Archive for July, 2005

Thursday July 21, 2005

Posted in News on 21 July 2005 by Johnny

Daylight saving time: You love it so much, so the government is giving you more — but less than was proposed. Here’s one of the most bizarre first sentences of a news story you might ever read …

“Lawmakers pared back a planned two-month extension of daylight-saving time Thursday after fielding complaints from industry representatives, education activists and Orthodox Jewish groups, agreeing to tack only four weeks onto the summer window of longer days.”

Now there’s a coalition. Why lengthen DST? Energy savings. More people are awake after sunset than before sunrise, so stretching days later into the night lowers electricity consumption.

Why did those three special interests complain? Airlines complained that the change would mess up international flight schedules, school administrators didn’t want kids walking to school in the dark, and sunrise prayers for some Jews would be too late and make them late for work.

Anyway, starting next year, spring forward on the third Sunday of March and fall back on the first Sunday in November.

Meanwhile … I’d like to see how many days it takes for someone to (rightly) challenge NYC’s plan to randomly search people on subways. My over/under is three. C’mon people, let’s not rush to pitch the Constitution out the window when we get scared, hm? Then again, it’s not like we need an excuse to trample on it …

Wednesday July 13, 2005

Posted in News on 13 July 2005 by Johnny

I’m not sure where to go with this one (except that everyone’s lost their fucking minds):

BOISE, Idaho — A 10-year-old boy who died after hanging himself from a tree is apparently the second Idaho youth killed while playing a choking game.

The Fremont County sheriff’s office said Dalton Eby apparently was playing a game known as the “pass-out game,” trying to cut off the oxygen supply to his brain to achieve a type of “high.”

The boy’s mother reported him missing last Thursday night when he failed to return home after visiting a friend. Search and rescue crews found his body Friday, hanging from a tree near his Island Park home, the sheriff’s office said in a statement.

“Dalton was found with the rope looped around his neck,” the sheriff’s office said. “There was no sign of a struggle, nor was there any physical evidence to indicate anyone else had been at the scene.”

The statement added, “During the course of the investigation it was learned that there is a game that is common knowledge to many of our youth. A game known as the ‘pass-out game,’ the ‘fainting game,’ the ‘tingling game,’ or the ‘something dreaming game’ — to name a few,” the release said.

Dalton’s parents had never heard of the game, and neither had the parents of his friends, the sheriff’s office said. That was also the case three months ago in Nampa, where 13-year-old Chelsea Dunn was found dead after apparently hanging herself in her closet.

A police investigation into her death was inconclusive, but Dunn’s family believes she died accidentally while playing the game, which was popular with a group of girls at her East Valley Middle School.

Six girls at the Nampa school were suspended for a day after school officials reviewed a security camera videotape that showed the seventh graders choking each other in a hallway.

Dalton’s father, Dave Eby, did not want to comment on Fremont County investigators’ theory that his son also died while participating in a voluntary asphyxiation game. After burying his son Monday, he told the Post Register newspaper he wanted to thank his neighbors for their “generosity and caring during this hard time.”

Young teens and children lack the judgment to understand that making themselves pass out can be fatal, said Connecticut-based child psychologist Dr. Lawrence Shapiro, the author of “The Secret Language of Children: How to Understand What Your Kids are Really Saying.”

Though the so-called game is new to many adults — including himself — Shapiro said it’s likely something that children have been doing for a long time.

“That’s scary. I can’t say that I have heard of this before, but it’s not that surprising because kids do all sorts of crazy things,” Shapiro said.

In addition to talking to kids about drugs and alcohol, parents should also discuss risky behavior like the pass-out game, Shapiro said.

“Younger kids don’t know that they can die from this, that it’s a very dangerous activity. Sometimes kids hear about it, that other kids are doing it, but they don’t hear the rest of the story, the risks,” Shapiro said. “It’s like diving into a pool in the shallow end — parents have to tell their kids not to do it.”

Nathan Hoiosen, a school resource officer with the Nampa Police Department, said youngsters think the choking game offers a “safe” buzz compared to drinking or doing drugs.

“It’s one of those undetectable things, no signs until it’s too late,” Hoiosen said.

Children have been playing hyperventilation or asphyxiation games for decades, he said, but using ropes or other ligatures seems to be a new trend.

“It’s scary, though,” he said. “You wish you could just take the kids and shake them and say, ‘What are you thinking?’”

Thursday July 7, 2005

Posted in Thought on 7 July 2005 by Johnny

Last February, I passed through all three of the Underground stations hit by this morning’s bombings in London. I’ve been reading and watching coverage constantly since I first heard what had happened. This hits home, of course, knowing that a jihadist with an earlier timetable could have blown me to smithereens. Those tubes are the lifeblood of the city — three million people pass through them each day. The inhumanity of this is unfathomable.

It is impossible to stop these things, though. It’s impossible to prevent a few terrorists from sneaking bombs onto those trains if they’re determined to do so. In that sense, the “war on terror” is a farce, just as past “wars” on poverty and drugs are impossible to conduct. (As an aside, keep in mind that the risk of dying in an al-Qaeda attack is infinitesimally small. If you’re afraid of riding a train now because of terrorism, keep in mind that the risk of the train breaking down and killing you is way higher. Just a thought.)

This realization is a double-edged sword for our current foreign policy. It means any thought that the war in Iraq is not a front in the struggle against al-Qaeda and cannot possibly make our nation any safer in the short run. However, if Bush’s vision of a free, democratic Middle East were actually to come to pass down the line (a 25:75 proposition in my mind), the desperation that brings about terrorism would evaporate. The neocons, however, have done a horrible job selling that idea. The president continues instead to stick with the “we’re fighting them over there so we don’t have to fight them over here” pseudo-logic. If they can kill people in Baghdad and London at once, they can kill them in Baghdad and Washington at once too.

Back to work, y’all.