Crime and Courts: We need a smarter war on drugs – Muskogee Daily Phoenix

Did we learn nothing from the so-called crack-cocaine plague of the '80s and '90s?

For those with fuzzy memories, the media back then erroneously and breathlessly declared that crack use had reached epidemic proportions. Newsweek declared crack was "the most addictive drug known to man." The full truth would eventually come out. Crack was only half the problem.

Crack is created when powder cocaine is mixed with baking soda and water and cooked down into rocklike nuggets to be smoked in a pipe. It's a relatively cheap high and favored by those in poorer neighborhoods. The more expensive powder cocaine was snorted primarily by higher-income Caucasians. What was happening in the '80s wasn't just a crack epidemic; it was also a cocaine epidemic and poor and rich alike were addicted.

Congress bought the fake news that crack was the real problem and passed the ill-conceived Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1986, which set a mandatory sentence of five years in federal prison for anyone convicted of possessing 5 grams of crack (equal to 1 teaspoon), even if it was their first offense. Thousands of mostly poor, young African American men were imprisoned, their families torn apart. Powder cocaine users were only sentenced to that mandatory five years in prison if they possessed 500 grams (or over a pound) of the drug. The racial disparity was painfully obvious.

The overcrowding of our prison system began. More importantly, the crime and drug problems in America did not lessen with these tough-on-crime sentences. Things got worse over the years, as addicts moved on to "black tar" heroin, meth, ketamine, ecstasy and more.

Today, the deadliest drug is reported to be fentanyl not the medically approved pharmaceutical fentanyl, an opioid that treats severe pain, but rather the illegally produced fentanyl, which is mostly smuggled into the U.S. via illicit laboratories in China and Mexico. Tens of thousands of Americans have died from fentanyl overdoses and other similar chemical compounds called analogues.

There are several bills pending in Congress now aimed at curbing distribution and use of fentanyl and its analogues. Some seek to label the addicting chemicals as highly regulated, Schedule I dangerous opioids, which opponents say could adversely affect future scientific research. But guess what is also being considered as a solution to this deadly problem? You guessed it mandatory prison sentences for drug addicts and street dealers in possession of drugs containing fentanyl and its close cousins.

Reality check: Street-level sellers and buyers have no way of knowing if their drugs include fentanyl. It's added in by criminal "chemical cookers" to give their drugs that extra punch that keeps customers coming back.

Attorney General William Barr hit the nail on the head at his confirmation hearing last year when he said, "The head of the snake is outside the country, and the place to fight this aggressively is at the source more than on the street corner." Barr added, "We could stack up generation after generation of people in prison and it will still keep on coming." Ironically, Barr has recently campaigned for passage of two bills that fail to focus on stopping fentanyl at the source.

When will lawmakers understand that locking up addicts and low-level dealers doesn't stop the problem? It just creates another fractured generation of ex-cons and ever-mounting incarceration costs for us to pay. Going after the source of the product that poisons so many is a much smarter long-term tactic.

Spend more money interdicting shipments of fentanyl (and all illegal opioids!) coming into this country via the U.S. Postal Service. Outfit agencies like the Customs and Border Protection and the Drug Enforcement Administration with more personnel and technology to stop drug shipments headed this way, whether they're arriving via air, sea, land or border tunnels. Make foreign aid dependent on whether the receiving country helps stop the flow of drugs into the U.S. And how about focusing on job training for convicted dealers and truly meaningful treatment for addicts so that upon their release, they become taxpaying citizens with decent jobs?

We need a modern-day war on drugs one that is strong and focused on the source of the problem, not just on the addicted victims drugs create.

Diane Dimond is a syndicated columnist and television reporter of high-profile court cases.

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Crime and Courts: We need a smarter war on drugs - Muskogee Daily Phoenix

Editorial: A better way to take on drug addiction – New Haven Register

By Hearst Connecticut Media Editorial Board

Its easy to come up with arguments against a plan to distribute drug paraphernalia on the streets of one of Connecticuts largest cities, where drugs and crime have long plagued the life of residents. Using illegal drugs is supposed to be discouraged, so why would anyone in a position of authority do anything to make it easier?

New Haven, though, last week announced that it has started distributing free plastic bags that contain items including clean needles, sterile glass pipes and information about local rehabilitation services to people who have been released from the citys detention facility. Its part of an initiative to use harm reduction principles to curb addiction and a turn away from what are considered the failed policies of the long-running War on Drugs.

For now, part of the plan is on hold. The States Attorneys Office says the glass pipes in the packets could pose complications to future legal cases involving drug paraphernalia, and the city will wait for a clarification of state law before going ahead with that aspect. But the reasoning behind the plan is sound, and its one other communities should explore.

The focus of this program is harm reduction, New Haven Police Chief Otoniel Reyes said this week. As a department that traditionally has been on the side of enforcing and the accountability side of drug use, we recognize that our efforts have had very little, if no, impact in the reduction of people using drugs.

This is dispiriting to consider, but important. For all the millions of dollars spent on enforcement and thousands of people who have spent time behind bars, some serving extraordinarily long sentences, the tactics that police have used to fight drugs over recent decades have had little to no impact in reducing the numbers of addicts.

The harm reduction that New Haven seeks to encourage includes meeting people where they are, and creating opportunity for people that are on a destructive path, to hopefully give them a chance to find a way out, Reyes said. It doesnt mean law enforcement stands down, but it does mean that a rethink of proper strategies is necessary. New Haven is smart to lead the movement.

City and health officials have compared the distribution of glass pipes to needle exchange programs, which have been in effect for decades and have helped cut the spread of communicable diseases. A change in state law in the 1990s removed syringes from a statute defining drug paraphernalia, and the same should happen for glass pipes like those in the harm reduction kits.

The prevailing wisdom for too long in this country has been to treat drug addiction as a moral failing rather than as a health care issue. The result is a waste of police resources, thousands of people locked up for years on end and a lack of improvement in the states addiction statistics. It only makes sense to reconsider how we go about this fight.

The result, if other communities adopt similar policies, could be not just a drop in overdoses and spread of disease, but the decline in addiction rates that was supposed to be the goal all along.

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Editorial: A better way to take on drug addiction - New Haven Register

How the police war on drugs is different from the public’s – Police News

In 1971, President Nixon declared a War on Drugs. I became a participant as a police officer on January 1, 1974.

I fought the good fight for 33 years, but looking back at the countless drug searches, seizures and arrests, I dont know if we have ever waged a war on drugs, but drugs are definitely waging war on us.

In 2017 alone, 70,237 Americans died of drug-related overdoses. This eclipses, in one year, the 58,220 total American deaths during the entire Vietnam War. Drugs are waging war on us!

Some headway has been made recently as we are beginning to seeflat or declining drug overdosenumbers. Factors contributing to this positive development include:

Bravo! Keep up the good work!

I am observing, however, that some allies in our efforts seem to have become part of the problem instead of the solution. Here are a few questions I have for these allies.

To the people who believe police officers pursue a person because of their color rather than their criminality, I ask: What if you are wrong and police officers are truly motivated by a sincere desire to keep you and your children safe?

Believe it or not, the vast majority of police officers you paint with your wide brush pursue criminality, not color.

If you do not believe me, listen to the testimonies of people who have worked hard and succeeded in getting out of troubled areas describe what a challenge it was to survive in an environment dominated by drugs and gangs.

We will never solve the problem of illegal drugs and other criminality by giving criminals a pass while blaming the police and the courts for putting people in prison who have earned the price of admission by poisoning our children and committing many, many, many crimes.

To healthcare professionals, I ask: If drug addiction is a disease, why are you not clamoring for drug dealers to be quarantined indefinitely?

Medical experts have declared drug addiction to be a disease. Therefore, since the numbers bear out that this disease is more deadly than modern warfare, it follows that drug dealers, who are the carriers of this disease, should be quarantined from society immediately and indefinitely.

However, if you examine bonding and sentencing policies nationwide, you will see that painstaking efforts are made to release drug dealers quickly and often back into our communities after they are arrested and even after conviction. Signature bonds, ankle bracelets and urine tests dont prevent drug dealers from exposing young children to the potentially fatal disease of addiction.

To legislators, I ask: If drug addiction is a disease, why are there so few medical treatment centers available to treat an affliction that kills so many?

Police officers can attest to the fact that not only in the case of drug addicts but also the mentally ill, it is difficult to get a bed in a treatment facility for long-term treatment even when the afflicted are pleading for care. As it stands, the only treatment facility that makes room for them upon request by the police are jails. Legislators must provide for the construction of many more treatment facilities for addicts and the mentally ill.

Why in the midst of a drug abuse epidemic are you rushing to legalize marijuana?

It is puzzling that instead of comprehensively trying to solve a massive drug abuse problem we have in this nation, legislators opt instead to spend their time on efforts to legalize marijuana. These efforts continue unabated even as we have children and adults dying horrible deaths after vaping products containing THC.

Why do you continue to facilitate needle giveaway programs when they endanger communities?

This effort to facilitate addicts and keep them safe has clearly backfired and endangers the public. In many small towns and big cities, park and recreation employees carry around needle collection kits so that our children are not injured by discarded free needles while sliding off a slide or into second base.

To prosecutors, judges and mayors, I ask: Why are some of you choosing to serve as advocates to lawbreakers rather than your constituents?

Keeping a community safe within the law should be the goal of everyone in service to their community. Too many prosecutors, judges and mayors have become criminal advocates at the expense of the good citizens they serve. You have mayors of sanctuary cities ordering drug dealers and other criminals to not be turned over to federal authorities upon request, allowing the release of these criminals, which enables them to commit more crimes. With that in mind, here is one more serious question: Where does a law-abiding citizen find sanctuary in a sanctuary city?

Finally, here is a question for everyone to ponder: How can we help children make the right choice when that moment comes?

Experts say Just say no doesnt work. However, the moment comes in every childs life, when it is their turn to decide to either use illegal drugs or just say no!

Preparing kids for that moment is our best chance of keeping them from the sinister grip of drugs. We must discuss and decide how we can redouble our efforts through education, personal example, enforcement, treatment and other options not yet thought of, to convince every child that when their moment to decide comes its not, Just say no, it's, Must say no!

Pondering these questions reminded me of a long-ago shift when I had someone before me who could have given me some insight into solving this problem. As I looked down upon the young overdose victim looking back at me like a discarded mannequin wearing that eyes-wide-open stare, I asked, How could this have been prevented?

Sadly the question was asked too late for the answer was...silence.

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How the police war on drugs is different from the public's - Police News

More Than A Trip: Psychedelic Drugs Being Used To Help People Quit Smoking In Just One Dose – CBS Baltimore

BALTIMORE (WJZ) When most people think of psychedelic drugs, they think of hippies in the sixties tripping on LSD or magic mushrooms. But at Johns Hopkins, fascinating research is being done using hallucinogens as medicine and the results are promising, particularly when using psilocybin to treat addiction.

Davi Peterson was a very heavy smoker for over 25 years. After years of struggling to quit, she volunteered for a study at Johns Hopkins Behavioral Biology Research Center using the hallucinogen psilocybin.

Davi Peterson

I tried everything and I was starting to think that I would never be able to stop, so I went for it, Peterson said.

So after some pre-counseling, Peterson got her first dose of psilocybin.

Psilocybin is a naturally occurring psychedelic compound found in more than 200 species of mushrooms. It and other hallucinogenic drugs target the brains serotonin 2A receptors.

It kind of sets off a cascade of activity in the brain thats very different than whats happening when were normal and awake, said Albert Garcia-Romeu, PhD.

For Peterson, the effect was immediate and lasted over five hours.

It started very quickly kinda like being launched out of a space shuttle or something hurling through space, she said. It was very dramatic and very quick.

Time and space changes completely, Peterson continued. [It was] one of the most intense experiences of my life and it probably always will be.

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A lot of time theyre describing something that can be both overwhelming, but also positive and potentially life-changing, Garcia-Romeu added.

In the fifties and sixties, much research was done with hallucinogenic drugs, studying their effects on the brain and behavior. But that all came to a halt, when in 1971, President Richard Nixon launched whats become known as the war on drugs.

But in 2000, restrictions on testing were lifted and now Johns Hopkins leads the world in research into the possible physical and mental benefits of psychedelic drugs such as psilocybin.

If you look at the two images below on the left is a brain without the drug and on the right, is a brain on psilocybin.

Simplified illustration of the connections tracked while receiving the placebo (a) and the psilocybin (b). Image credit: Petri et al., 2014.

Theres far more connectivity on the right that may allow for a brief period of plasticity or a period in which the brain can change the way its connected. In other words, it can interrupt old patterns, well-worn neuro pathways, or habits.

People will often come out of these sessions describing changes in their way of thinking, their way of relating to the people around them, said Garcia-Romeu.

Hallucinogenics were a part of the social fabric of the turbulent sixties, but this study is not about recreational drug use its controlled and scientific.

WJZ was not allowed to show you a real session, so Denise Koch went through a mock session with a researcher. Heres what happens: you take a psilocybin pill and lie on a couch. Theres music and the researcher will give you eyeshades, headphones and a blanket, while you go through the five- to six-hour trip.

They will make sure participants know they are safe, sometimes holding their hand or sitting with them, to help them move through the difficult experience.

Since Hopkins started its research, 700 people have gone through the process.

A pilot study saw that 80% of participants quit smoking after one dose of psilocybin and research on 51 cancer patients showed the drug decreased anxiety and depression in 80% of those tested.

They do challenge us to reexamine our preconceptions about the way the world works and what, really is our place in the world, Garcia-Romeu said.

Right now, the Behavioral Biology Center is recruiting for studies using psilocybin in people with early stages of Alzheimers, anorexia-nervosa or major depression.

If youre interested in participating, click hereto go to Hopkins website. Click the Research tab to apply.

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More Than A Trip: Psychedelic Drugs Being Used To Help People Quit Smoking In Just One Dose - CBS Baltimore

Philippines’ Duterte tells US he is scrapping troop agreement – The Guardian

Rodrigo Duterte, the president of the Philippines, has given formal notice to the US of his decision to scrap a bilateral agreement covering visiting American troops, following through on repeated threats to downgrade the defence alliance.

The visiting forces agreement (VFA), signed in 1998, accords legal status to thousands of American troops rotated in the country for humanitarian assistance and military exercises, dozens of which take place annually.

Duterte, who has made no secret of his grudge with the US and his disdain for his countrys close military relationship, believed it was time to be more militarily independent, his spokesman said.

Its about time we rely on ourselves. We will strengthen our own defences and not rely on any other country, Salvador Panelo told a regular briefing, quoting Duterte.

Defence ties between the Philippines and its former colonial ruler go back to the early 1950s and are governed by a mutual defence treaty (MTD), which remains intact, along with an enhanced defence cooperation agreement made under the Obama administration.

Duterte made the decision after the top commander of his war on drugs, the former police chief Ronald dela Rosa, said his US visa had been rescinded over an issue related to the detention of a senator and critic of Duterte.

It is the first time Duterte has scrapped an agreement with the US, having throughout his more than three years in office denounced Washington for hypocrisy and for treating the Philippines like a dog on a leash.

Despite reassurances from his generals, Duterte has long accused US forces of conducting clandestine activities. In a speech on Monday he said US nuclear weapons were being stored in his country.

He has argued that the presence of US forces makes the Philippines a potential target for aggression.

Dutertes move follows a Senate hearing last week during which his defence and foreign ministers spoke in favour of the VFA, both noting its overall benefits.

He said even the US president wanted him to change his mind. Trump, and others are trying to save the [VFA]. I said I dont want, he said.

His foreign secretary, Teodoro Locsin, confirmed on Twitter that the US embassy in Manila had received notice. The termination will take effect after 180 days.

Duterte favours warmer ties with China and Russia than the US and has praised those countries and increased their military contributions and donations, which are dwarfed by the $1.3bn (1bn) spent provided by the US since 1998.

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Philippines' Duterte tells US he is scrapping troop agreement - The Guardian

Rep. Tulsi Gabbard Wants to Legalize Drugs (As in All Drugs) – The National Interest Online

The New Hampshire primary on Tuesday will prove a make or break moment for Rep. Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii. After having collected no popular support from the questionable Iowa caucus results, the congresswoman is relying on what has been a consistent 4-5% base of support in the Granite State.

Gabbard, whose key platform issue is an overhaul of the U.S. foreign policy establishment and opposition to regime change wars, has also staked herself out as the most progressive 2020 Democratic candidate when it comes to drug legalization.

When asked by a New Hampshire voter what she would about the unjust War on Drugs, Gabbard agreed with the voters suggestion to legalize and regulate narcotics. To justify that position, Gabbard mentioned the country of Portugal, which legalized all drugs in 2001.

I think that when you look at the statistics that come out of countries like Portugal that have taken that extreme stepthe fears, and the myths, and the stigma around taking that stuff should be set aside, she said. Because ultimately what you see is there are fewer and fewer people who are unnecessarily being incarcerated, and there are more people who need help who are actually getting the help that they need.

For Gabbard, drug policy is a question of personal autonomy and free choice. When it really comes right down to it, thats what this issue is about. Its about choice, she elaborated at the town hall. And each of us as individuals living with and dealing with the consequences of those choices whether they be on our own personal health or impacting us in other ways. However, Gabbard does not believe one of the consequences of drug use should be time in prison or a permanent criminal record.

The candidate further clarified that she was not advocating drug use, or that her views on personal liberty were reflective of her own decisions. For me, Ive never done drugs, and I wont. Thats my choice, she said.

This position, first announced publicly only three weeks ago, is a jump from Gabbards previous policies. Up until January, the congresswoman had promised to legalize marijuana at the federal level (having already introduced a bipartisan bill in the House), end the War on Drugs, and implement criminal justice reform. Her policy positions on her campaign website have not been altered to reflect her recent statements.

New Hampshire has so far only legalized marijuana for medical use, making it more restrictive than all three of its neighboring states and far from the policy Gabbard is prescribing. No matter what the primary results are, Tulsi Gabbard has pledged to take her campaign to the floor of the Democratic convention.

Hunter DeRensis is senior reporter at the National Interest. Follow him on Twitter @HunterDeRensis.

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Rep. Tulsi Gabbard Wants to Legalize Drugs (As in All Drugs) - The National Interest Online

Help the Mendocino Cannabis Alliance get an Equity Grant This Saturday by Telling Your Prohibition Story – Redheaded Blackbelt

Press release from the Mendocino Cannabis Alliance:

[Stock photo by Kym Kemp]

MCA is currently working with the Mendocino County Board of Supervisors to support the countys application for a state-funded Equity Grant. We invite ALL Mendocino County cannabis community members (permitted or not) to come and share their stories of suffering brought about by the War on Drugs and cannabis prohibition to aid in this effort.

MCA DECLARATION WRITING DAY

11AM 4PM on Saturday February 15th, 2020

475 S. Oak St., Ukiah, CA

We will help you tell your story.

Community members should be ready to answer questions like:

How did the War on Drugs hurt you?

Were you or someone close to you raided? Busted? Affected by the overflights?

Did you lose land, product, assets?

Has it kept you from going legal or keeping you in the legal market?

Did the lack of banking, access to loans or drop in prices affect your ability to go forward?

Could you use an Equity Grant to help you get through the hoops?

Guided by Attorney Hannah Nelson.

The Mendocino Cannabis Alliance serves and promotes Mendocino Countys world-renowned cannabis cultivators and businesses through sustainable economic development, education and public policy initiatives.

If you would like more information on this event, please email info@mendocannabis.com

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Help the Mendocino Cannabis Alliance get an Equity Grant This Saturday by Telling Your Prohibition Story - Redheaded Blackbelt

Drugs – why is the ‘Just say no’ campaign failing? – Malaysiakini

COMMENT| I attended an anti-drug campaign during high school. We were reminded again and again: Dont ever do drugs or your life will be ruined! There was a big screen in the hall. You could hear a pin drop when they first played the video. It was about a man who was flogged 24 times for committing a crime.

For many of us, it was the first time we saw the naked buttocks of a grownup man. Pieces of flesh were ripped from his body. Definitely not for the faint-hearted. But did the scare tactic work?

When the video ended, some of my schoolmates were traumatised. But some found it amusing and they cheered and clapped their hands. Despite the intended effect, our school wasnt drug-free that year.

The National Anti-Drug Agency (AADK) often brings different types of drugs to exhibit them in schools. The purpose? To show students how harmful drugs can be.

Last year, the director-general of the AADK told the media that two million students were at risk of drug use. Urine-testing was done in schools as an early preventive step to stop students from using drugs.

I am not saying we should turn a blind eye to children who use drugs. But the main reasons why kids use drugs are curiosity, broken families, trauma from abuse, mental illnesses, stress, boredom and peer pressure. Will random drug tests and harsh punitive action prevent all these?

True story on random urine testing - When I was in Form 4, nine of my friends smoked rokok daun in the school bus. The next day, the AADK did a urine test in our school. All of them were found positive for tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and jailed for weeks. After their release, the headmaster caned all of them publicly.

Some boys were suspended, some expelled. The majority ended up living a problematic life. But the one that did not attend school that fateful day was able to escape and now is a doctor.

This story reminds me of Barack Obama and Bill Clinton who had admitted to drug use in their younger days. Would they have been US presidents if they had been caught?

The Dangerous Drugs Act, which criminalises drug use, was enacted in 1952 when addiction was considered a security threat and not a medical condition. The law does not differentiate people who use drugs experimentally, recreationally, for self-medication or chronic use. Instead, it only provides a "one-size-fits-all" solution.

The punishment is either a fine, jail sentence or both. In any case, the criminal records will be a hurdle for pursuing higher education and deters future proper employment.

"Ahmad" scored 7As for his SPM. His father and sister were both in prison for minor drug offences. Feeling lonely and depressed, he mingled with the wrong crowd and became addicted to drugs. Does the war on drugs break the cycle of addiction or has it broken Ahmads family, making him vulnerable to drug addiction?

Addiction is defined as a chronic, relapsing disorder characterised by compulsive drug-seeking. Negative emotions, such as sadness, grief and shame, if left unaddressed, will create tremendous potential for relapse. Without evidence-based treatment and interventions, it is highly unlikely "Ahmad" will break the cycle of addiction in prison.

I met "Rahul" and his family in a children's court when I was a rookie in the legal system. "Rahul" was this mischievous boy who frequently appeared in courts for drug use and other petty crimes.

Please send him to prison, I dont know how to deal with him anymore, said Rahuls father. What he didnt understand was that prison is not the solution. You might even expect "Rahul" to learn something and end his addiction while in prison.

But the unpopular truth is that prison officers are not trained to handle drug addiction. Furthermore, overcrowding in prison can fan the spread of diseases.

Research conducted revealed a high prevalence of latent tuberculosis among prisoners (88.8 percent) and prison staff (81 percent) at the Kajang Prison. Instead of getting the needful intervention, "Rahul" was exposed to infectious diseases and other hardcore criminals.

The last time we met, Rahul was in the High Court, facing a drug trafficking charge.

Most drug education programmes are aimed solely at preventing drug use. After instructions to abstain, the lesson ends. Abstinence is treated as the sole measure of success. Although the abstinence-only mandate is well-intended, this approach is clearly not enough.

It is unrealistic to believe that, at a time in their lives when they are most prone to risk-taking, teenagers will completely refrain from trying alcohol and/or other drugs.

If we really want to minimise drug problems among young people, we need a "fall back" strategy that includes comprehensive education and puts the safety, welfare and future of our children at the forefront.

Drug prevention programmes should focus on enhancing the decision-making ability for a healthier lifestyle while providing active social support.

Perhaps it is wise to look at the Iceland drug prevention model, which was designed around the idea of giving youngsters better things to do. Technology and a high-level of social media use have changed the way children interact with others. What worked before might not work now, and definitely won't always work.

With the influx of information on how drugs can be delivered from door-to-door, it is high time for Malaysia to embrace a comprehensive drug policy that is evidence-based and encompasses prevention, supply reduction, treatment and harm reduction while working closely with the affected communities.

SAMANTHA CHONG is a former deputy public prosecutor and drug policy reform advocate.

The views expressed here are those of the author/contributor and do not necessarily represent the views of Malaysiakini.

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Drugs - why is the 'Just say no' campaign failing? - Malaysiakini

Are single childfree women the last of the hopeless romantics? – TheArticle

It was the actor Timothy Dalton who ruined me for other men.

I was eight or nine years old, lying on the sofa, battling a fever and watching the afternoon matinee when it happened. The film was Wuthering Heights. Dalton was Heathcliff. And the die was cast.

Love was no longer heart-shaped sweets and posters of David Soul; it was a dirty-faced gypsy boy consumed by a girl called Catherine. Heathcliffs love was bitter, greedy and eternal, and I had no sympathy for Catherine when she died. She betrayed Heathcliff and she betrayed love. She settled for less and she got what she deserved. I would never have married Edgar Linton. Id have waited for Heathcliff.

Ive spent a lifetime waiting for him.

Four decades on, and while recognising that Heathcliff is possibly not the greatest ambassador for love, I cant shake the all or nothing ideal he represents. This probably explains why, at the age of 49, Im alone and childless and possibly destined to remain that way, certainly as far as children are concerned.

By rights, I should be beside myself. And yet, Im not. I consider myself a true romantic and if the latest research is to be believed, Im all the happier for it.

According to the experts, unmarried and childless women are the happiest subgroup in the population.

In his book, Happy Ever, Professor Paul Dolan from the London School of Economics, looked at evidence offered by the American Time Use Survey (ATUS), which compared levels of pleasure and misery in unmarried, married, divorced, separated and widowed individuals.

While men largely benefited from marriage, the same couldnt be said of women, with middle-aged married women being at a higher risk of physical and mental conditions than their single counterparts.

And yet, in spite of this evidence, there remains a common belief that unmarried, childless women are somehow less complete or in denial.

Although I cant say I have ever felt in any way stigmatised by my status as a single, childless woman, I have come across people who have found it difficult to understand, or even accept.

A couple of years ago I was pursued via messenger by a former schoolfriend who seemed to think we would be good together by virtue of us both liking to write. I tried to let him down gently, only to receive the plaintive cry Why are you scared of love? What to say? Single women in their forties are not scared of love; au contraire they are scared of nutjobs they once went to school with.

In truth, I have been in love on several occasions one of them deeply yet it has never been quite enough. Some might say, Im a childish idealist rather than a true romantic and I should wake up and join the real world. Maybe theyre right. But let me assure you, I am no stranger to reality. Over the years, I have seen it carved into mutilated bodies left to rot on the Afghan plains. I have seen it reflected in the tears of grown men struggling with memories of childhood abuse. I have seen it in the extended bellies of starving children.

I know reality. And thats why I wont barter with it in my personal life. There can be no compromise. Its the real deal or no deal.

Kate OConnor is an international journalist in her forties now living in London. Though she used to joke that her ideal man was a hunk with a hedge fund and a horse farm, coming over the horizon in a helicopter, she is actually very happy with her life the way it is.

I have a very full and rich life. I have men in my life. I have freedom. And I honestly say to myself, out loud, Thank God, I dont have children. Ive never wanted children although in the two serious relationships in my life I came close to making the compromise, but it just wasnt me. Ive never thought I had to conform to what society thinks I should be doing.

Kates longest relationship lasted ten years though she admits it should have been culled by six, but vanity, hubris and pity kept me going. She also believes that too many people stay in dead-end relationships because they dont know any better.

Its the frog-in-a-pan-of-cold-water theory, she explains. You put a flame under the pan and as the water heats up the frog doesnt realise its going to boil to death. If the frog did know, it would have jumped out of the pan and saved itself. Its the same if youre in a long-term relationship; it can deteriorate so slowly that you dont realise the point at which it deteriorates beyond repair. People stick around because this has become their normal.

Usually my relationships end because I make a commitment, I put everything into it, I focus on it, and then Im disappointed. When that disappointment hits me, there is no resurrection. Theres no saying this was the great love of my life. Its just over. If it really was the great love of my life, I wouldnt be single. For me, the great love of my life is the next one.

According to the most recent figures published by the Office for National Statistics, some 18 per cent of British women aged 45 are childless putting them close to the top of the world leader board in terms of childless women over forty. The expert opinion appears to be that women are increasingly delaying motherhood in order to pursue careers. While that might be partly correct, life is usually more complicated than that. For some, delaying motherhood wasnt a conscious decision, it was a repercussion of failing in our primary goal that of finding true love.

Sandra Khadhouri, 48, is a political communications adviser living in London. She has held down high-powered jobs with the UN, the EU and Nato, but has yet to attain the same success in her personal life.

People dont put the same effort into romantic relations as they do in other areas of their life so if theyre happy to be led by their career theyre happy to walk away from relationships. Personally, Id like to feel that within the relationships that I really thought there was something there, I did make the effort. I did try to make it work, but for whatever reasons those guys at those particular times couldnt commit to me in the way I wanted them to commit. Now, a couple of them have come back into my life, but its too late. I dont love them anymore.

I recently found a guide Id written when I was 12 years old about how to prepare for parties. I had to rinse my hair with rain water, put on body glitter and do my make-up. All the points were itemised and it made me feel quite sad because I used to care so much about getting it right and I can still remember those butterflies at the thought of meeting a guy I liked. I miss that in a way. I guess Im a romantic at heart, but my passion for other causes got in the way.

It is this very romantic notion of love that underlines many of the stories of women who have never truly settled. For some its an unattainable image of perfection; for others its a surprise still waiting to happen; for others its a moment that has been and gone and left them unable to move on.

Hels Laycock was 25 when her boyfriend Paul McGee was fatally stabbed after a night out in Lochwinnoch, Renfrewshire in 2009.

Paul, a Scots Guard who was awarded the Queens Commendation for Bravery after risking his life to save a fellow soldier in Iraq, was caught up in an altercation between two men and the taxi driver who was taking him and Hels home following a charity event.

Hels, a nurse, said: All this time, I think Ive been looking too hard to replace him. Ive had relationships since he died, but Ive probably compared them all to Paul. Now, Im conscious of getting older and all our friends have got married and had kids. Im the only one who hasnt. Paul and I might not have stayed together in the end, but the not knowing is what kills me, and when his captain revealed Paul had made plans for the two of us it made his loss even worse because I knew then he had been serious about us and all Ive ever wanted is to be loved.

While Hels admits she has gone from one bad relationship to another in pursuit of love, she has always managed to extricate herself before fully committing, knowing deep down that she hadnt found the one to replace the man who could have been the one.

Sandra and Kate have also had their fair share of happy-ever-after near misses and though they are both at ease with being single, they are still dating. For Sandra, she believes its a question of timing when it comes to finding Mr Right rather than Mr Right Now.

I do assume I will meet someone in the end, when the time is right, says Sandra. I feel that will happen when my life is more settled, and Ive achieved a few other life goals. I know I must make an effort to meet guys or else it wont happen. Still, Im hoping that just by being more open, I will meet someone naturally.

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Are single childfree women the last of the hopeless romantics? - TheArticle

Montauk Fishing Crew Overboard Off Fire Island – East Hampton Star

New Age, a commercial fishing vessel, was taking on water and the crew jumped overboard. An HH-60 Jayhawk helicopter from Air Station Cape Cod responded and transported an injured crew member to the hospital.

Update: The owner of theNew Age, a commercial fishing vessel from Montauk that took on water Wednesday morning, forcingits crew to evacuate the boat 25 nautical miles south of Fire Island, raced to his boat and is now aboard, heading fora New Jersey port in an effort to save it.

Chris Winkler of Montauk, the boat's owner, had just landed at J.F.K. Airport after a two-week vacationwith his girlfriend, Tracy Stoloff, when he received a call from the Coast Guard that his crew had been forced overboard. "The first question out of Chris's mouth when he was talking to the Coast Guard is 'How is my crew? Where is my crew?' "

One crew member was injured and taken to the hospital.

Mr. Winklerwas told that it was too dangerous to try tosave the boat, though it had not yet sunk or capsized, Ms. Stoloff said Wednesday evening.

He called his brother-in-law,Matt Fabrizio, and they raced to Mr. Fabrizio'sboat in the Islip-Bay Shore area, while Ms. Skoloff retrieved some gear from his garage for their trip to the New Age. Mr. Winkler was able to get onto his boat, which was stillfloating and drifting, and use pumps he had brought to get enough water off it sohe could try to make the trip to Belford, N.J., the nearest and safest port, Ms. Stoloff said.

"He is steaming the boat right now," she said around 6 p.m. A Coast Guard cutter was trailing him. "They saved that boat," she said.

Ms. Stoloff received a call from a petty officer with the Coast Guard, who, alone on the boat,updated her. She said he should be at the port in three to four hours.

Mr. Winklerhas owned the New Agefor 30 years.

Originally: The captain and crew of New Age, a commercial fishing vessel out of Montauk, had to abandon ship with water washing over the deck while 25 nautical miles south of Fire Island Wednesday morning. One person was taken to the hospital.

Coast Guard Sector Long Island Sound first received a distress call from the 45-foot boat, operated by Capt. William Carman, at 4:35 a.m., according to Petty Officer John Hightower.

Chris Winkler of Montauk owns the New Age. He could not immediately be reached.

The dewatering pump was not working, and the three men on board told the Coast Guard they were preparing to deploy a life raft and were donning flotation devices.

A 45-foot response boat from Coast Guard Station Fire Island arrived at 6:44 a.m. and found the three men in the water. Though they had deployed the life raft, they were not in it, Officer Hightower said. All three were wearing survival suits, used in cold weather.

One of the men, whose name was not released, was injured when jumping overboard, the petty officer said. A medevac helicopter from Air Station Cape Cod flew him to Good Samaritan Hospital in West Islip. He is expected to recover.

The boat has not yet capsized, but it is flooded and drifting. The Coast Guard is monitoring the situation while a plan for what to do with the boat is formulated.

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Montauk Fishing Crew Overboard Off Fire Island - East Hampton Star

Grand Island moves forward with six-year road construction project plan – KSNB Local 4

GRAND ISLAND, Neb. (KSNB) - The Grand Island city council has set in motion a big number of road projects that will have an impact on many drivers. Tuesday night they approved a six year plan and one of the biggest projects the city will have ever done can start as soon as this summer.

The intersection that is the source of the most car crashes in the entire city of Grand Island will be getting major improvements. Old Potash Highway and Highway 281 will have right turn lanes added in both directions. This means the road will be widened to accommodate.

So we have two through lanes in each direction along with turn lanes, Public Works Director John Collins said.

On the East side, there will be a roundabout added on Wilmar Avenue where many turn in to go to Hy Vee or Perkins. This is to deal with the projected population growth over the next ten years.

On the West side, since business along Old Potash will be impacted, Claude Road will be paved to give another point of access.

But this will become like a Webb Road in that one side will be highly commercial, the other side will probably be less used. Rather than people going up and down diers North-South they'll use claude, Collins said.

Diers Avenue will also be limited to right turns only since people turning left on to Old Potash cause a lot of backup. The road will be widened all the way to North Road where drivers will be met with another roundabout. The Old Potash project is projected to take until 2022 and will cost about $15 million.

Some of the money is coming from the gas tax revenue the city gets from the state each year and then to accelerate it the half cent tax is being used, Collins said.

With these improvements the city says old potash will become safer to drive on and save commuters a lot of time.

The bidding process for the Old Potash projects is set to begin in march. Collins said the first phases can begin as soon as this summer.

Other projects include:

-Asphalt resurfacing-Hwy 281 corridor signal timing optimization-Sycamore underpass - S Front St bridge deck replacement-Eddy St underpass and associated bridges-North Rd - 113th to Hwy 2 - Widen to 3-lane-North Rd - Old Potash to 13th - Widen to 3-lane-Capital Ave - Moores Creek to North Rd - Widen to 3-lane-Custer Ave - Forrest to Old Potash - Widen to 3-lane-Broadwell Ave/UPRR - Planning and Environmental-Locust St Reconstruction; Koeing St to Fonner Park Rd-Stolley Park Rd; State Fair Entrance to Stuhr Rd-Independence Ave; Capital Ave to Manchester/Macron

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Grand Island moves forward with six-year road construction project plan - KSNB Local 4

ABC Act breaks down barriers to mental health care on-Island – Martha’s Vineyard Times

An act titled Addressing Barriers to Care (ABC) recently unveiled by the state Senate seeks to provide easy access to mental health support services across the commonwealth.

According to a press release, the act will implement sweeping parity and insurance reforms, mental health workforce pipeline improvements, and will extend the access to care for psychiatric services.

Marthas Vineyard representative for the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) Cecilia Brennan told The Times everyone at NAMI is very excited to see where this act takes us in the future of accessibility to mental health services.

NAMI executive director Jackie Lane took part in five separate listening sessions for the bill, and her input was used in developing the legislation, according to Brennan.

Brennan said it will take a while to implement some of the conditions and requirements in the bill, but its one step in the right direction for improving access and continuum of care.

She said one issue on the Vineyard that the bill might address is the lack of an adequate workforce, and the integration of mental health services in primary care.

For the Vineyard, much of the issue is getting the right workforce and creating a better pipeline of candidates for these types of jobs, Brennan said. We want to encourage people to go into these fields.

Brennan also said ensuring capacity in the emergency department of Massachusetts hospitals will be another possible benefit to the legislation. We want to make sure there are enough beds and enough mental health clinicians available to meet the needs of our community, Brennan said.

State government officials wrote in the release that mental health issues are often not covered by insurance, and are often tough topics to broach.

Too many people in Massachusetts struggle to access the mental health services they desperately need and deserve, said Sen. Julian Cyr (D-Truro), co-chair of the Joint Committee on Mental Health, Substance Use and Recovery, in the release. The reasons are many and complicated: Mental health care is treated differently than physical health, it is often not covered by insurance, it is difficult to access, and it is hard to talk about.

The bill will effectively diminish the leverage insurance companies have in determining a patients course of treatment, and give health care providers and individual clinicians more say in the process as they consult with patients, the release states.

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ABC Act breaks down barriers to mental health care on-Island - Martha's Vineyard Times

The Conventional Wisdom Still Stands: America Can Deal with China’s Artificial Island Bases – War on the Rocks

What is the strategic value of Chinas Spratly outposts in the South China Sea? Are they a military asset or liability for Beijing? While they allow China to monitor air and naval traffic in the South China Sea, an emerging consensus in American military circles argues that Chinas artificial features are more of a headache for Beijing than for Washington. U.S. Navy and Air Force assets could neutralize the Chinese positions relatively quickly if required.

Gregory Poling disagrees with that assessment. In a recent War on the Rocks article, he concludes that Chinas man-made installations could pose a major problem for the U.S. military in the Western Pacific in war time, and could even be used to deny American forces access to the region. Poling argues that it would be prohibitively costly for the United States to neutralize those outposts during early stages of a conflict. He warns Washington that dismissing the strategic value of the Spratly outposts would be a mistake.

The arguments that Poling advances are plausible, but not convincing. The conventional wisdom about the Spratlys still holds true because the reach and capability of the U.S. military to fight its way through Chinas island defenses remains robust. The United States, not China, enjoys the benefit of multiple options in the event of a conflict. In contrast, Chinas ability to supply the far-flung outposts, amass significant air power on the three largest artificial islands the Fiery Cross Reef, Subi Reef, and Mischief Reef and generate and sustain combat air sorties could quickly dwindle in the face of concentrated cruise missile and air strikes against those outposts.

American Options in the South China Sea

Chinas outposts in the Spratlys would be difficult for Beijing to defend in a crisis. First, the man-made islands suffer from congestion. Much of the critical infrastructure, such as aircraft shelters and supporting supply and weapons storage, is erected in close proximity, as satellite pictures and aerial photographs clearly demonstrate. Moreover, the limited available real estate creates clear constraints for dispersing air defense systems, equipment, and troops. The tightly packed aircraft shelters offer valuable targets for American planners. Additionally, the very environment on the islands restricts burying critical infrastructure deep underground.

Striking these bases with cruise missiles remains the most plausible U.S. military strategy in the early hours of any conflict. The most realistic military objective for striking these bases would be to degrade their ability to generate air sorties and cut off the outposts logistical support from mainland China more than 600 nautical miles away. Another objective would be to keep the Spratlys out of operation until more air power could be mounted against them.

The U.S. Navy and Air Force would need 3050 cruise missiles per the three largest outposts (or 90150 cruise missiles total) to accomplish these objectives. This number of cruise missiles would be sufficient to cut each three-kilometer-long runway to roughly 400-meter sections, strike taxiways, quick-reaction alert shelters, and aircraft at open or otherwise known locations. It would also allow American forces to target command, control, and communication nodes, fuel and weapons storage facilities, known air defense sites, as well as logistical facilities and piers. The given number of cruise missiles is inclusive of required redundancy: Two to three missiles are required to ensure successful destruction of key targets like command and control or communication nodes, and three to four missiles may be needed to take out buried or hardened targets.

Air power would be at the forefront of an American approach to seriously degrade Chinas ability to mount a substantial defense from the military outposts against follow-on forces. B-2 (or the future B-21) and other stealth aircraft, as well as supporting electronic warfare/electronic attack platforms, would be utilized to penetrate air defenses. The aircraft would drop dozens of precision-guided munitions to take out the defenses that could hinder the Navys access to the South China Sea. Air Force and Navy aircraft would expend standoff weapons to crater runways, taxiways, and attack aircraft in shelters or at open. The bases supply and storage facilities, as well as the pier infrastructure, would come under heavy attack. American assets would make good use of stand-off jamming aircraft, such as the Growler, and stand-in decoys and jammers to blind and confuse integrated air defences on the bases. Notably, many of these actions would happen in sequence and almost simultaneously. Also, the penetrating munitions the United States would use could undermine or damage the integrity of the artificial islands foundation, which has already suffered from erosion.

Poling argues that cruise missile strikes would be ineffective against the Spratlys. He cites the large-scale cruise missile attack against al-Shayrat Air Base in Syria in 2017 in which the United States launched 59 Tomahawk cruise missiles at the base but failed to stop the bases operations for any meaningful period of time as proof that this approach would not work. This argument is based on the fact that the runway [at al-Sharyat Air Base] was back in operation just a few hours later. However, none of the 59 Tomahawks launched at the air base targeted the runway. Rather, the United States intention was to degrade the Syrian Arab Air Forces ability to deliver deadly chemical weapons and to signal that such actions do not go without consequences. In line with its objective, Washington targeted aircraft in the open and in hardened aircraft shelters, as well as fuel and ammunition depots and air defenses. The military intention, therefore, was not to destroy the air base completely but to degrade it and convey a message.

The relative dispersion of targets on Chinas artificial islands remains well within the range of American cruise missiles. Precision-guided munitions are insensitive to even wide dispersion. If the United States knows of the geographic longitude and latitude of the given targets, it can direct American cruise missiles to those targets regardless of physical dispersion. However, a conventional air strike against an air base with widely dispersed targets would pose a greater challenge. Wide dispersion demands more strike aircraft and attack vectors to cover all intended targets. But this is not a significant problem at the Spratly outposts due to the limited real estate and congestion.

What if China is Able to Deny America Access to the South China Sea?

If America is unable to neutralize Chinas Spratly outposts at the outset of a conflict, it can turn to other alternatives. The U.S. Air Force could mount a response of strategic bombers, such as the B-1, B-52, and B-2, laden with sophisticated low-observable cruise missiles. These aircraft could be positioned at U.S. bases in Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean, Darwin in Australia, or Guam in the Western Pacific Ocean, offering enough ramp-space for the large bombers (see Figure 1). These bases guarantee fast response from a relatively safe distance. By comparison, while U.S. bases in Korea and Japan offer closer proximity, they would likely be targeted by Chinese missile forces in the event of major confrontation. Hawaiis Hickham Air Force Base could serve as hub for amassing air power and logistics. In the past, the United States has carried out cruise missile strikes in the Middle East with B-52s or B-2s taking-off from the Barksdale AFB the home for U.S. Air Force Global Strike Command.

Conducting coordinated cruise missile strikes from these distant bases would allow the U.S. Air Force to effectively stop Chinese air operations from the three airfields in the Spratlys, seizing initiative to follow-up with more destructive air strikes or to put focus elsewhere. Carrying between 1220 advanced cruise missiles each, such as the Tomahawk air-launched cruise missiles (ALCM) or joint air-to-surface standoff missiles (JASSM-ER), U.S. strategic bombers alone have the sufficient range and capacity to degrade or cease adversary air operations in the island outposts.

Gaining access to basing in, for example, the Philippines, Thailand, and Singapore would further benefit the U.S. militarys ability to press in and ultimately destroy Chinese military potential in the Spratlys. Gaining access to basing in Southeast Asian littorals, however, remains an unreliable alternative. As Poling correctly points out, those countries may deny the United States access to their facilities. At the same time, a conflict in the South China Sea would likely involve some of the littoral states in hostilities, directly or indirectly. Against such odds, some of the weaker actors could choose to offer or accept U.S. forces as a concrete security guarantee against Chinese aggression. A shared threat generates alliances. This would open U.S. military access closer to the theatre and allow for greatly increased sortie generation.

Source: Map generated by the author.

To be sure, each U.S. military service has or is devising elaborate plans to ensure continued access to East Asian littorals. The U.S. Air Force, for example, has developed and tested innovative plans to fight its way in, involving rapid and dispersed deployment of multiple 5th-generation fighter elements, supported by a single C-17 or C-130, that stand a better chance to get access closer to the theatre and to challenge an adversarys air superiority. The Marines operational plans include full-length aviation deck amphibious landing ships with flights of F-35Bs, contributing to and supporting the U.S. Navys big deck carriers in bringing about dispersed operations and concentrated effects. Again, access to basing in the archipelagic Southeast Asia would make life much easier for the U.S. military, enabling better sustained air operations, but the absence of which would not mean losing the fight.

U.S. warships could be pushed out of the South China Sea by a combination of Chinas advanced anti-ship cruise and ballistic missiles, complicating the U.S. Navys role in providing the mass (capacity depth) for any cruise missile strike against the Chinese bases in the Spratlys. To maintain an adequate range for Tomahawk land attack missile (TLAM) strikes against the Spratly outposts, U.S. ships could operate from the Sulu or Celebes Seas, as Poling raised. But it is also likely that U.S. Navy ships could launch cruise missile strikes from the Java Sea, Flores Sea, Molucca Sea within the Indonesian archipelago, east of Luzon in the Philippines, or from waters northwest from the Malacca Strait, or east of Sumatra Island (see Figure 2). American submarines could be used to help manned aircraft in cutting Chinese supply efforts to the Spratlys. The more China can amass forces on its Spratly outposts, the more the outposts can rely upon supplies from mainland China.

Source: Map generated by the author.

Its Hard for China to Maintain a Large Military Footprint on the Spratlys

Chinas Peoples Liberation Army Air Force (PLAAF) would find it difficult to maintain air supremacy over the South China Sea. China has constructed enough aircraft shelters to base a full regiment (typically 24 aircraft) of fighter aircraft at each of its three largest outposts. PLAAF would need to operate these aircraft from a single runway before any American strike. This reality can easily turn into a serious operational bottleneck during increased flight operations. The RAND Corporations 2015 study, The U.S.-China Military Scorecard, highlight the PLAAFs problems in amassing air power over the Spratlys as well as the United States ability to bring in decisive air power. In addition, the large number of aircraft on the outposts would be very vulnerable to follow-on attacks due cratered runways. If in the air, however, the aircraft would need to try to make it to Hainan island for landing. Maintaining air superiority over the South China Sea from mainland China does not come easy.

A large military footprint on the Spratlys also creates massive demand for continuous flow of supplies, food, and fuel, virtually all of which would need to be transported by sea from the mainland. The three largest outposts have underground storage spaces for fuel and supplies, but that reserve can last only so long in the face of a U.S. attack. In addition, as casualties mount, repatriation to mainland or replacement of manpower becomes very difficult. Targeting the outposts electricity-generation would make matters worse. Based on aerial and satellite pictures, China has not added redundancy to its critical infrastructure on the islands.

To make matters worse for China, Beijing has to take into account possible U.S. submarine presence in the South China Sea when supplying its man-made islands. As some experts see the artificial islands defenses forming a bastion for Chinese SSBNs, the deep waters also give space for Chinas adversaries submarines to hide. China has made headway in developing anti-submarine warfare capabilities, but this area remains one of its burgeoning navys greatest weaknesses. Forming an undersea blockade to attrite Chinese supplies to the outposts thus poses a real and present danger to Chinese defense planners.

The true military value of the outposts, as Poling rightly alluded to, is in their ability to generate an unmatched situational awareness in air and sea in the South China Sea, enabling Chinas military to monitor all movement in and out the South China Sea. This can be further supported by innovative uses of Chinas maritime militia observing movements at sea where sensors cannot reach. It has also become clear that China has gained escalation dominance in the South China Sea in most situations short of war. This de facto control of the South China Sea gives China an important advantage over its neighbours in helping sustain and expand the reach and presence of its maritime forces in the region. The man-made features would be particularly useful for Beijing in any conflict between China and its smaller Southeast Asian neighbours that do not possess Americas military might.

The Big Picture

Chinas outposts in the Spratlys are a strategic liability for Beijing. They are hard to defend, and the United States has a number of options to attack them in a conflict. The American military retains its ability to degrade Chinese forces on the islands and to create a permissive environment for a further military push against Chinese assets in the South China Sea. There is no immediate military need to destroy the outposts completely, but rather to diminish their ability to bring about their intended military effects.

There is only so much that China can do to further bolster the man-made islands defenses. Any new addition of capabilities also creates further demands for supply and support. Ultimately, the offense in this case the United States should always have the advantage when it comes to the Spratlys. U.S. tested conventionally armed intermediate range ballistic missile over the Pacific in December 2019 once banned under the intermediate-range nuclear forces treaty (INF) a system that offer offensive advantages if deployed in the region. Additionally, Navy, Marines, Army, and Air Force are all working at breakneck speed to field a rapidly deployable hypersonic missile capability to frontline forces as early as 2021 or 2023. These new weapons will provide Washington with additional military options going forward. Any use of nuclear weapons against the Spratly outposts would not be advised and is an overkill. At the same time, nuclear weapons should deter a full-blown escalation between China and the United States. At the same time, as Sino-U.S. tensions intensify, Washington should not lose sight of simultaneous developments elsewhere in the vast Indo-Pacific. There is no space for complacency when it comes to the competition with China.

Olli Pekka Suorsa, Ph.D., is a research fellow at the Institute of Defense and Strategic Studies, S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, Singapore.

Image: Air Force (Photo by Staff Sgt. Joshua Smoot)

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The Conventional Wisdom Still Stands: America Can Deal with China's Artificial Island Bases - War on the Rocks

Staten Island mornings: Todt Hill – SILive.com

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- Mornings on Todt Hill are quiet and filled with wildlife, some grazing on the lawns of the spacious homes. The beautiful mansions make for great silhouettes against the red sunrise.

Todt Hill is the highest natural point in the five boroughs of New York City and the highest elevation on the entire Atlantic coastal plain from Florida to Cape Cod. The hill stands 401-feet tall, made of serpentine rock. The Greenbelt Blue Trail surrounds the neighborhood.

The waning moon over Todt Hill. (Staten Island Advance/ Jan Somma-Hammel)

From Flagg Place the sun rises and the early morning light shines. (Staten Island Advance/ Jan Somma-Hammel)

Looking over Reed's Basket Willow Swamp Park. (Staten Island Advance/ Jan Somma-Hammel)

Peeking through the bramble of the woods that surround Todt Hill. Only in winter can you get a sighting of the sunrise here.

Another interesting view of the Verazzano Bridge from Todt Hill as the sun rises. (Staten Island Advance/ Jan Somma-Hammel)

From Douglas Road the sun rises over the house tops. (Staten Island Advance/ Jan Somma-Hammel)

Deer roam the woods surrounding Todt Hill. (Staten Island Advance/ Jan Somma-Hammel)

A tree of colorful bird houses, Todt Hill. (Staten Island Advance/ Jan Somma-Hammel)

One of the mansions on Todt Hill in the early morning light. (Staten Island Advance/ Jan Somma-Hammel)

Wildlife. (Staten Island Advance/ Jan Somma-Hammel)

One of the stunning mansions with park like grounds on Circle Road. (Staten Island Advance/ Jan Somma-Hammel)

The long row of sycamore trees along Benedict Road, Todt Hill as the sun rises. (Staten Island Advance/ Jan Somma-Hammel)

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Staten Island mornings: Todt Hill - SILive.com

Former Little Bay Islands Resident says Water Not Shut off in Community – VOCM

(Photo courtesy Kintsugi via Facebook.)

A man who has property on resettled Little Bay Islands says somebody forgot to shut off the taps at the municipal water supply. As a result, his house and contents could be ruined.

The lights were turned off in Little Bay Islands December 31 but other services, including water, were supposed to be discontinued a few weeks before that. Perry Locke says the water is still running.

Locke plans to stay in his house during the summer months, and has installed about $10,000 worth of solar equipment in his concrete basement to live off the grid. There is no electricity on the island. Hes worried that the water will flood his basement.

He says government is just ignoring his requests to turn the water off. He wonders if they even know how to shut it off.

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Former Little Bay Islands Resident says Water Not Shut off in Community - VOCM

Poll: Who is Staten Islands best HS girls hoopster this season? – SILive.com

After weeks of polling, with nearly 200,000 votes pouring in, New Dorps Kasey Caroccia and Notre Dame Academys Amanda Zuntag emerged as the readers choice for the best girls hoopsters in the PSAL and CHSAA, respectively.

Now, were asking readers to crown a final champion -- as Caroccia and Zuntag square off in our conclusive poll to determine who is Staten Islands best HS girls hoopster this season.

Caroccia, a senior guard averaging 16.6 points per game to go along with 6.5 rebounds per contest, has developed into one of the PSALs prime scoring threats.

In the CHSAA circuit, Zuntag, a junior, has established herself as one of the leagues premiere rim protectors and elite post defenders -- tallying four blocks per game. She averages 8.7 points per game and 10 rebounds per contest.

*** The poll will remain open until Sunday at 10 a.m., when the winner is announced, with an update in the standings to come on Friday -- feel free to vote as often as youd like!

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Poll: Who is Staten Islands best HS girls hoopster this season? - SILive.com

What Its Like to Be Quarantined on an Island Over Coronavirus Fears – SBS News

Life in an immigration detention centre on Australias Christmas Island has not been as bad as David Huang feared.

It is certainly a far cry from the conditions that thousands of asylum-seekers have faced in the countrys offshore detention centres in recent years.

Sure, the steel on the buildings facade is rusted in parts. The Wi-Fi is shaky, especially at meal times, when he and others are trying to contact their families and friends.

Dinner, at least on Tuesday, the first night he spent there, was uninspiring and mushy.

Medical personnel preparing for the arrival of evacuees on Thursday.Credit...

Richard Wainwright/EPA, via Shutterstock

Yet after being evacuated from the Chinese city of Wuhan, the epicentre of the coronavirus outbreak, he had set his expectations low.

Mr Huang, a 22-year-old student from Sydney, is one of about 270 Australian citizens and permanent residents who have been flown out of China in the past week and taken to Christmas Island.

None of the evacuees have tested positive for the virus, Australias health minister said on Tuesday.

Health experts have criticised the governments decision to quarantine them for two weeks in a centre usually used to house asylum-seekers rather than holding evacuees in better-equipped military bases on the mainland.

But while some evacuees have said the conditions at the centre are worse than they had imagined, Mr Huang said he personally found the quarantine bearable.

Evacuees arriving at the airport on Christmas Island.Credit...

AAP

Although he said the travellers had found dead moths in their beds and dead cockroaches on the floors, and spent much of their first night in the centre cleaning, Mr Huang said he didnt really mind.

Its obviously not great for the rooms to have dirty conditions, he said by telephone.

But I think it's important to think about the fact that there are so many families here that they have to accommodate.

Workers at the centre have been responsive to evacuees requests, Mr Huang said.

They added more fruit and vegetables to the meals and handed out soap and cigarettes as well as sunscreen, shorts and sandals attire more suited to the tropical island than the clothes they had brought from China.

There are Xbox 360 gaming devices, which some of the evacuees were playing to pass the time.

A member of the medical team playing football at the detention center.Credit...

Shutterstock

Those in the quarantine have been given wristbands with QR codes that, when scanned, provide access to their medical records.

And every day, doctors wearing face masks and full protective medical gear take their temperatures.

Families are split into two people per room. Mr Huang and his father are staying in one room, while his mother and brother are staying in another.

The rooms have bunk beds and a desk. Showers and toilets are shared.

For Mr Huang and his family, their journey began on Sunday in the city of Xiangyang in Hubei province, about three hours away from Wuhan, the Chinese city hardest hit by the virus.

They had been visiting relatives during the Lunar New Year holiday last month when authorities locked down Xiangyang as part of a security cordon to contain the epidemic.

When the family decided to leave, they made a series of phone calls to Chinese and Australian officials and received documents that allowed them to drive through multiple checkpoints to Wuhans airport.

The flight first landed on Learmonth, an airbase in Western Australia. Passengers were then transferred on separate flights to Christmas Island.

There, Mr Huang, who is worried about contracting the virus, has mostly kept to himself.

Each day after waking up, he goes for a walk outside the building, which is surrounded by tall fences. After breakfast and a medical check, Mr Huang, who is studying game development, returns to his room, where he plays computer games for a few hours.

Then he goes for another walk to check his social media accounts. To pass the time, his mother has been teaching him how to read and write Chinese characters.

And repeat, he said. Thats what my daily schedule looks like.

Mr Huang said the hardest thing to deal with was the sense of isolation on an unfamiliar island, and he misses his friends in Sydney.

Very, very homesick, I think describes both my family and the families around us, he wrote on Facebook Messenger shortly before the internet seemed to drop out once more.

By Isabella Kwai 2020 The New York Times

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What Its Like to Be Quarantined on an Island Over Coronavirus Fears - SBS News

What’s happening on Shelter Island the week of Feb. 13 – Shelter Island Reporter – Shelter Island Reporter

THIS WEEKSCHOOL PLAY

Shelter Island Schools elementary students will perform The Big Chill on stage on Thursday, Feb. 13, at 7 p.m. in the auditorium.

The Shelter Island Library presents Friday Night Dialogues on Friday, Feb. 14, at 7 p.m. featuring Short and Sweet: Stories of Love. Whose heart does not warm at a love story? In celebration of Valentines Day, Islanders John and Katherine Moore will present a reading of short pieces on the subject of love in many forms. Featuring refreshments. Register at 631-749-0042.

Visit Mashomack Preserve on Saturday, Feb. 15, from 10 a.m. to noon for Signs of Life in Winter. Come see what is out and about in the dead of winter. We will hike, look for tracks, search for birds and learn how animals survive the cold season.

The Shelter Island Library hosts a new podcast club on Saturday, Feb. 15, at 2 p.m. The club will gather monthly to discuss podcast episodes over coffee or tea and explore a variety of topics. Listen to the podcasts at home, then join neighbors at the library. This month, the group will listen to Mobituaries, presented by journalist and humorist Mo Rocca and talk about the black Congressmen of Reconstruction in honor of Black History Month.

Shelter Island Friends of Music presents violin virtuoso Eric Silberger and pianist Bradley Moore at the Shelter Island Presbyterian Church on Sunday, Feb. 16, at 3 p.m., featuring music by Mozart, R. Strauss, Tchaikovsky, Gershwin and Hubay. A meet-the-artists wine and cheese reception follows. Free. shelterislandfriendsofmusic.org.

The Shelter Island Library presents Friday Night Dialogues: Getting Organized: A Talk and Discussion with Patty Morrissey on Friday, Feb. 21, at 7 p.m. Organizing and lifestyle consultant Patty Morrissey will speak about a whole host of topics related to organizing, goal setting and prioritizing. Ms. Morrissey will build upon concepts discussed at an earlier workshop but this interactive session will also be useful for those who are new to the topic. Please join us for this program to help you start the New Year off well. Please register at 631-749-0042 for this program which is free to the public.

Visit Mashomack Preserve on Saturday, Feb. 22, from 1 to 4 p.m. for Mashomack Point: A Tour of the Katharine Ordway Wildlife Refuge. Dedicated to a visionary and generous nature lover, Mashomack Point is opened for a guided walk just once a year. Well explore this areas unique woodlands, kettles, and fields, culminating with a breathtaking view of Northwest Harbor. Dress warmly.

Sylvester Manor presents Narratives in the Making: Unearthing the Stories Within Us, its sixth annual black history month celebration on Sunday, Feb. 23, from 2 to 4 p.m. at Bay Street Theater, 1 Bay St., Sag Harbor. Historical archaeologist Dr. Christopher Matthews and Cordell Reaves, historic preservation program analyst from NYS Office of Parks, will speak at the event which features panelists, a visual presentation and reception. Admission: $15 in advance; $20 at the door. Tickets available at sylvestermanor.org, 631-749-0626.

Shelter Island Library presents a screening of Downton Abbey (PG) on Thursday, Feb. 27, at 12:30 p.m.

The Shelter Island Library hosts a discussion group with philosophy professor Wendy Turgeon called Great Works of Philosophy on Friday, Feb. 28, at 12:30 p.m. Register: 631-749-0042.

Learn Spanish and English during Intercambio with Teri Piccozzi at the Shelter Island Library on Friday, Feb. 28, from 10 to 11:30 a.m. Engage in conversations in both languages. Informal, not a class. Featuring light refreshments. Free.

Visit Mashomack Preserve on Saturday, Feb. 29, from 1 to 2:30 p.m. for a truck tour and short hike to discover the traces of over 200 years of Nicoll family history in the meadows. Visit the Nicoll family cemetery, find the foundations of buildings in Miss Annie Nicolls Big House and learn about the familys lingering impacts on Mashomacks land today.

The Mashomack Preserve birding club will gather at the Mashomack Manor House on Saturday, March 7, from 10 to 11:30 a.m. Never gone birding? No problem. This is a casual meet-up open to anyone interested in learning more about local species. Coffee will be provided.

Sylvester Manor presents The Fretless playing two house concerts on Saturday, March 14, at 6 and 8 p.m. Hailing from Canada, The Fretless will jam in the historic Manor House music room. Winners of the 2017 Juno Award for Instrumental Album of the Year, The Fretless is a fiddle foursome playing an essential part in the emerging movement mainstreaming traditional Celtic folk music, just in time for St. Patricks Day. Admission: advance, $30; day of the show, $35.

The Shelter Island History Center is hosting a weaving workshop with textile artist Helena Hernmarck for children ages 7 to 12 on Saturday, April 4, at 11 a.m.

In her weaving practice, Ms. Hernmarck constantly works to see beyond the colors she thinks she sees in a design to get to the colors she actually sees. She then interprets these colors using skeins of wool in her wool wall, combining the strands into colorful bundles, and then weaving them into her tapestries.

In this workshop, participants will do the real thing in reverse. They will interpret the colors in a wool skein onto paper using a variety of artists tools including crayons and watercolors. In the process, they will get to know, though touch and sight, the special qualities of the wool Helena uses in her tapestries, and learn to see the intricacies of color. Fee: $25. Space is limited and online registration will be available until Wednesday, March 25 at shelterislandhistorical.org/hernmarckkidsworkshop.

After March 25 call the office at 631-749-0025 to check availability.

The Manhattan Film Institute returns with free films at the Greenport Theatre.

Feb. 15:

6:30 p.m.: The Goonies (PG)

7 p.m.: Philadelphia (PG-13)

Feb. 22:

6:30 p.m.: Spirited Away (PG)

7 p.m.: Breaking Away (PG-13)

Feb. 29:

6:30 p.m.: The Lion King (PG)

7 p.m.: Juno (PG-13)

March 7:

6:30 p.m.: March of the Penguins (G)

7 p.m.: Do the Right Thing (R)

March 14:

6:30 p.m.: Fantastic Mr. Fox (PG)

7 p.m.: Some Like it Hot (PG)

March 21:

6:30 p.m.: Moana (PG)

7 p.m.: Jerry Maguire (R)

March 28:

6:30 p.m.: Toy Story (G)

7 p.m.: Double Indemnity (NR)

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What's happening on Shelter Island the week of Feb. 13 - Shelter Island Reporter - Shelter Island Reporter

Hicks column: Would another layer of government on Johns Island stop growth? – Charleston Post Courier

Its easy to see why longtime Johns Island residents are frustrated.

Just drive out there and take a look ... but allot a couple of hours for the commute.

There are new subdivisions sprouting up every year and maddening rush-hour traffic every day. Now, they even have a gathering place an uber-urban collection of apartments, restaurants and retail businesses right there on Maybank Highway.

For some folks, its all just a little too James Island. This was predictably unavoidable given geography, population influx and property rights. People attempting to flee the citys rising home prices were bound to look for the nearest undeveloped spot, and some landowners saw dollar signs.

Old-timers fear the once-rural haven is vanishing and will disappear completely if Interstate 526 is extended onto the island. But forming another town to fight growth, as some residents are contemplating, may not be the answer.

In fact, it could have the exact opposite effect.

Right now, most of the growth on Johns Island crops up on land within the municipal borders of Charleston. A new town could do nothing about that. But that growth also is, not coincidentally, within the Urban Growth Boundary, beyond which the city and Charleston County have agreed they will not allow intense development.

Or, in most cases, even sewer lines the great enabler of development.

Nearly 79 percent of Johns Island or 60 of its 76 square miles is outside that boundary, which means it is already protected about as much as it legally can be. Most of that land is zoned for rural development that rarely allows more than one house per acre.

That is where a new town would form.

Thomas Legare, the islands unofficial mayor and one of the proponents of a local town, is certainly not looking for more density or development out that way. In fact, hed fight it pretty fiercely.

But hes only one person, and unless the new town government agreed to sign onto the Urban Growth Boundary, it wouldnt be forced to abide by those parameters.

Which means future elected officials could allow for any manner of sins against the remaining rural parts of the island. And make no mistake, some landowners would lobby for those rights there is too much money to be made.

It would be nearly impossible for a new town to make development more prohibitive than it is now. That would require down-zoning peoples property, and thats an expensive proposition that would involve years of court battles. The forest and agricultural land of currently unincorporated Johns Island wouldnt generate enough in taxes to fund such a crusade.

Of course, that assumes any municipality formed on Johns Island would be a real government and not a paper town like James Island, which exists only to block the city of Charleston from annexing more land there.

Johns Island would have to do things differently if it wants expanded police protection and flood mitigation. And more than half of residents would have to approve of a new town. Thats not a given, as Johns Island residents like everyone else are pretty divided. Believe it or not, some of them actually want 526. So this isnt something that happens overnight. James Island fought Charleston for 30 years to create its, ahem, minimalist town and finally won only because local legislators changed state law to help it do it.

The city might not fight a Johns Island incorporation, but those lawmakers probably would. They suspect this is a ploy to block the aforementioned 526, and they arent about to let that happen.

And the county, home to 18 municipalities already, is not keen to subsidize a 19th. Most of them already privately grumble about supporting the town of James Island.

Johns Islanders wisely retained local attorney Trent Kernodle, the man who helped James Island incorporate, to develop their plan. He told reporter Mikaela Porter there are a lot of questions to answer before this could happen.

Hes absolutely right. But the first question Johns Islanders have to ask themselves is this: Will another layer of government actually slow growth, or just give them a larger platform to vent their growing frustration?

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Hicks column: Would another layer of government on Johns Island stop growth? - Charleston Post Courier

Laughlintown family explores island life on ‘Beachfront Bargain Hunt’ – TribLIVE

Escaping to an island retreat is a fantasy many entertain.

Laughlintown residents Matt and Leigh Ann McCulty recently turned the fantasy into reality, with a little help from HGTVs Beachfront Bargain Hunt.

While working with a Realtor to find a home on Grand Cayman, they were asked to participate in the show.

They filmed in July, buying a condo that they will lease when not staying there. Their episode will air at 11 p.m. Feb. 18 and again at 2 a.m. Feb. 19.

The couple own and operate Ligoniers Diamond Theatre. Matt McCulty, 46, an audiologist, operates Advanced Hearing Centers in Mt. Pleasant, Greensburg and Ligonier.

Originally from Morgantown, W.Va., they had hoped to honeymoon in the Cayman Islands 21 years ago.

We couldnt afford it, Leigh Ann McCulty, 47, says. Years later they began visiting the island, falling in love with its beauty.

Since April, Matt McCulty has flown to the Cayman Islands once a month to spend a week working with an ear, nose and throat doctor.

Rather than continuing to spend money on hotels and restaurants during his stays, the couple began looking for a home.

Filming a fun experience

A British Overseas Territory, the Cayman Islands encompass three islands in the western Caribbean Sea. The largest, Grand Cayman, attracts sun lovers to its beach resorts and is known for scuba diving and snorkeling.

Two of the couples children, Arison, 12, and Mariana, 7, traveled with them in July. Son Lanigan, 15, joined them after football camp.

We did filming for four days, from morning to sunset, Leigh Ann says. We, of course, had to tell them what we were looking for. We definitely wanted something on the beach. The production team was amazing, she says.

I was nervous because everything is very expensive there. The main street, Seven Mile Beach, one-bedroom homes there are over $1 million, Leigh Ann says.

In one clip, the couple admire the view from one oceanfront home.

Beats pine needles and snow. Just think, you would never have to cut grass, she tells her husband.

The couple was shown three properties, all around the $500,000 price range. A bidding war led them to go over that price a bit in acquiring their two-bedroom condominium.

One larger home didnt make the cut. It was spectacular. But it was across the street from the beach. The beach was our priority, Leigh Ann says.

They hope their pride in their home states makes the filming cut.

During filming, we talked about many wonderful aspects of Pennsylvania and West Virginia, and what we enjoy doing in both places, Leigh Ann says.

Since buying the condo, they have painted and redecorated. They enjoyed trips to their new home over Thanksgiving and Christmas, and they recently made their first booking.

Mary Pickels is a Tribune-Review staff writer. You can contact Mary at 724-836-5401, [emailprotected] or via Twitter .

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Laughlintown family explores island life on 'Beachfront Bargain Hunt' - TribLIVE