U.S. Reclassifies Many Documents in Secret Review

In a seven-year-old secret program at the National Archives, intelligence agencies have been removing from public access thousands of historical documents that were available for years, including some already published by the State Department and others photocopied years ago by private historians.

The restoration of classified status to more than 55,000 previously declassified pages began in 1999, when the Central Intelligence Agency and five other agencies objected to what they saw as a hasty release of sensitive information after a 1995 declassification order signed by President Bill Clinton. It accelerated after the Bush administration took office and especially after the 2001 terrorist attacks, according to archives records.

But because the reclassification program is itself shrouded in secrecy — governed by a still-classified memorandum that prohibits the National Archives even from saying which agencies are involved — it continued virtually without outside notice until December. That was when an intelligence historian, Matthew M. Aid, noticed that dozens of documents he had copied years ago had been withdrawn from the archives’ open shelves.

NYTimes

U.S. Supreme Court Says Church Can Use Hallucinogen

Feb. 21 (Bloomberg)—The U.S. Supreme Court, saying law enforcement goals in some cases must yield to religious rights, ruled that the Bush administration can’t block a New Mexico church from using a hallucinogenic tea.

In a unanimous opinion written by Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr., the court said the 1993 Religious Freedom Restoration Act protects the church, a 130-member branch of a Brazilian denomination. The justices upheld a preliminary injunction barring federal prosecution of church leaders.

Roberts, ruling in his first religious-freedom case, rejected the Bush administration’s contention that only a categorical ban on the substance would adequately prevent abuse and diversion to non-religious use.

``The government’s argument echoes the classic rejoinder of bureaucrats throughout history: If I make an exception for you, I’ll have to make one for everybody, so no exceptions,’’ Roberts wrote. He said Congress instead required ``striking sensible balances between religious liberty and competing prior governmental interests.’’

Bloomberg

Japan Ramps Up Whale Hunting Dispite International Protest

Meat from whales caught under Japan’s “research” programme is so abundant that it is being sold as pet food, according to a UK conservation group.

In the current hunting season, it launched a programme called JARPA-2 which doubles its annual minke whale catch from Antarctic waters.

JARPA-2 will remove 935 minkes and 10 fin whales each year; while its other research programme JARPN takes 100 sei whales, 100 minkes, 50 Bryde’s whales and five sperm whales annually from the north Pacific.

Last year, it initiated a scheme to distribute whale meat to schools, and a fast-food chain began selling whale burgers.

But the latest news suggests demand from Japan’s human population is running some way behind the recently expanded supply.

A company is selling meat on the web as “healthy and safe natural” dog food.

“A quiet whale meat boom is starting,” says the website hakudai.com.

“The number of pet-owners who care about their animals’ health are growing, recognising the nutritious value of whale meat,” it adds.

BBC

Mice Lacking Social Memory Molecule Take Bullying In Stride

The social avoidance that normally develops when a mouse repeatedly experiences defeat by a dominant animal disappears when it lacks a gene for a memory molecule in a brain circuit for social learning, scientists funded by the National Institutes of Health’s (NIH) National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) have discovered. Mice engineered to lack this memory molecule continued to welcome strangers in spite of repeated social defeat. Their unaltered peers subjected to the same hard knocks became confirmed loners—unless the researchers treated them with antidepressants.

science daily

LSD on the BBC

BBC Radio 4 has a 20 minute program on the use of LSD in psychological treatment:

In the 50’s LSD was widely used to treat psychiatric illness but in the 70’s it was banned for clinical use and became a class A drug in the UK . Now some psychiatrists are arguing for it to be reintroduced in psychiatric treatment. You and Yours investigates.

In other LSD news, Erowid has posted a lot of media from the 2006 LSD Symposium.


The LSD Symposium “Problem Child and Wonder Drug”, held in Basel Switzerland January 13th-15th, 2006 was an enormous success. It was held on the occasion of the 100th birthday of Albert Hofmann, the man who first synthesized and ingested LSD. There were over 2,000 total attendees, dozens of speakers (including Albert Hofmann) and a strong showing from the world press.

Erowid participated in the conference as a patron and media partner. Earth and Fire gave a talk on Saturday titled “Current Views of Acid: What do LSD Users Say?” in which they presented the results of a series of surveys they conducted on the Erowid.org website asking questions about people’s use and views of LSD.

We are hoping to provide a space for people to share their experiences from the symposium with those who were unable to attend. If you attended the conference and have photos, recordings, comments, or conference reviews you’d like to share, please consider submitting them here. We will be putting together a public archive of the event from these submissions.

Scientists Evolve a Complex Genetic Trait in The Laboratory

Scientists have evolved a complex trait in the laboratory — using the pressure of selection to induce tobacco hornworms to evolve the dual trait of turning black or green depending on the temperature during their development. The biologists have also demonstrated the basic hormonal mechanism underlying the evolution of such dual traits.

Their experiments, they said, offer important insight into how complex traits involving many genes can abruptly “blossom” in an organism’s evolution.

biosingularity

New Transistor Uses Single Electrons

Scientists have demonstrated the first reproducible, controllable silicon transistors that are turned on and off by the motion of individual electrons. The experimental devices, designed and fabricated at NTT Corp. of Japan and tested at NIST, may have applications in low-power nanoelectronics, particularly as next-generation integrated circuits for logic operations (as opposed to simpler memory tasks).

The transistors, described in the Jan. 30, 2006, issue of Applied Physics Letters,* are based on the principle that as device sizes shrink to the nanometer range, the amount of energy required to move a single electron increases significantly. This makes it possible to control individual electron motion and current flow by manipulating the voltage applied to barriers, or “gates,” in the electrical circuit. At negative voltage, the transistor is off; at higher voltage, the transistor is turned on and individual electrons file through the circuit, as opposed to thousands at a time in a conventional device.

ScienceBlog

India Launches Public Works Initiative for Rural Poor

Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh officially launched what he called a “landmark” anti-poverty plan that promises 100 days of work a year to every rural family in the country.

“The main focus of the scheme is the poorest of the poor,” Singh said, calling the initiative “revolutionary”.

“This will be a landmark in our history, removing poverty from the face of our nation,” he said on television as he launched the programme in remote Bandlapally in the southern Indian state of Andhra Pradesh on Thursday.

Under the plan, one member of every rural household will get 100 days of work a year in such sectors as water conservation, irrigation and road construction.

CRI

Congress Extends Patriot Act Again

Congress sent President Bush a second five-week extension of the Patriot Act as Senate negotiators worked to close a deal with the White House on renewing the antiterrorism law with some new civil liberties protections.

“We need the Patriot Act,” said Judiciary Committee Chairman Arlen Specter. “I’m prepared to work on it further to improve it.”

CNN

TMSUK Enryu Rescue Robot

robo

If you have ¥60 million to spare and an urge to smash unsuspecting vehicles, then you might want to take a look at the latest attention-grabbing creation from the robotics genii at TMSUK.

The 3.5-meter high robot Enryu may soon be seen across Japan.

Tmsuk originally developed Enryu—or “rescue dragon” in Japanese—as a robot to assist in earthquake rescue operations. The model has two hydraulically operated arms with a reach of 5 meters, each capable of lifting 500 kilograms. In the tests, Enryu successfully lifted a car from deep snow and simulated knocking ice and snow off rooftops.

Fitted with seven cameras and mounted on a tread similar to a military tank, Enryu can also be operated by remote control to reach hazardous areas.

The Kyushu-based company hopes to unveil a finished version by next year.

Enryu.jp
MSN

Test for Magic Mushrooms Glows in Dark

An Australian researcher has developed a new test for mushrooms that produces a glowing light if they contain the hallucinogenic ingredients that make them ‘magic’.

Several species of magic mushroom grow in Australia, mainly in New South Wales, Victoria and South Australia.

Nicole Anastos, who did the research for her PhD at Deakin University, describes her work in the latest issue of the Journal of Forensic Sciences.

She applied the method to three species of magic mushroom Psilocybe subaeruginosa, Hypholoma aurantiaca and Panaeolina foenisecii, provided by the Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne.

The technique uses chemiluminescence, a light reaction that occurs when two chemicals react, to detect psilocybin and its metabolite psilocin. These are the serotonin-like psychoactive ingredients in magic mushrooms.

glowshroom

ABC

DNA Study Supports Call to Reclassify Chimpanzees

They already use basic tools, have rudimentary language and star in TV commercials, but now scientists have proof that chimpanzees are more closely related to humans than other great apes.

Genetic tests comparing DNA from humans, chimps, gorillas and orang-utans reveal striking similarities in the way chimps and humans evolve that set them apart from the others.

The finding adds weight to a controversial proposal to scrap the long-used chimp genus “Pan” and reclassify the animals as members of the human family. The move would give chimps a new place in creation’s pecking order alongside humans, the only survivor of the genus Homo.

GuardianUK

Sex Before Public Speaking Calms Nerves

Nervous public speakers should first have penetrative sex to ease the stress, according to a UK study.

But masturbation is unlikely to have the same effect, the study published in the latest issue of the journal Biological Psychology suggests.

Professor Stuart Brody, a psychologist at the University of Paisley, compared the impact of different sexual activities on blood pressure when a person later undergoes a stressful experience.

Brody asked 24 women and 22 men to keep a diary of their sexual activities for two weeks.

The volunteers then underwent a stressful ordeal that involved making a speech in public and doing mental arithmetic out loud.

Volunteers who had had penetrative sex during the previous week or so had the least stress, and their blood pressure returned to normal fastest after their test.

Penetrative sex was far more effective in this regard than masturbation or oral sex.

ScienceDirect

Inventor Develops ‘Artificial Gills’

An Israeli inventor has developed an underwater breathing system that literally squeezes oxygen directly from seawater, doing away with the need for compressed air tanks.

Called “LikeAFish”, the battery-powered artificial gill system aims to extract the small amounts of dissolved air that already exists in water to supply breathable oxygen to scuba divers, submarines and underwater habitats.

The device is the brainchild of Alon Bodner.

It utilises a high-speed centrifuge to lower the pressure of seawater in a small sealed chamber.

This allows the dissolved air to escape back into a gaseous state – much like the way carbon dioxide is liberated from a soft drink when you reduce the pressure on it by popping the bottle cap.

The air thus liberated is then transferred to an airbag for the diver to use.

BBC

Sensors, Filters, and the Source of Reality

by ROBERT G. JAHN AND BRENDA J. DUNNE

Abstract
The failure of contemporary scientific theory to correlate and explicate anomalous consciousness-related physical phenomena may trace to inadequate comprehension of the process of information exchange between the mind and its ultimate source. Elevation of the subjective capacities of consciousness to complementary status with the more objective physical senses, along with recognition of the bi-directional capabilities of both categories, allows establishment of resonant channels of communication between the mind and its source environment that can exceed conventional expectations. In this manner, order can be introduced into randomnicity, and self-consistent realities can be extracted from transcendent chaos. The key elements in tuning these channels to amplify such information creation are the physiological and psychological filters imposed upon them, some of which can be enhanced or altered by conscious or unconscious attention. Specifically, such attitudinal tactics as openness to alternative perspectives, utilization of transdisciplinary metaphors, self-sacrificial resonance, tolerance of uncertainty, and replacement of dualistic rigor by mental complementarity can enable experiential realities that are responsive to intention, desire, or need, to an extent consistent with prevailing empirical evidence.

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