Aptos psychologist: “Hillary: the Movie” now deemed political speech protected by the U.S. Constitution

Hillary: The Movie is now legal political speech by a corporation
Hillary: The Movie is a harshly critical 90-minute documentary. It was deemed a criminal act to show it on cable tv during the 2008 presidential primaries. Why? Because there was a federal law.

During the 2008 presidential primaries, the FCC denied permission to view Hillary: The Movie on demand cable. Back in 2008, to distribute in movie form an extremely vituperative expression of disdain for Hilary as a candidate was a criminal act. Cearly this was control of political content by the government.

That has now changed. The Supreme Court ruled in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission by a 5-4 decision that corporations have free speech the same as individual citizens.

It is no longer a criminal act for a non-profit (or for profit) corporation to express political free speech. The right for a group of people — such as a corporation — to express political speech is the same as for an individual.

This decision that corporations have freedom of speech makes sense. Freedom of assembly obviously means groups of people gathering together. Surely, groups of people gathering together as a group have freedom of speech. That goes for the ACLU as well as for Coke. What say you? written by Cameron Jackson DrCameronJackson@gmail.com

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Aptos psychologist: Let’s use the Internet to debate and control earmaks

ear marks
Pork is pork. Show it for what it is. Debate it. The Appropriations Committee is the Senate’s “favor factory”. It parcels out earmarks. Scott Brown wants to be on the Appropriations Committee precisely to improve transparency about earmarks. The last committee meeting held on Transparency in Government was held behind closed doors. written by Cameron Jackson DrCameronJackson@gmail.com

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DDS wastes money on research that finds more cases of autism located close to regional centers?

At times one wonders why huge sums of money are spent on research! The article below finds more autism is diagnosed close to regional centers and that more education and race is connected than environmental factors.

This money could have been better spent on what probably can reduce autistic spectrum disorders — reduce use of ultra sound and other invasive technology to medical necessity and reduce use of chemicals and pollutants in the home environments What goes on pre-birth, such as use of drugs and alcohol, has huge effects on development.

This study found that more cases of autistic spectrum disorder (ASD) are found to be located close to places that diagnose ASD — regional centers. Why? It is not that there are more cases close to regional centers but that there is access to a services that can diagnose ASD.

Take San

ta Cruz County which has a large agricultural population in Watsonville which is Hispanic and a more highly educated population in Santa Cruz and Scotts Valley. Far more children of Caucasian higher educated parents are routinely diagnosed than are children from less educated farm workers.

Why? Because lower income, less educated Hispanics are working 10-12 hours a day six days a week. Many do not have the time, energy or money to take their children to regional centers for a diagnosis.

So far as I can see this sort of research is a huge waste of time and money. What do you think? Read below what the researchers found:

“Researchers at UC Davis have identified 10 locations in California where the incidence of autism is higher than surrounding areas in the same region. Most of the areas, or clusters, are in locations where parents have higher-than-average levels of educational attainment. Because children with more educated parents are more likely to be diagnosed with an autism spectrum disorder, one need look no further for a cause, the authors say. The other clusters are located close to major autism treatment centers.

“The clusters are located primarily in the high-population areas of Southern California and, to a lesser extent, in the San Francisco Bay Area. The researchers said that, while children born within the clusters during the study period were more likely to be diagnosed with autism, the majority of the state’s children with autism were born in adjacent areas outside the clusters.

“For the rigorous study, published online today in the journal Autism Research, scientists examined nearly all of the approximately 2-1/2 million births recorded in the state of California from 1996 through 2000. About 10,000 children born during that five-year period were later diagnosed with an autism spectrum disorder, according to the state Department of Developmental Services (DDS).

After mapping the state’s birth cohort based on where the mothers lived at the time when their children were born, the researchers pinpointed birth locations of children who were later diagnosed with autism. The study looked for areas of higher incidence within each of the service zones of DDS’s regional centers, which coordinate services for individuals with developmental disorders like autism.

“This is the first time that anyone has looked at the geography of autism births in California in order to see whether there might be some local patches of elevated environmental risk. This method ignores unknown widespread factors (such as a regional pollutant) that could increase autism incidence,” said Karla Van Meter, the study’s lead author. Van Meter is an epidemiologist and was a doctoral student in the UC Davis Department of Public Health Sciences and at the Center for Animal Disease Modeling and Surveillance when the study was conducted.

“This spatial study was extremely rigorous because we developed a methodology that greatly improved accuracy in identifying areas of higher autism incidence. With so many possible environmental health risk factors, we see this method as generally useful for focusing studies on exposures that are elevated in such clusters,” Van Meter said.

However, the researchers said that in this investigation the clusters probably are not correlated with specific environmental pollutants or other “exposures.” Rather, they corellate to areas where residents are more educated.

“What we found with these clusters was that they correlated with neighborhoods of high education or neighborhoods that were near a major treatment center for autism,” said senior author Irva Hertz-Picciotto, a professor of public health sciences and a researcher with the UC Davis MIND Institute.

“In the U.S., the children of older, white and highly educated parents are more likely to receive a diagnosis of autism or autism spectrum disorder. For this reason, the clusters we found are probably not a result of a common environmental exposure. Instead, the differences in education, age and ethnicity of parents comparing births in the cluster versus those outside the cluster were striking enough to explain the clusters of autism cases,” Hertz-Picciotto said.

Autism is a neurodevelopmental disability characterized by impaired social development and communication and restricted, repetitive behaviors. It is considered a lifelong condition that develops by the time a child is 3 years old. The researchers limited their study to the five-year period between 1996 and 2000 in order to allow all of the children born during that time to grow to an age by which they probably would have received a diagnosis – 6 years old.

Van Meter said that the increased risk of autism in these areas is roughly a doubling of the incidence of autism over the incidence in the surrounding zone. For example, for the cluster area located in the service zone of the San Diego Regional Center, the autism incidence was 61.2 per 10,000 births and, in the rest of the Regional Center service zone, 27.1 per 10,000 births. For the Harbor Regional Center the incidence was 103.4 and 57.8, respectively. Van Meter added that it is important to remember that most of the children with autism were not born in the cluster areas.

In Southern California, the areas of increased incidence were located within these Regional Center service zones:

The Westside Regional Center, headquartered in Culver City, Calif., which serves the communities of western Los Angeles County, including the cities of Culver City, Inglewood and Santa Monica; The Harbor Regional Center, headquartered in Torrance, Calif., which serves southern Los Angeles County, including the cities of Bellflower, Harbor, Long Beach and Torrance; The North Los Angeles County Regional Center, headquartered in Van Nuys, Calif., which serves the San Fernando and Antelope valleys – two clusters were located in this regional center’s service zone. The South Central Los Angeles Regional Center, headquartered in Los Angeles, which serves the communities of Compton and Gardena; The Regional Center of Orange County, headquartered in Santa Ana, Calif., which serves the residents of Orange County; and The Regional Center of San Diego County, headquartered in San Diego, which serves people living in Imperial and San Diego counties.

In Northern California, the areas of increased incidence were located within these regional centers’ service zones:

The Golden Gate Regional Center, headquartered in San Francisco, which serves Marin and San Mateo counties and the City and County of San Francisco. Two clusters were located within the Golden Gate Regional Center’s service zone; and The San Andreas Regional Center, headquartered in Campbell, Calif., which serves Santa Clara, Santa Cruz, Monterey and San Benito counties.

Two areas of increased incidence were located in Central California regional centers’ service zones:

The Central Valley Regional Center, headquartered in Stockton, Calif., which serves Fresno, Kings, Madera, Mariposa, Merced and Tulare counties; and The Valley Mountain Regional Center, headquartered in Fresno, Calif., which serves Amador, Calaveras, San Joaquin, Stanislaus and Tuolumne counties.

The South Central and Valley Mountain Regional Centers autism clusters were listed as “potential clusters” because their clusters met a reduced set of statistical conditions.

All of these areas were identified using a sophisticated new biostatistical testing procedure developed by Van Meter in collaboration with study co-author Lasse Christiansen and constructed on Christiansen’s earlier statistical work. This method looked for combinations of events, in this case, autism, within a set of locations, in this case, births, whose occurrence would not be expected to occur at random. This is the first application of that method. UC Davis undertook the epidemiological study as a step toward identifying geographic risk factors for autism in California, Van Meter said.

The study also examined demographic factors recorded on the children’s birth records that are known to be associated with both autism and residential location. These included having an older parent – a known autism risk factor. The researchers found a statistically significant but small association of the cluster areas with older parental age at the time their child was born.

Hertz-Picciotto said that the findings do not counter the idea that the environment plays a role in autism, but rather, help to focus attention toward certain types of exposures.

“Because of the strong link between demographics, particularly parental education, and the locations of clusters, other explanations for these pockets of high autism incidence, such as localized sources of exposure, are not likely,” Van Meter explained.

“The risk for a child with highly educated parents to be diagnosed with autism is probably not caused by the location of the mother’s residence or any local shared environmental exposures,” she said. “Our result indicates that the most likely sources of environmental hazards for autism in California are in or around the home or else are widespread.”

“The strong link between demographics, particularly parental education, and the locations of the clusters validated the effectiveness of the statistical method that we employed because it successfully identified areas where a known risk factor was concentrated,” she added.

Keywords: Autism, Conservation, Developmental Disabilities, Developmental Disorders, Ecology, Environment, Environmental Health, Epidemiology, Neurology, Pediatrics, Public Health, University of California – Davis – Health System.

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Spector scolds Michele Bachman

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZnIxgNucioA[/youtube]Specter scolds Michele Bachman


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Read the MD at www.mdwhistleb…

Read the MD at http://www.mdwhistleblower.blogspot.com is worth reading on health care. See his Posts also at http://www.FreedomOK.net/wordpress


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Health Reform: Do it Right with Tort reform and…

Tell government that we must do health reform right: BE ABLE TO BUY ACROSS STATE LINES, LIMIT TORT LIABILITY TO $250 THOUSAND.

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It is now after the State of the Union speech. And after the upset by Republicans in Mass.

We CAN do health reform RIGHT: NOW is the time to limit malpractice tort claims to $250,000. That will save huge sums. And now is the time to increase competition so people can get insurance across state lines.

If it is OK to buy oranges from Florida in Ohio it should be OK to buy health insurance also!! Competition will bring down costs. Persons with prior problems SHOULD be able to get insurance through either existing government plans (Medicare) or state created plans. Let your representatives know what YOU think!

NOW time to advocate 1) 250 K tort malpractice limit; 2)OK by across state lines see http://www.freedomOK.net/wordpress

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Americans with Disabilities Act CAN protect persons with Autistic Spectrum Disorders

New Jersey has laws that require physicians to register those they diagnose with autism. Why such a high rate in the state of New Jersey? When there are dramatically different rates then the enviornment has to be implicated in addition to genetics. See the following article:

” A FLURRY of legislation was signed during former Gov. Jon Corzine’s last days in office, including two important autism bills: anti-discrimination legislation for people with autism and the opening of the autism registry to adults.

New Jersey has the highest autism rate in the country — 1 in 94
— and in the past three years, six other laws relating to autism were enacted. One, requiring that state-regulated health insurers cover medically necessary treatments, starts on Feb. 10.

Eight laws in three years is commendable. We urge the new governor and reorganized Legislature to continue that important work.

Autism is not one but a range of developmental disorders that are usually diagnosed around age 3. The cause is not fully understood, although scientists think complex genetic factors play a key role, as well as environmental factors. The disorder can range from mild to severe and from one symptom to many.

The autism registry started in 2007 and requires doctors who diagnose a child with autism to report it. Expanding the autism registry to include adults, who will voluntarily report themselves, will help the state develop better adult programs and provide a clearer picture of the range and scope of the disorder.

Advocates say the federal Americans with Disabilities Act has weakened over the last decade, and people with autism have not always been thoroughly protected. The new legislation expands the state’s anti-discrimination law to specifically include people with autism spectrum disorders. That means, for example, people with autism cannot be turned away from movie theaters or swimming pools.

Families of children with autism go through difficult years of grappling with the diagnosis, understanding their children’s needs and putting together the best education plan for them. It is an expensive, lonely and uncertain period for parents, especially since they’re dealing with a disorder we don’t fully understand. Then there’s the future. Parents worry about their kids growing up and government-mandated help running out.

Assemblywoman Joan Voss, D-Fort Lee, and Assemblyman Gary Schaer, D-Passaic, reintroduced a bill this month to create a state autism Web site. It would include information about the disorder and how to contact the Early Intervention Program. It’s a good start.

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