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Vancouver Island Eyes on the World






Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Google underwater maps

Now all of us non-scuba divers get to see what people have been raving about all these years and you don't get wet or bitten by a shark...





(Photo: Google)
Herron Island- Great Barrier Reef

The Great Barrier Reef and other coral wonders star in the latest "street" images added to to Google Maps.

- Dan Vergano

Underwater exploration just got easier. A tour of some of the world's great coral reefs is coming to the Street Views feature on Google Maps.

Using cutting-edge seafloor mapping cameras, the Catlin Seaview Survey has joined with Google Maps to show off Australia's Great Barrier Reef and other important coral sites on the handy street-view mapping site.

"Underwater is a little different than walking down the street," says Jenifer Foulkes of Google's Ocean Program, which aims to provide people with a view of coral reefs they can steer around as simply as a street map online.

Survey scientists built their own version of an underwater mapping camera, steered by divers tied to global positioning satellite buoys, for the efforts, says project director Richard Vevers of the Catlin Seaview Survey. He hopes that people seeing the views will become more aware of the threatened state of the world's oceans, heavily impacted by over-fishing.

The survey images unveiled in the new effort include views from Great Barrier Reef, Hawaii and the Philippines. In later efforts, the science team hopes to target deeper coral reefs, Vevers says.






Google underwater maps

 Link:  http://beta.usatoday.com/story/tech/sciencefair/2012/09/26/google-maps-coral-street-views/1593313/




Google underwater maps

Sunday, September 23, 2012

Noam Chomsky - YouTube



 Uploaded by on May 2, 2008
 
For the past forty years Noam Chomsky's writings on politics and language have established him as a preeminent public intellectual and as one of the most original and wide-ranging political and social critics of our time. Among the seminal figures in linguistic theory over the past century, since the 1960s Chomsky has also secured a place as perhaps the leading dissident voice in the United States.

Noam Chomsky is Institute Professor emeritus of linguistics at MIT and the author of numerous books including Chomsky vs. Foucault: A Debate on Human Nature, On Language, Objectivity and Liberal Scholarship, and Towards a New Cold War (all published by The New Press). He lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

This event took place on April 22, 2008 at the Google Cambridge office, as a part of the Authors@Google series.

Category:

License:

Standard YouTube License


Link:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rnLWSC5p1XE&feature=relmfu
Authors@Google: Noam Chomsky - YouTube



Authors@Google: Slajov Zizek - YouTube



Uploaded by on Oct 3, 2008
 
The Authors@Google program was pleased to welcome Slavoj Žižek to Google's New York office to discuss his latest book, "Violence".

From Wikipidea:

"Slavoj Žižek is a Post-Marxist sociologist, philosopher, and cultural critic. In 1989, with the publication of his first book written in English, The Sublime Object of Ideology, Žižek achieved international recognition as a major social theorist. Since then, Žižek he has continued to develop his status as an intellectual outsider and confrontational maverick.

Žižek is a senior researcher at the Institute of Sociology, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia and a professor at the European Graduate School. He has been a visiting professor at, among others, the University of Chicago, Columbia, London Consortium, Princeton, The New School, the University of Minnesota, the University of California, Irvine and the University of Michigan.

He is currently the International Director of the Birkbeck Institute for the Humanities at Birkbeck College, University of London"

This event took place on September 12, 2008.

Category:

License:

Standard YouTube License





Authors@Google: Slajov Zizek - YouTube


 Link:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_x0eyNkNpL0&feature=relmfu




Thursday, September 20, 2012

Evolutionary Dr Pepper ad spurs religious kerfuffle - Life Inc.

 

 Controversy is good business:

Evolutionary Dr Pepper ad spurs religious kerfuffle

Dr Pepper


This ad has created an online uproar.

Dr Pepper marched directly into controversy a week ago when it launched its “March of Progress” ad campaign. And the uproar has not abated.


On Sept. 13, the soft drink maker posted to its Facebook wall an ad using the classic “March of Progress” image tweaked to promote the “evolution of flavor.”

The whimsical ad showed a chimpanzee dragging his knuckles, followed by a semi-erect hominid reaching for a Dr Pepper, followed by a fully upright man walking and gulping a Dr Pepper.

The images are captioned “Pre-Pepper,” “Pepper Discovery,” and “Post-Pepper” respectively.

Sounds harmless. Even banal. But about 7,000 comment and nearly 33,000 likes later, the ad is still provoking reaction by creationists who say it promotes the theory of evolution.

Some are even threatening to boycott Dr Pepper. That in turn has stoked evolutionists to make counter comments. Then there's folks jumping on the pig pile just for laughs.

After all, we are talking about a soda pop ad, right?

  
The debate also blew up on popular link-sharing site Reddit, whose users flooded the thread to mock the outrage and post parody comment, further inflaming the debate and spreading the conversation ...

 Dr Pepper has posted over 450 images to its Facebook wall since 2009.  Most garnered a few hundred comments... proving:

 Controversy is good business


Read More:
Evolutionary Dr Pepper ad spurs religious kerfuffle - Life Inc.


 Link:  http://lifeinc.today.com/_news/2012/09/20/13990802-evolutionary-dr-pepper-ad-spurs-religious-kerfuffle?lite

 



BBC News - Day in pictures: 18 September 2012



k

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge are carried from a boat to a plane in Marau during their Diamond Jubilee tour of South East Asia and the South Pacific. Prince William and Catherine are representing the Queen on a visit to Singapore, Malaysia, the Solomon Islands and Tuvalu.



Link: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/in-pictures-19634140

BBC News - Day in pictures: 18 September 2012

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Small is Beautiful


Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Eco Power Africa - A Mini Power Grid Startup

Eco Power answers a need for more mini-grid energy startups across the continent.Their product could be self built or purchased:
The GEK gasifier which is designed to consume kilos, not tons of biomass daily. The GEK gasifier is clearly a winner for those who have plenty of biomass lying about, such as lumber sawmills, farmers or food processors. Other entrepreneurs will have to obtain biomass. Since biomass is waste by-product, the main expense will not be the biomass itself but transporting it to the gasifier.
A need for decentralized micro-grids:
the solution is modeled on the telecom breakthrough in Africa. Following the central-station model as practiced in the West meant that Africa had no tele–communications for decades. Cellular telephone technology allowed local entrepreneurs to build small, cheap, and rapidly deployable cell towers. Cellular technology enabled Africa to avoid replicating the expensive centralized model.

The same can be done with electricity generation. Instead of investing billions in constructing major power stations, transmission towers, and distribution and metering infrastructure, it is much easier to deploy micro-to-small power generating nodes that will supply electricity efficiently on a localized basis.

By default, power generation in most of Africa is already Distributed Generation. Institutions and individuals that can afford it use diesel genrators. But diesel is much too expensive, inefficient and polluting.

Because there is no readily available distribution network for conventional fossil fuels – gas, oil or coal – distributed generation in Africa will depend on the advent of green technologies.

EcoPower Africa’s solution is to generate electricity with locally available biomass fuel, making electricity much more affordable.
Coupled with biogas generation, mini-grids like these could solve the energy power generation problem. 
 
 
 
 


 
 
 

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

CHART OF THE DAY: The American Paycheck Now Buys Half As Much Gas As It Did 10 Years Ago - Business Insider

 Eye Opening Chart:  We all feel it at the pump but this simple picture  tells the story of your irritation every time you pull up to the pumps.

Over the last decade, the price of gas has moved higher while wages have been driven lower.

Here's a sad chart plotting how many gallons of gasoline can be bought at average U.S. hourly wage since 1998, from Reuters by way of Marc Chandler.

chart of the day, gallons of gasoline that could be bought with an hour's worth of wages, septemberg 2012

Follow Money Game Chart Of The Day and never miss an update!


Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/chart-of-the-day-the-american-paycheck-now-buys-half-as-much-gas-as-it-did-10-years-ago-2012-9#ixzz26rVuhVoe




CHART OF THE DAY: The American Paycheck Now Buys Half As Much Gas As It Did 10 Years Ago - Business Insider




Saturday, September 8, 2012

The Madness of Crowds


"I can calculate the motion of heavenly bodies, but not the madness of people."

-Sir Isaac Newton, after losing 20,000 pounds in Britain's south sea Bubble of 1720






Wall Street Titans Are Not Being Prosecuted


Why Goldman Sachs, Other Wall Street Titans Are Not Being Prosecuted


Aug 14, 2012

The Justice Department's decision not to prosecute Goldman Sachs in a financial-fraud probe is another sign of the cronyism that has kept Attorney General Eric Holder from taking action against other big Wall Street firms, says Peter Schweizer.

On Thursday the Department of Justice announced it will not prosecute Goldman Sachs or any of its employees in a financial-fraud probe.

The news is likely to raise the ire of the political left and right, both of which have highlighted one of the most inconvenient facts of Attorney General Eric Holder’s Justice Department: despite the Obama administration’s promises to clean up Wall Street in the wake of America’s worst financial crisis, there has not been a single criminal charge filed by the federal government against any top executive of the elite financial institutions.


Why is that? In a word: cronyism.


Take Goldman Sachs, for example. Thursday’s announcement that there will be no prosecutions should hardly come as a surprise. In 2008, Goldman Sachs employees were among Barack Obama’s top campaign contributors, giving a combined $1,013,091. Eric Holder’s former law firm, Covington & Burling, also counts Goldman Sachs as one of its clients.

Furthermore, in April 2011, when the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations issued a scathing report detailing Goldman’s suspicious Abacus deal, several Goldman executives and their families began flooding Obama campaign coffers with donations, some giving the maximum $35,800.


That’s not to say Holder’s Justice Department hasn’t gone after any financial fraudsters. But the individuals the DOJ’s “Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force” has placed in its prosecutorial cross-hairs seem shockingly small compared with the Wall Street titans the Obama administration promised to bring to justice.


Will bipartisan outrage boost the decibels in D.C. loud enough for Holder to hear and heed?


 Protesters hold signs during a demonstration outside the Goldman Sachs San Francisco headquarters in San Francisco, July 31, 2012. (Justin Sullivan / Getty Images)


Consider the following small-time operators as listed on the Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force website:


• “Three Connecticut Women Charged with Overseeing ‘Gifting Tables’ Pyramid Scheme.” Three women in their 50s and 60s were indicted for conspiracy, tax, and wire-fraud charges. “These arrests should send a strong message to all who threaten the financial health of our communities,” one federal agent declared.


• In March, 2012, the DOJ sent a property appraiser in Washington, D.C., to the slammer for 65 months for fraudulently inflated prices in a scheme to “flip” properties. The scheme was a small-time $1 million operation, a sharp contrast with the billions on Wall Street.


• The DOJ’s “get tough” on financial crime strategy included sending two health-care software company executives to the clink for 13 and 15 years.


• A Florida resident was charged and sentenced to 14 months in federal prison for falsifying documents, thereby resulting in the obstruction of an SEC investigation.


• Five people in California were charged with bid-rigging foreclosure auctions. The individuals have been charged with violating the Sherman Act and could face up to 10 years in jail.

• Federal officials went after 10 people in Las Vegas because they tried to “fraudulently gain control of condominium homeowners’ associations in the Las Vegas area so that the HAOs would direct business to a certain law firm and construction company.”


• The owner of a Miami company got 46 months in prison for creating fake loan applications.


• Four people in Tacoma, Wash., were indicted for conspiracy that caused a small bank to fail. Their crime: making false statements on loan applications and to HUD.


To be sure, financial fraud of any kind is wrong and should be prosecuted. But locking up “pygmies” is hardly the kind of financial-fraud crackdown Americans expected in the wake of the largest financial crisis in U.S. history. Increasingly, there appear to be two sets of rules: one for the average citizen, and another for the connected cronies who rule the inside game.


That could be changing, as critiques of Eric Holder’s lack of financial prosecutions have now come from the political left and right; indeed, battling cronyism may represent one of the rare points of common ground in today’s fractious political environment.

As progressive Richard Eskow of the Huffington Post recently wrote: “More and more Washington insiders are asking a question that was considered off-limits in the nation's capital just a few months ago: Who, exactly, is Attorney General Eric Holder representing?

As scandal after scandal erupts on Wall Street, involving everything from global lending manipulation to cocaine and prostitution, more and more people are worrying about Holder's seeming inaction—or worse—in the face of mounting evidence.”

Will bipartisan outrage boost the decibels in D.C. loud enough for Holder to hear and heed? We’ll see. He’s got at least three months to get moving.


Peter Schweizer is the president of the Government Accountability Institute and the William J. Casey Fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. In 2008-09 he served as a consultant to the White House Office of Presidential Speechwriting and he is a former consultant to NBC News. He has written for The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Los Angeles Times, USA Today, National Review, Foreign Affairs, and elsewhere. His new book is Throw Them All Out




Source:


Why Goldman Sachs, Other Wall Street Titans Are Not Being Prosecuted - The Daily Beast

LINK:

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2012/08/14/why-goldman-sachs-other-wall-street-titans-are-not-being-prosecuted.html





Wall Street, step aside.  Here come the Politicians!!!
http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2012/07/the-startling-accuracy-of-referring-to-politicians-as-psychopaths/260517/#


the Startling Accuracy of Referring to Politicians as 'Psychopaths'

By James Silver
inJul 31 2012

The characteristics that define clinical psychopathy are many of the same that make effective leaders.

bob-roberts-615.jpgParamount Pictures
In this presidential election season where, as usual, the fur is flying and name-calling is in full swing, one invective seems to be gaining currency -- psychopath.

A web search for "Romney" or "Obama" and "psychopath" (or, more generally, "politician" and "psychopath") yields millions of hits.

While it's tempting to dismiss this phenomenon as mere venting by angry voters, the rantings of conspiracy theorists, or even bloggers trying to drive traffic, it is worth at least asking the question: could they be right? If these pundits mean that the targeted office-seekers are evil or "crazy," probably not.

But if they are pointing out that politicians and psychopaths share certain characteristics, they could be on to something.

Psychopathy is a psychological condition based on well-established diagnostic criteria, which include lack of remorse and empathy, a sense of grandiosity, superficial charm, conning and manipulative behavior, and refusal to take responsibility for one's actions, among others.

Psychopaths are not all the same; particular aspects may predominate in different people. And, although some psychopaths are violent men (and women) with long criminal histories, not all are.

It's important to understand that psychopathic behavior and affect exist on a continuum; there are those who fall into the grey area between "normal" people and true psychopaths.
Two of the hallmarks of psychopathy are a calculating mind and a seemingly easy charm.
The question, then, is whether it is reasonable to believe that people with serious abnormalities in the way they interact with the world can be found running for (and winning) office.

However unsettling as this may be, the answer seems to be yes. It's possible for psychopaths to be found anywhere -- including city hall or Washington, D.C. Remember, psychopaths are not delusional or psychotic; in fact, two of the hallmarks of psychopathy are a calculating mind and a seemingly easy charm.

In his landmark book on psychopathy, The Mask of Sanity, researcher Hervey Cleckley theorized that some people with the core attributes of psychopathy -- egocentricity, lack of remorse, superficial charm -- could be found in nearly every walk of life and at every level, including politics.

Robert Hare, perhaps the leading expert on the disorder and the person who developed the most commonly used test for diagnosing psychopathy, has noted that psychopaths generally have a heightened need for power and prestige -- exactly the type of urges that make politics an attractive calling.

There is more at work than just the drive to seek office, though; psychopaths may have some peculiar talents for it, as well. Research has shown that disorder may confer certain advantages that make psychopaths particularly suited to a life on the public stage and able to handle high-pressure situations: psychopaths score low on measures of stress reactivity, anxiety and depression, and high on measures of competitive achievement, positive impressions on first encounters, and fearlessness.

Sound like the description of a successful politician and leader?

Doubtless, it's easier to see some leaders as psychopaths than it is others.

Presumably, no one would dispute the notion that Hitler and Stalin were psychopaths at the extreme end of the spectrum: completely unconstrained by empathy or guilt and willing to say or do anything to accomplish their goals.

This, though, reinforces the perception of psychopaths as out-of-control madmen who are evil to the core. Might there be other, more mainstream political leaders who have psychopathic traits but fall closer to the "normal" range? Some have certainly thought so.

In 2003, neuropsychologist Paul Brok argued that Prime Minister Tony Blair was a "plausible psychopath" who was ruthlessly ambitious, egocentric, and manipulative.

Respected psychologist and researcher David Lykken has written:
If we can believe his biographer, Robert Caro [...] Lyndon Johnson exemplified this syndrome. He was relatively fearless, shameless, abusive of his wife and underlings, and willing to do or say almost anything required to attain his ends.
In any event, the idea that a psychopath could reach the heights of power is nothing new.

Over a century ago, famed American philosopher and psychologist William James said,


"When superior intellect and a psychopathic temperament coalesce [...] in the same individual, we have the best possible conditions for the kind of effective genius that gets into the biographical dictionaries." 

Perhaps, then, that's the key; it's the combination of other talents with certain elements of psychopathy that can make an effective leader.

Which brings us back to those currently tossing about the label of psychopath -- ironically, some of them may not be denigrating the candidates as much as they suppose.




James Silver - James Silver is the co-author of Almost a Psychopath: Do I (or Does Someone I Know) Have a Problem with Manipulation and Lack of Empathy? and a former federal prosecutor and current criminal defense attorney.


 LINK:  http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2012/07/the-startling-accuracy-of-referring-to-politicians-as-psychopaths/260517/#






vancouver Island Art: Victoria muralist is a Michelangelo of the cinder block -


 The wall was banal as only a wall can be, a lengthy expanse of uninteresting cement block.
It stretched for more than 30 metres along the interior yard of a recycling business located in a gritty Victoria neighbourhood home to tire depots and auto-body shops.

It was stupefyingly dull even by the undemanding standards of walls.

For the owners, though, it represented an opportunity to make a statement. For one local artist, it provided an opportunity to launch a career that is changing the look of the city.

A blank wall for Ellice Recycle was a blank canvas for Jeff Maltby.

Trained as a graphic artist and mostly self-taught as a painter, Mr. Maltby has produced Christmas cards for the company for more than two decades. He went from the smallest of commissions – rendered in a palm-sized card – to the largest.

In the eight years since, the artist has completed six other murals in the city, including a trio in Chinatown in front of which tourists gather for photographs.

Yet he remains a little-known figure, this Michelangelo of the cinder block, a quiet artist who confesses one of the difficulties of working as a muralist is “being on stage.”

The homage to garbage pickers was rendered with great deliberation.

He began painting on Canada Day in 2004, his days often spent aboard a hydraulic lift.
He painted throughout the summer and fall before at last completing the mural.


To earn a living, he sells canvas paintings, does some commercial art, even paints houses.
 


 He moved to Vancouver Island with his wife, Trudy, who is also a painter.
Their first stop: a pilgrimage to Chemainus, the logging town that transformed itself into an outdoor art gallery with more than three dozen murals.

It became his ambition to “do a big painting and make it like a piece of fine art.”

None of his murals have been damaged by the city’s legion of taggers and graffiti artists. Even the easy targets at street level have gone untouched, which the muralist takes as a sign of respect.


Victoria muralist is a Michelangelo of the cinder block - The Globe and Mail


 LINK:  http://www.theglobeandmail.com/commentary/victoria-muralist-is-a-michelangelo-of-the-cinder-block/article4515460/





Thursday, September 6, 2012

Blogrunner - NYT's News Service

About Blogrunner

Blogrunner is a service from The New York Times that automatically monitors news articles and blog posts and tracks news events as they develop across the Web.


Link:  http://www.blogrunner.com

Addicting Info |

Addicting Info started as a resource to discredit all the lies and propaganda that the right-wing spreads. When I undertook the project I thought I would probably have about 100 different articles about a number of different myths, and people could sort through them at will. Eventually that expanded to news and other info, and I quickly realized the DAUNTING task of actually trying to discredit EVERY right-wing myth that is in existence, especially with the constant creation of new ones.
 
Now, I look for people who seem to have a similar goal in mind, whether they have realized it or not, and recruit them to join our team. I’m very pleased to say that I haven’t had a regret about any recruits yet, and we’ve assembled an incredible team of writers.

A lot of you have asked for more information about our writing staff, so we will be posting it soon. If you’re a writer and would like to contribute to our site, please contact us at editor@addictinginfo.org and send links to any current blogs you are writing or any political fan pages you manage through facebook. Unlike many other political news sites, we pay our writers, based on article views. 
Thanks for your interest in our site!



Addicting Info |

Link: http://www.addictinginfo.org/


Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Ways to be Environmentally Friendly

 Inspire children...

http://howtogetalifenow.blogspot.ca/

 David Malan / Getty Images
 David Malan / Getty Images

Ways to Eat Environmentally Friendly

If you started using reusable bags exclusively starting at age 25, you could save more than 21,000 plastic bags in your lifetime. Point being: sustainable eating doesn’t have to be hard, and it also doesn’t have to be all-or-nothing. A single change can make a difference


33 Ways to Eat Environmentally Friendly | Healthland | TIME.com


Sunday, September 2, 2012

Bush, Blair should face trial for role in Iraq war: Desmond Tutu - The Globe and Mail


Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Desmond Tutu called Sunday for Tony Blair and George Bush to face prosecution at the International Criminal Court for their role in the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq

Archbishop Tutu, the retired Anglican Church’s archbishop of South Africa, wrote in an op-ed piece for The Observer newspaper that the ex-leaders of Britain and the United States should be made to “answer for their actions.”

The Iraq war “has destabilized and polarized the world to a greater extent than any other conflict in history,” wrote Archbishop Tutu, who was awarded the Nobel prize in 1984.

“Those responsible for this suffering and loss of life should be treading the same path as some of their African and Asian peers who have been made to answer for their actions in the Hague,” he added.

The Hague, Netherlands, based court is the world’s first permanent war crimes tribunal and has been in operation for 10 years. So far it has launched prosecutions only in Africa, including in Sudan, Congo, Libya and Ivory Coast.

While the International Criminal Court can handle cases of genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity, it does not currently have the jurisdiction to prosecute crimes of aggression.


Any potential prosecution over the Iraq war would likely come under the aggression category.



Read More:
Bush, Blair should face trial for role in Iraq war: Desmond Tutu - The Globe and Mail

Link:   http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/bush-blair-should-face-trial-for-role-in-iraq-war-desmond-tutu/article4514835/




Hard Luck and Trouble

Never Sold a Painting in his Lifetime

Vincent van Gogh:

 "I'd like to show by my work what such an eccentric, such a nobody, has in his heart"

How a genius feels:

 "I'm a nonentity, an eccentric, an unpleasant person"


March 30th is the birthday of Vincent van Gogh, born in Holland in 1853, a famous painter and also great letter-writer.

His letters were lively, engaging, and passionate; they also frequently reflect his struggles with bipolar disorder.

He wrote:  

"What am I in the eyes of most people — a nonentity, an eccentric, or an unpleasant person — somebody who has no position in society and will never have; in short, the lowest of the low. All right, then — even if that were absolutely true, then I should one day like to show by my work what such an eccentric, such a nobody, has in his heart."

He wrote thousands of letters to his brother Theo over the course of his life. 

Theo's widow published the van Gogh's letters to her husband in 1913.
Be kind, for everyone you meet is fighting a great battle.

            - Plato Greek author and  philosopher in Athens (427 BC - 347 BC)  



















Image source: Vincent van Gogh's 1890 painting At Eternity's Gate. Wikipedia, public domain.





Saturday, September 1, 2012

David Freeman: Are Politicians Psychopaths?

It's no secret that politicians can be driven by outsized egos. I mean, who among us really thinks he or she deserves a seat in Congress -- or a desk in the Oval Office?

But can egotism alone explain why so many elected officials seem to get caught telling lies, having affairs, committing financial improprieties or engaging in other scandalous behavior?

Not everyone is convinced that it can, and some in the blogosphere have gone so far as to wonder if bad-boy (and bad girl) politicians are actually psychopaths.

And a recent article in The Atlantic asks of these pundits:
Could they be right? If these pundits mean that the targeted office-seekers are evil or "crazy," probably not. But if they are pointing out that politicians and psychopaths share certain characteristics, they could be on to something.
Just what does it mean to be a psychopath? Turns out psychopathy isn't a formal psychiatric diagnosis but a term first popularized by Medical College of Georgia psychiatrist Hervey Cleckley in his 1941 classic The Mask Of Sanity. Psychopaths seem superficially normal but tend to be cold-hearted, lacking in empathy, egocentric, manipulative, irresponsible, and antisocial.

Or, as a 2007 Scientific American article put it:
Superficially charming, psychopaths tend to make a good first impression on others and often strike observers as remarkably normal. Yet they are self-centered, dishonest and undependable, and at times they engage in irresponsible behavior for no apparent reason other than the sheer fun of it...
Psychopaths routinely offer excuses for their reckless and often outrageous actions, placing blame on others instead.
Hmm. That description could probably describe more than a few politicians -- though you and I might not agree on whom to nominate for psychopath status. But before indulging in any armchair analysis, I reached out to Dr. Martha Stout.

A clinical psychologist who was long affiliated with Harvard Medical School, she's the author of The Sociopath Next Door and other popular books on emotional disorders (including a forthcoming text that explores the link between emotional disorders and politics).

By the way, Dr. Stout tends to use the term sociopath instead of psychopath, explaining to me that the terms are often used interchangeably by mental health professionals.

Anyway, when I asked Dr. Stout if there's any truth to the contention that politicians are more likely to be psychopaths, she said in an email that no solid statistics were available to prove or disprove the hypothesis.

Yet despite the lack of proof, she gave a surprisingly definitive answer to my question:
Yes, politicians are more likely than people in the general population to be sociopaths. I think you would find no expert in the field of sociopathy/psychopathy/antisocial personality disorder who would dispute this...
That a small minority of human beings literally have no conscience was and is a bitter pill for our society to swallow -- but it does explain a great many things, shamelessly deceitful political behavior being one.
At one time, she continued, the terms psychopath and sociopath conjured up image of mass murderers and serial killers. "As it turns out, the majority of sociopaths/psychopaths never kill anyone with their own hands, nor do they end up in prison," she said. "A smart sociopath can avoid prison and find other, less conspicuous ways to satisfy his or her lust for dominating and controlling others, and what better way than through politics and big business?"

Which politicians deserve to be labeled sociopaths? Dr. Stout was reluctant to name names of living politicos, saying it would be unethical to do so. But she told me in the email, "I think most experts would agree that Hitler, Pol Pot, Nicolae Ceausescu and the like were sociopaths.

But a leader certainly does not have to be an infamous dictator to be sociopathic." In fact, she said, sociopaths often are extremely charismatic. They may not feel "higher emotions" like love and guilt, they may not have actual consciences, but they study those of us who do -- and simply pretend.

Some have hypothesized that there are times when we want our leaders to be cold and calculating and even deceitful -- for example, in times of crisis or when our national security is at stake. But for the most part, it would seem to me a very bad thing when we elect men and women who feel they can say anything and do anything and damn the consequences.

What's a concerned citizen to do? Dr. Stout offered a not-so-modest proposal: along with releasing their tax returns and medical records (and, sometimes, birth certificates), maybe political candidates should be asked to prove their psychological fitness before their names go on the ballot.

Though psychopaths can apparently fool even skilled psychiatrists into thinking they're normal, Dr. Stout maintains that standardized psychological tests like the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (and someday maybe brain scans) might be able to tip voters off to candidates who exhibit worrisome personality traits.

"I'm not sure that we will do this," she said of psychological testing of politicians. "But given the stakes, it might be a decent idea."

If psychological testing really could distinguish great leaders from destructive creeps, it's an idea that gets my vote. What do you think? If you'd like to join the discussion, please leave me a comment.

Follow David Freeman on Twitter: www.twitter.com/davyfreeman


David Freeman: Are Politicians Psychopaths?

 LINK:  http://www.huffingtonpost.com/david-freeman/are-politicians-psychopaths_b_1818648.html