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Columbus Day Before Parade
It was a beautiful day Today. The sun and temperature was perfect. I have some footage from the parade. Before the parade started I went wondering around Washington Square in front of the Church to see the Ferrari Display and the people hanging around it. The whole footage is divided in three parts.
1. This movie, before the Parade starts
2. During the Parade
3. After the Parade have a section with the Blue Angels It was a beautiful day Today. The sun and temperature was perfect. I have some footage from the parade. Before the parade started I we... more -
Angel Island in San Francisco it is on fire
I was just working on the Columbus Day Parade footage when walking to get some water from the frige I saw this small fire on Angel Island behind Alcatraz. Now it has spread very quickly and half of the Island it is on fire. I was just working on the Columbus Day Parade footage when walking to get some water from the frige I saw this small fire on Angel Isl... more
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John McCain: The Nuclear Option
Building 45 new nuclear plants in this country is insanity and will doom the waterways of this country and put our national security at risk. For a candidate who also talks about fighting the 'war on terror' as well, how could this thought even be entertained in the world we live in? Nuclear energy is not safe, it is not CO2 free, and I am truly getting tired of John McCain talking about what he really knows nothing about. He was on a nuclear submarine that didn't get blown up so that is how he assessed nuclear power is safe? Does he even understand the process of how the uranium is extracted and the toxic pollution it causes to our waterways and land? Does he understand how the toxic waste causes cancer? Does he understand the radioactivity of the waste? The immense amount of water nuclear uses? (Not good in a country now experiencing droughts, especially in the US Southwest) The cost in dollars and in potential lives?
My one message to him and yes, Obama as well who has now flip flopped to say he too engages nuclear is: STOP LYING TO THE AMERICAN PEOPLE. The strides being made in solar, wind, and geothermal are here and now. We could take the money their congressional subsidies give out for their nuclear pipedreams and repower this country! I will make a pledge that should John McCain be corronated I will call the White House every day regarding this issue and 'clean coal.' And I will do the same if it is Obama.
It is unconscienable to me that they could ever want to foist this antiquated unsafe energy source on us just to appease backers and the lobbyists who get the subisidies from Washington Dc. The nuclear option must be out of the question. It is antiquated. It is unsafe. It is toxic. It wastes water. It is expensive. It puts our national security at risk, and will take too much time in light of the reports coming from peer reviewed scientists regarding the current state of our world. Why don't these candidates ever pick up a report instead of a poll to craft their policies? Building 45 new nuclear plants in this country is insanity and will doom the waterways of this country and put our national security a... more -
ABC deems Al Gore's Alliance for Climate Protection advert too 'controve...
Tell me now who really runs these networks. Controversial is merely a replacement for TRUTHFUL. It is a KNOWN FACT that oil lobbyists buy policy in Washington DC. The Iraq invasion is about OIL. Exxon can pull in billions of dollars in profits on the backs of working Americans all the while denying that global warming is manmade and that isn't controversial? Coal, which kills is not controversial? So, what is to be done about this BS? We can't even get a good enough boycott going in this country anymore to make these networks feel it where they should feel it: in their ratings and in their wallets. Well, I am boycotting ABC, all of their affiliates, and Disney and their products. Anyone who wants to join in please feel free because unless we do something networks will continue to get away with this blatant bias. This is not a political issue it is a moral issue. This is not about some ridiculous political grudge against Al Gore. This even goes beyond Al Gore. THIS IS ABOUT THE SUSTAINABILITY OF THIS PLANET! This is about truth. ABC has now shown it has no morals and should be treated as such. And yes, I'm angry. Outrageous so many others aren't.
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From the article:
The ABC network has refused to air an advert produced by Al Gore's environmental group, ruling that its charge of US government favouritism to the oil industry is too "controversial" for television.
The TV commercial, part of the WE campaign run by Gore's Alliance for Climate Protection, was submitted for airing after this week's presidential debate between Barack Obama and John McCain - both of whom have vowed to limit greenhouse gas emissions if elected.
But ABC concluded that the advert violated its internal policy against "controversial" content during network-sponsored programmes, network spokeswoman Julie Hoover told the Guardian.
"All of our advertising is reviewed on a case-by-case basis, and the context of this particular ad was determined not to be acceptable per our policy on controversial issue advertising," Hoover said.
The WE campaign has since attracted more than 170,000 supporters to an online petition drive asking ABC to reconsider its decision.
The script of the advert is similar in tone to political speeches made by Obama and McCain during the election season. An unseen narrator states that climate change can be combated through wind and solar power as well as "end[ing] our dependence on foreign oil".
Over an image of a young child playing with blocks, the narrator continues: "So why are we still stuck with dirty and expensive energy? Because big oil spends hundreds of millions of dollars to block clean energy. Lobbyists, ads, even scandals. All to increase their profits, while America suffers."
An ABC email published on the blog of Grist magazine stated that the advert was rejected due to its split-second shot of the US Capitol building.
"Per our guidelines, national buildings may be used in advertising provided the depictions are incidental to the advertiser's promotion of the product or service," the email stated. "Given the messages and themes of this commercial, the image of the Capital [sic] building is not incidental to this advertising."
Cathy Zoi, chief executive of the WE campaign, called ABC's decision "outrageous" in light of US networks' frequent airing of adverts from Chevron, Exxon Mobil and other oil companies.
"As our country faces deep economic problems, we need to be able to have an honest debate about the root causes of our problem," Zoi wrote in an email to supporters of Gore's group on Wednesday. Tell me now who really runs these networks. Controversial is merely a replacement for TRUTHFUL. It is a KNOWN FACT that oil lobbyists ... more -
Columbus Day Celebration 2008
Four days San Francisco's Columbus Day Celebration has been a demonstration of a fictitious power, waste of money that could be used for Communities citizen's security. I am not against the Celebration but I think we could be more wise with our City Money. Lose all the annoying small buzzing flying aircrafts and have just one day of Blue Angels. That's enough. Apply the rest of the money to secure our City airspace against the Airlines Industry that violates our rights all year long with low flying aircraft. I remember this Year Supervisor Chris Daly District 6 made an attempt to reduce costs and it was putted down by an elite City of lobbyists. Four days San Francisco's Columbus Day Celebration has been a demonstration of a fictitious power, waste of money that could be u... more
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USDA biotech regulations on "pharma" crops could allow drugs in food
The Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS) today denounced newly proposed U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) rules governing genetically engineered crops, including food crops engineered to produce pharmaceutical and industrial products. The proposed rules, UCS charged, would not protect the U.S. food supply from potential contamination by drugs from "pharma" crops, and could allow drugs that it deems "safe" to enter the food supply. This contamination could occur through cross-pollination or seed mixing between pharma food crops and crops intended for consumption.
The USDA ignored recommendations for a ban on the outdoor production of pharma food crops from the Grocery Manufacturers Association, major food companies, UCS, and more than 100 environmental, agricultural, health, and consumer organizations.
Below is a statement by Jane Rissler, UCS's Food and Environment Program deputy director:
"Under the proposed rules, USDA's new motto is 'Only safe levels of drugs in U.S. food.' If these proposals are enacted into law, American consumers must accept the possibility of drugs in their breakfast cereal or other common foods. Moreover, these rules likely will lead to contamination scares, which will hurt the food industry.
"The USDA proposal, unlike the ban we recommended, offers no incentives to drug companies to pursue already existing, safer methods for producing drugs.
"In its rush to enact the proposed rules into law before the end of the Bush administration, the USDA has given short shrift to public participation. The department is allowing only 45 days for the public to analyze and comment on this major proposal, which will determine the government's approach to regulating genetically engineered organisms for years to come.
"The proposed rules also overhaul the existing regulatory system for genetically engineered crops other than pharma crops. Some of the proposed changes represent steps in the right direction such as making the regulatory program more coherent and comprehensive, expanding the scope of genetically engineered organisms subject to government oversight, and allowing the department to consider impacts on public health."
For UCS's Web feature profiling innovative biotechnology companies that are developing drugs more safely, go to
http://ucsusa.org/food_and_agriculture/solutions/sensib....
For the location of pharma crops that have been grown outdoors across the country, go to
http://go.ucsusa.org/food_and_environment/pharm/index.p....
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Here we go again. The Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS) today denounced newly proposed U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) rules governing genetical... more -
Rent-A-Troll for Blog Warfare
Ever wonder why so many interesting stories on Current.com get voted DOWN instead of UP? Maybe this has something to do with it...
A company called Advantage Consultants offers up a service for any candidate or campaign. It basically boils down to renting trolls to flood blogs with your message.
For a fee, they will provide "professional blog warriors" to "flood the zone" with defensive or offensive talking points of your choosing. Their ad, replete with bizarre military imagery, also states the following:
"Why wait for the attack? Launch your attack with a battery of blog and forum comments aimed at all media and blog sites in your district. Contact us today and let us show you the Advantage in professional blog warfare."
Now, for all the trolls who may be reading this right now... I hope you've learned that your divisive and belligerent opinions, en masse, can EARN YOU BIG BUCKS!
THAT'S RIGHT!
Don't be a sucker!
Don't "troll" for free!
Get the GOP to PAY YOU for your services!
Wait... why am I recruiting for these morons? Ever wonder why so many interesting stories on Current.com get voted DOWN instead of UP? Maybe this has something to do with it... ... more -
Mad about the bailout? Here's what we're doing about it
Now that Congress has totally betrayed the people by passing the heinous bailout for billionaires, which in fact will do absolutely nothing to solve the real problem, we have only one recourse and one imperative --- to remove Nancy Pelosi, the queen of the cave-ins, from office, which we can do in just four weeks, by having Cindy Sheehan win.
If you can make a donation of any amount please submit the form below to help get as many of these TV spots on the air as possible, so that the citizens of San Francisco know they have a real choice.
Follow the link and DONATE! Even just $5 will make a difference. Now that Congress has totally betrayed the people by passing the heinous bailout for billionaires, which in fact will do absolutely no... more -
The Iraq war hits Wall Street
At almost $1 trillion, and counting, the Wall Street bailout will cost taxpayers as much as the Iraq war.
Barack Obama squandered the chance to lead with an alternative plan to the Wall Street bailout. Instead both Obama and McCain pushed for a plan that's not only deeply unpopular but potentially as costly as a new Iraq war. Too busy slinging mud at each other, both campaigns are ignoring the enormous significance and wide-ranging repercussions of the financial crisis, which British scholar John Gray defines as the US equivalent of the fall of the Soviet Union.
Pepe Escobar, born in Brazil is the roving correspondent for Asia Times and an analyst for The Real News Network. He's been a foreign correspondent since 1985, based in London, Milan, Los Angeles, Paris, Singapore, and Bangkok. Since the late 1990s, he has specialized in covering the arc from the Middle East to Central Asia, including the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. He has made frequent visits to Iran and is the author of Globalistan and also Red Zone Blues: A Snapshot of Baghdad During the Surge both published by Nimble Books in 2007. At almost $1 trillion, and counting, the Wall Street bailout will cost taxpayers as much as the Iraq war. ... more -
The financial crisis at the local level
Leo Panitch: As property values tank, so do state and municipal budgets. Part 3
In the third segment of Senior Editor Paul Jay's discussion with Leo Panitch, Leo explains how the credit crunch will affect state and municipal governments. Leo points out that the Great Depression had its roots in the bankruptcy of state and municipal governments, offering that in such a situation the national government must intervene to keep the states and municipalities solvent. Leo advocates for a hybrid of increased taxation and deficit spending to finance this, adding finally that a real solution requires more than a change in policy, but a change in deep structures.
Leo Panitch is the Canada Research Chair in Comparative Political Economy and a Distinguished Research Professor of Political Science at York University in Toronto. Panitch is also the author of "Global Capitalism and American Empire" and his most recent release "American Empire and the Political Economy of International Finance".
See Part 1 at: http://current.com/items/89378166_free_markets_depend_o...
See Part 2 at: http://current.com/items/89382669_the_financial_crisis_... Leo Panitch: As property values tank, so do state and municipal budgets. Part 3 ... more -
National Debt Clock Runs Out of Digits
The clock has run out on the national debt. more good news.
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Black Friday, recession global: European and Asian markets in deep plunge
European markets plummeted at Friday's open, following the lead of Asian and Pacific markets in response to the U.S. stock market's new five-year low.
Dealers at the Tokyo Stock Exchange on Friday.
London's FTSE, the CAC in Paris and the XETRA DAX in Frankfurt, Germany were all down 10 percent.
In Asia, Japan's Nikkei Exchange closed down 9.6 percent, as the Bank of Japan injected 4.5 trillion yen ($45 billion) into financial markets -- the largest single-day amount in history.
Meanwhile, the Australian All Ordinaries index closed more than 8 percent lower, and South Korea's KOSPI index finished the day off 4.3 percent.
Hong Kong's Hang Seng index and Mumbai's BSE SENSEX both were down 8 percent in afternoon trading.
India's central bank also tried to boost markets, making 400 billion rupees ($8.2 billion) available for the financial system. Video Watch panic-selling in the Asia markets »
The Dow Jones industrial average lost 679 points, or 7.3 percent, on Thursday, closing at its lowest point since May 21, 2003. It was the Dow's third biggest one-day point-loss ever.
The Standard & Poor's 500 index lost 7.6 percent and closed at its lowest point since April 28, 2003. The Nasdaq composite lost 5.5 percent and closed at its lowest point since June 30, 2003.
During the past seven sessions, the Dow has lost 2,271 points, or 20.1 percent. Since hitting an all-time high of 14,164.53 one year ago Thursday, the Dow has lost 39.4 percent.
The White House confirmed earlier Thursday that the U.S. Treasury Department is looking at buying equity stakes in some U.S. banks.
Spokesperson Dana Perino confirmed reports that the U.S. could soon join the United Kingdom, Iceland and Italy in announcing a plan to inject capital directly into their troubled banking systems.
"These capital injections are something that Secretary (Henry) Paulson is actively considering," said Perino. She said she could not comment on the timing or extent of such investments.
The move would be made under the $700 billion Wall Street bailout passed by Congress on Friday.
But the possibility of Treasury intervention failed to reassure investors amid the ongoing credit crisis.
Asian central banks also did their part to give markets a potential boost. South Korea's central bank -- the Bank of Korea -- slashed its key interest rate by a quarter percent, the Yonhap news agency reported. The Bank of Japan injected 2 trillion yen ($20 billion) into money markets. And the Hong Kong Monetary Authority cut its key interest rate again -- 1.5 percent during two days.
European markets posted mixed results Thursday, but the continent's most influential -- London, Paris and Frankfurt -- all closed 1 percent to 2 percent lower.
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Russia's battered stock markets rebounded Thursday after financial regulators reversed a decision to close them, so vigorously that one exchange had to be temporarily closed.
The index of leading stocks on the MICEX exchange, where most of Russia's trading takes place, gained nearly 16 percent before halting trading around midday, the second time in less than three hours of action that it suspended activity.
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Do everything to protect yourselves from an unavoidable global recession. This is the beginning of the end of Capitalism as we know it. The greed is finally catching up with the fat boys on Corporate and Capital Hill. Don't let them take more! European markets plummeted at Friday's open, following the lead of Asian and Pacific markets in response to the U.S. stock market... more -
More and more over-60s in debt
Older people are in 25% more debt than four years ago, according to a report carried out by Citizens Advice Scotland (CAS).
A study of over 60s who sought help from CAS found debt levels had risen to £17,767 since 2004, but more than a quarter had a debt of over £25,000. Many of the clients asking for advice had a low income and were struggling to repay high debts. The report claimed that average debt levels for this group were 29 times their monthly income.
As a result, CAS called on the Scottish Government to ensure that measures to deal with debt were accessible to older people. Older people are in 25% more debt than four years ago, according to a report carried out by Citizens Advice Scotland (CAS). ... more -
Age 19 and $20,000 in debt!
A student at Tidewater Community College, Logan Culpepper is only 19 years old and already has a $20,000 dollar debt to contend with. She talks about her lifestyle as she juggles school, work and family, barely squeezing out any time for herself. A student at Tidewater Community College, Logan Culpepper is only 19 years old and already has a $20,000 dollar debt to contend with. ... more
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Hey Current, Thanks for the Gifts!
To all of you at Current Networks, Thanks for all the nice gifts you sent me!
The first time I got a hat and two cool black tshirts, one Commentator and the other Contributor and the pocket book, notebook and stickers. One tshirt and the hat I gave to a good friend in Italy and he probably can see running around Rome.
The second time I got more stickers, lenses cleaning cloth, ha Thanks I need that and a plastic card with an embedded ship on it I have not been able to find out what it is. There is no instruction on the card. If any of you know what this card is for, please give a ring.
The sound on the background it is the blue angels flying over the bay.
Big hug and kisses to everybody.
Keep on doing and you will also receive some cool gifts! To all of you at Current Networks, Thanks for all the nice gifts you sent me! ... more -
Nature losses to far exceed losses due to 'bank crisis'
The global economy is losing more money from the disappearance of forests than through the current banking crisis, according to an EU-commissioned study.
It puts the annual cost of forest loss at between $2 trillion and $5 trillion.
The figure comes from adding the value of the various services that forests perform, such as providing clean water and absorbing carbon dioxide.
The study, headed by a Deutsche Bank economist, parallels the Stern Review into the economics of climate change.
It has been discussed during many sessions here at the World Conservation Congress.
Some conservationists see it as a new way of persuading policymakers to fund nature protection rather than allowing the decline in ecosystems and species, highlighted in the release on Monday of the Red List of Threatened Species, to continue.
Capital losses
Speaking to BBC News on the fringes of the congress, study leader Pavan Sukhdev emphasised that the cost of natural decline dwarfs losses on the financial markets.
"It's not only greater but it's also continuous, it's been happening every year, year after year," he told BBC News.
"So whereas Wall Street by various calculations has to date lost, within the financial sector, $1-$1.5 trillion, the reality is that at today's rate we are losing natural capital at least between $2-$5 trillion every year."
The review that Mr Sukhdev leads, The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity (Teeb), was initiated by Germany under its recent EU presidency, with the European Commission providing funding.
The first phase concluded in May when the team released its finding that forest decline could be costing about 7% of global GDP. The second phase will expand the scope to other natural systems.
Stern message
Key to understanding his conclusions is that as forests decline, nature stops providing services which it used to provide essentially for free.
So the human economy either has to provide them instead, perhaps through building reservoirs, building facilities to sequester carbon dioxide, or farming foods that were once naturally available.
Or we have to do without them; either way, there is a financial cost.
The Teeb calculations show that the cost falls disproportionately on the poor, because a greater part of their livelihood depends directly on the forest, especially in tropical regions.
The greatest cost to western nations would initially come through losing a natural absorber of the most important greenhouse gas.
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And that isn't only on a monetary scale. The loss of forests, natural carbon sinks, biodiversity, our oceans, and the ecosystems that depend on them will lose us as a species far more than $$$$$$. We will lose our very essence and our reason for being on this planet. We will lose the very breath of our Earth. To me, while the global markets struggle to maintain a tangible asset, let us not forget that our Earth and its sustainability is our most precious asset in more ways than just the tangible. And if we as a world community do not get truly serious about dealing with this loss within the next year it will not matter what happens on a global market. The loss to us otherwise will be even more catastrophic. The global economy is losing more money from the disappearance of forests than through the current banking crisis, according to an EU-... more -
John Lennons birthday today, Peace Tower to be lit, a letter from Yoko on IMAGINE ...
On 9 Oct 2008, John Lennon's birthday, Yoko Ono asks the people of Iceland (and the world)
to join her and many others across the rest of the world in praying for peace
and stability.
At 8pm, (today in Iceland) as the IMAGINE PEACE TOWER is illuminated on the island of Viðey
she asks everyone to join together and let the power of light and prayer
become a collective expression of the desire for peace and harmony on our
planet.
Dear Friends,
Please join me not only in remembering John on October 9th but also in
spreading the message of peace. This is something that was so important to
John - the fact that we could all work together for the positive good of our
planet. He would have loved how we are all mobilizing ourselves in thought
and in action. It's time for action and the action is peace!
with love, yoko
Yoko Ono
9 Oct 2008
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Let's join our collective consciousnesses to bring energy and light to the need for World Peace. On this site, there are times to do this per your location on earth. Remember the Laws of Attraction as well, an energy that permeates the Universe, and energy that keeps it all glued together!
If you want, you can also send a wish message to be included in todays ceremony. You can find out how on the site. or at this link: http://www.imaginepeace.com/wish.html
peace and light..WPTV
ps..listen to what John says in the video. Even tho this was over 20 years ago, it still holds true On 9 Oct 2008, John Lennon's birthday, Yoko Ono asks the people of Iceland (and the world) ... more -
The next burden: inflation
It is now clear that every government in the west is going to try their best to ensure that no savers lose any of their deposits. The Federal Reserve is lending directly to companies, and here in the UK, the government is going to start buying shares in UK banks. There is no escaping the severity of the crisis. Monetary authorities around the world are now focused on trying to ensure that we avoid the fate of the United States in the Great Depression of the 1930s, when output fell by over 30%. Instead, their hope is that the recession to come is more like the early 1970s, when western economies shrank by 5% to 10%. Painful but not catastrophic.
What we cannot escape is the fact that the amount of money in the banking sector far outweighs the value of the assets that it was lent against. This is how it works. You want to buy a house, and you need to borrow £100,000. You go to a bank and they create the loan, and at the same time deposit £100,000 in your bank account. This money did not exist before: it is new money. You buy your house, and at the other end of the chain, the sellers deposit the £100,000 back into the banking system. The amount of money in circulation has risen by £100,000 and is represented by the seller's bank "savings". But those savings are a reflection of the value of the house. If the price of the house doubled while they owned it, then £50,000 of those savings is a result of inflation caused by the banking sector creating money.
Supposing the housing market crashes. There is now more money in the banking system than the value of housing stock. The value of that the money has to fall as well. During the Asian crisis 10 years ago, this is exactly what happened. Many banks went insolvent, many savers lost their deposits, and the value of money in the economy fell so as to reflect the new and lower value of assets in the economy. This was exactly what happened in Thailand, but unlike us, their government was simply too poor to bail out savers who happened to have their deposits in the wrong bank.
In the west, we are rich enough to be able to ensure that banks do not collapse, wiping out individual savers. (Indeed, why should some savers be OK just because they were lucky enough to put their deposit in the right bank?) However, what we cannot escape from is the fact that the value of money in circulation now has to shrink to match the falling value of property against which the money was lent. However little we like it, the value of our savings has to fall. It is now clear that every government in the west is going to try their best to ensure that no savers lose any of their deposits. The ... more -
Interest rates cuts worldwide
Is this a sign of a turn around in the global financial crisis?? Personally I think its going to take a few months if not years until it gets back to the world powers having stable economies!!! Is this a sign of a turn around in the global financial crisis?? Personally I think its going to take a few months if not years until... more
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Army's life-or-death drama: To combat suicides, service introduces interactiv...
Alarmed by a record rate of suicide in its ranks, the Army yesterday unveiled a unique prevention tool -- an interactive video to be mandatory viewing Army-wide -- in which soldiers will play the role of an anguished infantryman and make virtual choices that lead the character to get help or, in the worst case, shoot himself in the head.
"This is you: Specialist Kyle Norton," a male narrator begins, putting soldiers in the boots of a 19-year-old Midwesterner after a bomb-clearing mission in Iraq.
The video, titled "Beyond the Front," leads the viewer through a detailed drama in which Norton is hit by relationship troubles, financial problems and scrapes with the law -- what Army research shows are major events that precipitate suicide. Norton is blindsided by an e-mail from his fiancee, who has become pregnant by another man. He is devastated further when one of his best friends is killed in an ambush.
Questions pop onto the screen at key moments, prompting the viewer to decide whether to get help -- by opening up with buddies, Norton's sergeant or a chaplain. Depending on the choices, Norton edges toward recovery or sinks deeper into suicidal thoughts. The goal is to immerse the viewer into Norton's life in a way that makes preventive lessons stick, say Army officials and the video's creators.
The video is one of several initiatives launched by the Army to try to stem the suicide rate among active-duty soldiers. That rate increased from 12.4 per 100,000 in 2003, when the Iraq war started, to 18.1 per 100,000 last year.
This year, 93 active-duty soldiers killed themselves through the end of August, the latest data show. A third of those cases are under investigation by the Armed Forces Medical Examiner's Office. In all of 2007, 115 soldiers committed suicide. Suicide attempts by soldiers have also increased since 2003.
If the trend continues, the death rate this year is likely to exceed that of a demographically similar segment of the U.S. population -- 19.5 per 100,000, Stephens said -- which has not happened since the Vietnam War Alarmed by a record rate of suicide in its ranks, the Army yesterday unveiled a unique prevention tool -- an interactive video to be m... more
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