release of US documents on WikiLeaks, and the locating of bin Laden. The declassified version of my job title was “Global Network Vulnerability Analyst.” I was in the Computer Network Operations Development Program, and my office was S32X: Signals Intelligence Directorate (S) > Data Acquisition (S3) > Tailored Access Operations (S32) > Special Tactics and Techniques (S32X). Most of my time was spent writing Ruby code to help with the systems that gather and manage electronic intelligence.

This piece gets a bit wonky by the end, but for the most part, I think many who have weighed in on the NSA debate will find themselves surprised by how logical the points being made here are. I also think it raises a huge discussion point that has been absent from the general debate—Americans vastly underestimate just how dangerous and prevalent the threat of cyber terrorism/warfare is. Not will be—is.

/via Daring Fireball

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