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October 11, 2014

Mental Health Break

The Disneyfication of bear culture:





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Published on October 11, 2014 13:20

A Short Story For Saturday

Today’s selection, “A Tiny Feast” by Chris Adrian, comes from the still-ungated archives of The New Yorker. How the story begins:



It took them both a long time to understand that the boy was sick, though she would point out that she had been the first to notice that he was unhappy, and had sought to remedy his discontent with sweeter treats and more delightful distractions. She thought it was evidence that she loved him more—that she had noticed first that something was wrong—and she said as much to her husband, when they were still trying to outdo each other in love for the child.


Neither of them had much experience with illness. They had each taken many mortal lovers, but had cast them off before they could become old or infirm, and all their previous changelings had stayed healthy until they were returned, unaged and unstuck from their proper times, to the mortal world. “There was no way you could have known,” said Dr. Blork, the junior partner in the two-person team that oversaw the boy’s care, on their very first visit with him. “Parents always feel like they ought to have caught it earlier, but really it’s the same for everyone, and you couldn’t have done any better than you did.” He was trying to make them feel better, to assuage a perceived guilt, but at that point neither Titania nor her husband really knew what guilt was, never having felt it in all their long days.


Keep reading here. Check out The Great Night, the novel Adrian based on the above story, here. Catch up with previous SSFSs here.




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Published on October 11, 2014 12:28

Your Moment Of Squid

dish_squid


Elizabeth Preston shines a spotlight on the badass, gender-bending opalescent inshore squid:


Scientists have found that certain female squid can switch on and off a body pattern that makes them look male. They use a never-before-seen cell type to do it, and it may be all for the sake of keeping the actual testes owners far away. …. Daniel DeMartini, a graduate student at the University of California, Santa Barbara, “observed the female squid rapidly switching the stripe on and off,” says his advisor, Daniel Morse. He decided to gather a few hundred D. opalescens squid in laboratory tanks and watch them work. DeMartini found that females can turn on a bright white stripe on their mantles, highlighted by a line of iridescence on both sides. This happens to look pretty similar to a male squid’s testis, which—in his less colorful moments—is visible as a long white shape inside his transparent body.


She adds, “The authors speculate that female squid might use this stripe as a disguise when they want to avoid harassment by males”:


“In this species of squid, mating occurs in dense assemblages of animals, with the females subject to repeated bouts of mating by multiple males,” Morse says. By switching on her white stripe and mimicking a male, a lady squid might be able to fend off some of these mating attempts, protecting both herself and any fertilized eggs she’s carrying.


(Photo of a Doryteuthis opalescens paralarva via Wikipedia)




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Published on October 11, 2014 11:39

Going, Going, Gone

Ruth Graham explores the world of conservation science, where a precise tally on the number of extinct species is hotly debated:


Actual documented extinctions are vanishingly rare. “If you ask any member of the public to name 10 species that have gone extinct in the last century, most would really really struggle,” [conservation scientist Richard] Ladle said. “Then you’ve got the world’s most famous conservationists telling you that 27,000 are going extinct every year. The two don’t tally up.” The International Union for Conservation of Nature, which keeps the most definitive list of extinct and threatened species, has counted just over 800 total confirmed animal extinctions since the year 1600.


Graham continues:



The huge numbers of extinctions being thrown around may be overstated, or they may be understated. They may also, some say, be the wrong thing entirely to focus on. “It bothers me, and you can quote me on this, that we are still talking about species-level extinction,” said Ross MacPhee, a paleontologist at the American Museum of Natural History who studies extinction. There are other vital questions: Is there a wild population diverse enough to be healthy? Does the animal exist only in zoos? Is a threatened species a linchpin in a large ecosystem? Is it particularly unusual genetically? As Ladle pointed out in a 2010 paper, “extinction” isn’t as binary as it seems: There’s local extinction, extinction in the wild, extinction of subspecies, theoretical extinction of unknown species, and so on—each of which can grab headlines, depending on the fame of the animal.





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Published on October 11, 2014 04:36

October 10, 2014

The Cultural Side Effects Of Prozac

Retro Report dusts off coverage of the antidepressant:



John M. Grohol celebrates the marketing legacy of the drug, despite it not being “as great an antidepressant as its makers claimed”:


Prozac showed how a mainstream marketing effort targeted toward a specific mental illness could change the entire conversation. Before its introduction, depression was stigmatized, people were embarrassed to admit they had it, and they often hid it from others. It was because of Prozac’s marketing campaign that, for the first time in American society, we could have a serious and real discussion about mental disorders like depression.


Not only was it suddenly O.K. to be taking an antidepressant, for many it became a badge of honor. Its marketing let everyone know, “hey, depression isn’t a personal failing or due to poor morals or bad parenting. It’s a biochemical thing that a medication can help with.”


Lisa Schwartz and Steve Woloshin differ:


Prozac has clearly been effective in its marketing campaign but may have faltered, remarkably, in treating depression – especially mild depression, that muddy realm between normal sad emotions and disease. Here, Prozac-type drugs are barely better than placebos and no better than talk therapy, which has a longer-lasting effect, no sexual side effects or withdrawal symptoms.


It’s also unclear if these drugs reduce suicide, the worst outcome of depression. The F.D.A. actually requires a black box warning because of increased suicidal thoughts in young adults.


The pharmaceutical treatment of severe depression has undoubtedly helped many people. But many more have been overtreated for symptoms that don’t require drugs.


Jerry Avorn looks at the broader impact:


Prozac helped usher in the era of the blockbuster drug – a product that brings in over $1 billion of annual sales. With broadening expectations of what medications can do to increase life satisfaction, and the allowance of direct-to-consumer advertising in the mid-1990s, sales of these drugs went into orbit. Psychotherapy withered on the reimbursement vine (“a pill is worth a thousand words” and is much cheaper), and weltschmerz became reason for patients and doctors alike to seek solace from the pharmaceutical industry.




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Published on October 10, 2014 17:31

The Straights Leaving The Closet

Christine Grimaldi visited a support group for the straight spouses of formerly closeted gays and lesbians:


Straight spouses are largely absent from the national conversation about gay marriage and the modern family. Certainly, it’s easier to talk about two moms or two dads who have been together from the start than to talk about why Mom left Dad for another woman, or why Dad left Mom for another man. (Forget about it if Mom or Dad is elsewhere on the sexuality and/or gender spectrum.) But we need to include straight spouses in that conversation, because as tolerance for LGBTQ people spreads throughout the culture, more closeted spouses will undoubtedly come out. While for them, the light beyond those doors can be liberating, for the straight partners stumbling out behind them, it can be quite harsh.


The Straight Spouse Network is attempting to kick-start the discussion by creating a safe place for straight spouses to share their stories.


Grimaldi also talks with psychotherapist Kimberly Brooks Mazella, who treats straight spouses:


​“Straight spouses are often struggling with competing emotional experiences—their own feelings of grief and loss, anger at the gay spouse’s betrayal, and compassion for their partner’s own painful journey,” she says. Empathy for gay spouses is not unusual among the straight spouse community. Degrees vary based on personal experience, as in any divorce. But ask a straight spouse, any straight spouse, what awaits him or her on the other side of the closet door. The most common answer is a deep sense of isolation.


“Most [straight] spouses endure their pain in silence on their side of the closet, while their gay, lesbian and bisexual partners find support from their respective communities,” SSN founder Amity Pierce Buxton wrote in her 1991 book The Other Side of the Closet: The Coming-Out Crisis for Straight Spouses and Families. From her years treating straight spouses, Mazella adds a few more factors to the mix. The straight spouse can be blamed as complicit in the closet. A gay spouse’s infidelity can be viewed as an expression of his or her true self instead of an act of unfaithfulness. “How did you not know?” is a common question. There are those who are dismissive of the entire marriage, as Mazella encountered. “People said to me, ‘Oh, it wasn’t really a marriage anyway,’ ” she says.




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Published on October 10, 2014 16:57

Go To Congress, Mr. President, Ctd

Screen Shot 2014-10-10 at 11.39.43 AM


Aaron Blake passes along the results of a new CBS News poll showing that 62 percent of Americans think the ongoing campaign against ISIS in Syria requires congressional authorization. But that doesn’t mean it will happen:


Similarly, 80 percent think member of Congress should desert the campaign trail, come back to Washington, and debate the use of force against the Islamic State. Those are pretty strong numbers. But it’s highly unlikely they’ll force any kind of action.



That’s because, however many Americans feel Congress should approve military action, very few of them are speaking out against the decision to go into Iraq and Syria without congressional approval. To be sure, Americans would like for their duly elected representatives to sign off, but they’re not exactly incensed that Congress hasn’t been asked. And people largely approve of what they’ve seen so far, as far as the airstrikes go.


The latest Reason-Rupe poll turns up a similar result, with 78 percent saying Congress should return to Washington to vote on this war:


Fully 63 percent of Americans say members of Congress haven’t voted on the authorization of military force because they don’t want to put their vote on the official record. Only 15 percent of Americans think Congress hasn’t voted because it believes President Obama does not need their authorization for military action, and 8 percent felt Congress simply hasn’t had enough time yet to hold the vote. This is a rare non-partisan issue in which overwhelming majorities of Democrats (77%), Independents (78%), and Republicans (83%) feel Congress should weigh in on this important decision.


Noting that Obama’s 60 days are up, Jack Goldsmith infers that the White House’s shifting legal basis for the operation is meant to avoid a Congressional vote:


Section 5(b) of the [War Powers Resolution (WPR)] requires the President to “terminate any use of United States Armed Forces” 60 days after he introduces such forces into “hostilities” unless Congress “has enacted a specific authorization for such use of United States Armed Forces.” Senator Cruz is thus right that the WPR requires the President to seek new congressional authorization from Congress unless the 2001 and 2002 [Authorizations For Use of Military Force (AUMFs)] are specific authorization” for the airstrikes against the Islamic State. Recall that the President originally (in August and September) relied on Article II alone as a basis for the strikes against IS. He then switched about a month ago to say that the strikes are also based on the 2001 and 2002 AUMFs. The switch in legal rationales has enormous significance for – and in my judgment was likely motivated by – compliance with the WPR. For if the AUMFs are a proper basis for the strikes against the Islamic State, then there is no issue under the WPR because Congress has authorized the conflict. Only if the President is wrong about the applicability of the AUMFs to the Islamic State is there a problem under the WPR.




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Published on October 10, 2014 16:34

The Greatest Show In Your Butt

Martha C. Nussbaum advocates forgoing anesthesia for colonoscopies, arguing that the painless procedure is worth being awake for:



Yesterday I saw my appendix.





It was pink and tiny, quite hard to see, but how interesting to be introduced to it for the first time. In for a routine colonoscopy (my fourth, on account of a family history), I refused sedation as I always do, and I had the enormous thrill of witnessing parts of myself that I carry around with me every day, but never really know or acknowledge. I chatted with my doctor about many things, including the various justices of the Supreme Court, the details of my procedure, and, not least, the whole question of sedation and anesthesia. He told me that 99 percent of his patients have either sedation or, more often now, general anesthesia, since that is increasingly urged by the hospitals. (In Europe, he said, about 40 percent refuse sedation.) He listed the costs of this trend: financial costs that are by now notorious, lost workdays for both patient and whoever has to drive the patient (whereas a non-sedated patient needs no caretaker and can go right back to work), lost time for nurses and other hospital staff, and, of course, the risks of sedation and the even greater risks of general anesthesia.


And, I’d add, the loss of the wonder of self-discovery. You are only this one body, it’s all you are and ever will be; it won’t be there forever; and why not become familiar with it, when science gives the chance? I began refusing sedation out of a work ethic; I continued through fascination.





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Published on October 10, 2014 16:07

Our Outstanding Student Loans

StudLoans2


J.D. Tuccille flags a report from the Dallas Fed, showing that America’s student loan delinquency rates are still high, even as we get other forms of household debt under control:


Unshockingly, while defaults decline for credit card debt, mortgages and auto loans, they’re on the rise for student loans. “At 10.9 percent, the second quarter 2014 delinquency rate on student loans was more than three times that of mortgages and auto loans, and more than 3 percentage points higher than the rate of serious delinquencies on credit cards.” Apparently, young grads with overpriced sheepskins and no decent jobs in the offing have trouble meeting the tab.


And they’re certainly not about to take on mortgages. John Aravosis points to another new study estimating the impact of student debt on the housing market:



8% fewer homes will transact than normal in 2014, purely due to student debt. … Our conclusion is that 414,000 transactions will be lost in 2014 due to student debt. At a typical price of $200,000, that is $83 billion per year in lost volume.


Meanwhile, an analysis from Pew shows that more students of every class background are graduating college in debt today than 20 years ago:


In the early ’90s, only among graduates from low-income families did a majority of graduates finish college with student debt. Now, solid majorities of graduates from middle-income families (both lower-middle and upper-middle) finish with debt, and half of students from the most affluent quartile of families do the same. … Among recent college graduates who borrowed, the typical amount of cumulative student debt for their undergraduate education increased from $12,434 for the class of 1992-93 to $26,885 for the class of 2011-12 (figures adjusted for inflation). The increase in the median amount of debt by newly minted borrowers between the class of 1992-93 and the 2011-12 varied somewhat by the graduates’ economic circumstances. But regardless of family income, the typical amount owed at graduation increased about twofold over this time period.




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Published on October 10, 2014 15:55

Where’s Kim Jong Un?

Isaac Stone Fish analyzes the significance of the North Korean leader’s month-plus-long disappearance:


Setting aside for now the impossible question of where Kim has gone — Pyongyang’s state-run media say he is sick, though he could also be under house arrest, dead, on vacation, or simply bored of appearing in public — North Korea is arguably much more stable with Kim at the helm. (First, the eternal caveat when writing about North Korea: The country is more opaque than an eye afflicted with cataracts, so much of what I’m writing is speculation.)


The most dangerous thing about North Korea is its unpredictability. Because we know so little about what Pyongyang wants, or why it does what it does, it’s difficult to prepare for contingencies.




… Much of the burden of an imploding North Korea would fall on the backs of North Koreans, but the country’s collapse could also destabilize northeast China by sending hundreds of thousands of refugees across North Korea’s northern border — and allow rogue elements in North Korea to sell nuclear material to enemies of the United States.


William Pesek elaborates on the China angle:



[W]hat’s most intriguing about North Korea these days are signs China is fed up with Kim’s antics and may be tightening the financial screws. Concrete evidence is hard marshal, of course; Beijing keeps a tight lid on its machinations at home, never mind its relationship with Pyongyang. But whereas former Chinese President Hu Jintao maintained a working relationship with his North Korean counterpart Kim Jong Il, who died in December 2011, China’s current leader Xi Jinping has been decidedly cool toward Kim the younger.



And Joshua Keating focuses on the timing:


Kim’s absence also comes at a critical moment. North Korea sent a surprising and unprecedented high-profile delegation, including Kim’s two closest aides, to Seoul last weekend, and the two sides have agreed to resume reconciliation talks. This is a major shift after months of aggressive rhetoric from the North Korean side. This resumption of talks could be a sign that something serious has changed behind the scenes in Pyongyang. Or, less excitingly, as unnamed U.S. officials suggest to Reuters, it could simply be “diplomatic tactics by Pyongyang, aimed at dividing and weakening international pressure over its nuclear weapons program and human rights record as well as propaganda for domestic consumption.”




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Published on October 10, 2014 15:33

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