Wednesday, February 10, 2010

john mayer have some regret.

If you've been following the trail John Mayer's potty mouth has left all over the Web today, you've learned a few things.
You now know that
Jessica Simpson was his addiction, and you also know that he regrets ending his relationship with Jennifer Aniston, but hey, he's 32.
What you may not know - if you have yet to surf over to a particular magazine's Web site - is that Mayer unleashed quite a few
racially sensitive remarks, with one of them using the "n" word.
That comment is just one of the many that have started a social media backlash of sorts against Mayer, and he has since apologized via
Twitter.
Around 4:50 p.m. Wednesday, hours after news first broke of his interview, Mayer tweeted, " Re: using the 'N word' in an interview: I am sorry that I used the word. And it's such a shame that I did because the point I was trying to make was in the exact opposite spirit of the word itself."
Mayer added that "It was arrogant of me to think I could intellectualize using it, because I realize that there's no intellectualizing a word that is so emotionally charged."
After a bit of rumination, Mayer once again took to Twitter - the same social media site that allegedly was a point of tension in his relationship with Aniston - and said around 5:15 p.m., "And while I'm using today for looking at myself under harsh light, I think it's time to stop trying to be so raw in interviews."
"It started as an attempt to not let the waves of criticism get to me, but it's gotten out of hand and I've created somewhat of a monster," he tweeted. "I wanted to be a blues guitar player. And a singer. And a songwriter. Not a shock jock. I don't have the stomach for it. Again, because I don't want anyone to think I'm equivocating: I should have never said the word and I will never say it again."

Take this bank and shove it

When Abel Collins decided to end his three-year banking relationship with Bank of America earlier this year, he simply wanted to make a statement.
The 31-year old Rhode Island-resident said he never had a problem with BofA specifically. But he switched from the nation's biggest bank to a local credit union to protest what was happening in the financial sector more broadly, namely that banks had become "too big to fail" and Washington wasn't doing enough about it.




I basically figured if Congress wasn't going to take action to reduce the size of banks or at least regulate the activities they were involved in, I'd remove my part of the money they [Bank of America] controlled," Collins said.
Collins isn't the only one to put principles over convenience these days. Even though BofA, Wells Fargo (
WFC, Fortune 500), Citigroup (C, Fortune 500) and other big banks continued to attract more deposits in the fourth quarter, countless other Americans have suddenly found themselves more willing to switch to smaller banks.
The general public anger over taxpayer bailouts and big bonuses for bankers is one reason. According to a recent survey published by Forrester Research, consumers said they considered the top banks, including BofA and JPMorgan Chase (
JPM, Fortune 500), as among the least trusted U.S. financial institutions.
There's also growing resentment about how many big banks are nickel-and-diming customers in tough economic times. Several CNNMoney.com readers said it was the seemingly never-ending series of fees that prompted them to ditch larger banks.
Barry J., who detailed his switch from Bank of America (
BAC, Fortune 500) to Southeastern lender Regions (RF, Fortune 500) in an email, said he had just become fed up with the $8.95 monthly maintenance fees on each of his three accounts.
"When I was closing my accounts, [Bank of America] would call me with a survey to see if it was the fault of any their customer service people or tellers or bank managers," he wrote. "They never asked if it was the additional fees they were charging."
0:00 /5:04
Paulson: Bailouts were like a 'root canal'
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Others said they were simply lured away by the attractive rates offered by a local bank or credit union that the big guys just couldn't match.
Tom Q. of Minnesota said he ended his 17-year relationship with Wells Fargo after learning he could open a checking account that earned a 4.10% annual percentage yield at nearby credit union.
"Wells Fargo just laughed and the banker said he would probably do the same!" he wrote.
Of course, these isolated incidents may not make much of an impact for banks like Wells Fargo, as consumer deposits generally make up just a fraction of a big bank's overall deposit base.
State and local governments as well as large and small businesses also make up a sizeable chunk of a bank's overall deposits. But big banks should note that even some business owners aren't too happy with their banks these days.
Two months ago, John Andersen said he became so fed up with some of the practices of the big banks that he decided to close the KeyBank (
KEY, Fortune 500) checking account he used for his Portland, Ore.-based carpet cleaning business The Lindey Company.
Andersen added that his decision was also driven by a desire to do business with a smaller lender that would make loans that would benefit the local community.
Nowadays, Andersen says he pays his bills from an account he opened at Sunset Science Park Federal Credit Union, a lender with such personalized service that they do not even use deposit slips, he notes.
"I'm very happy," he said. "It is like the banker in the movie 'It's a Wonderful Life'. It really is that way."

Revised psychiatry manual targets autism, substance disorders

People with Asperger's syndrome would be included in the same diagnostic group as people with autism and pervasive developmental disorders, according to new guidelines under consideration by the American Psychiatric Association.
Psychiatrists are in the process of revising the guidelines, known as the
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. The manual has implications for how psychiatric drugs are developed and prescribed, what treatments get covered under insurance plans, which approach doctors take in treating their patients, and how patients view their own identities.
Anyone who has received a diagnosis from a mental health professional has most likely had his or her symptoms defined by the guidebook.
The revisions, which will be in the DSM's fifth edition, due in 2013, were made public Wednesday at
DSM5.org.
The proposal for a single category for autism that encompasses a broad range of conditions is generating debate.
Scientifically, the distinction is correct; the research on people with these conditions has shown that Asperger's is on the mild end of the spectrum of autistic disorders, said Dr. Michael First, professor of clinical psychiatry at Columbia University, who worked on the version of the DSM that is currently in use.
Of concern is that Asperger's has been destigmatized and autism has not, he said. Over the past 15 years, communities have formed around Asperger's, and the condition has taken on more positive tones with the notions that Albert Einstein and other intellectual luminaries may have had it.
Given that Asperger's has become more acceptable, First favors keeping it as a diagnosis.
"This is a case where the science of the decision and social ramifications of the decision are separate," First said.
But the DSM does not make diagnoses based on the stigma of one group over another, said Catherine Lord, director of the University of Michigan Autism and Communication Disorders Center, who is on the American Psychiatric Association committee looking at autism.
"Many people prefer to use the term Asperger's, and we're not saying that you can't describe yourself that way," she said. But the research shows "no scientific evidence that there are separate syndromes."
The term Asperger's has become too vague and may currently prevent some children from receiving the assistance they need at schools that offer "autism" services and don't necessarily include them, Lord said.
The new criteria require that the symptoms begin in early childhood and that deficits be measured in two areas: social interaction and communication, and the presence of repetitive behaviors and fixated interests and behaviors.
First also takes issue with "psychosis risk syndrome," a proposed classification of the set of symptoms that sometimes precede schizophrenia.

For example, milder versions of delusions, disorganized speech and hallucinations fall under this. In First's analysis, however, only 20 percent of people with this set of early symptoms would go on to develop schizophrenia.
That means "an unusual and unconventional adolescent who has a very rambling writing and speaking style, whose parents are concerned about the fact that their son is different, could qualify for this disorder," he said.
This kind of diagnosis could ruin this person's life, affecting his social life and college plans, and landing him on antipsychotic medications with strong side effects.
But Dr. Charles Raison, psychiatrist at Emory University, said there is some evidence that looking for psychosis early has tremendous benefits.
The psychiatric association's rationale for considering psychosis risk syndrome is that psychotic illness is most effectively treated early and that intervening early may have long-lasting benefits not achievable with later therapy, the proposal said. But moving forward on putting this on the list of disorders, or in the appendix, depends on field trials.
First and Raison both lauded
the association for proposing to get rid of the terms "substance abuse" and "substance dependence" and putting them under one name: addiction and related disorders, with the subheading "substance use disorders."
Problems with thinking and memory, known as neurocognitive disorders, have been divided into "major" and "minor," said Dr. Dan Blazer, professor of psychiatry at Duke University School of Medicine. In the past, people with "minor" impairments -- for example, minor dementia -- may not have been covered by insurance, and reframing the conditions in this way would include them, he said.
"Many people come seeking help because they are having some difficulty with their cognition but don't qualify for a diagnosis currently," said Blazer, who was part of the committee to revise the neurocognitive disorder criteria. "These are people that clearly need to be seen, and there's a very good reason for them to be seen."
At the same time, psychiatrists have recommended getting away from the word "dementia" because it has "outgrown its time," Blazer said. Dementia does not accurately describe what's going on in a person with cognitive impairment, he said.
The term will probably not disappear completely. For instance, it has not been decided whether "vascular dementia" ought to be renamed, he said.
Taking "dementia" out will probably not cause the same degree of controversy as decisions regarding
autism classification because the proposed changes simply clarify what "dementia" actually means, he said.
First, however, is skeptical of this move.
"It feels to me like they're fixing a problem that wasn't there," he said. "No one has ever said to me, 'There's a problem with the word "dementia." ' "
Blazer's group also proposed using biological markers as guides for diagnosis. For example, several studies are ongoing to identify the signatures of Alzheimer's disease in brain scans. No such tests are currently required by the DSM, but the revisions note that they are useful in ruling in or out certain conditions.
"We are moving toward trying to include some kind of more quantitative assessment of the severity of the condition, which will help us in this major-minor distinction," Blazer said.
The proposed revisions also include new classifications for learning disorders. The new category "learning disabilities" will have the subcategories of dyslexia, related to reading, and dyscalculia, related to mathematics. This is a further specification of what academic skills should inform a diagnosis, Lord said.
The committees do not take insurance or drug company opportunities into account when crafting revisions to the DSM, she said. But First noted that the DSM does have these implications.
"Any new disorder added provides an opportunity for a pharmaceutical company to develop a new drug," First said.
But Raison said the era of trying to treat an entire diagnosis is over, meaning the DSM V may have less of an impact than its predecessors in generating new drugs. As psychiatrists realize that mental illness diagnoses are sometimes vague descriptions rather than biological entities, there is a movement toward treating individual symptoms, he said.
"We're in a bit of a backlash right now, and I think the golden age of just taking these psychiatric diagnoses as if they're real things that exist in nature, I think those days have been winding down," he said.
The new criteria will be available for public comment at
DSM5.org until April 20. They will reviewed and refined over the next two years, during which time the American Psychiatric Association will conduct field trials to test some of the proposed revisions in real-world clinical settings.

Hong Kong's 'milkshake murderer' to get retrial

An American woman called the "milkshake murderer" after she was found guilty of killing her husband in a case that rocked Hong Kong's expatriate community had her conviction thrown out Thursday by Hong Kong's highest appeals court.
The Court of Final Appeal said in its judgment there were "numerous elements of grave concern" when reviewing the "totality of everything in the case" to decide if Nancy Kissel had received a "fair trial."
"The Court unanimously allows the appeal, quashes the conviction and orders a retrial," the judgment said. "The Court further orders that the appellant be remanded in custody pending retrial."
"It is plainly in the interests of justice that there should be a retrial," the judgment said.
Kissel was found guilty in 2005 of the November 2, 2003, killing of her husband Robert Kissel in the southern Chinese city. She was sentenced to life in prison.
The prosecution alleged that Robert was tricked by his wife into drinking what appeared to be a milkshake, but was in fact a cocktail of drugs. They said she later attacked him with a "heavy metal ornament" -- striking him in the head -- as he slept, the judgment said.

The body of Robert Kissel was found in the couple's storeroom four days after his death. His body was discovered "in a sleeping bag with towels inside a rolled-up carpet over which was placed plastic sheeting secured by rope and masking tape, with four cushions placed on top and held together by adhesive tape," according to the judgment.
Nancy Kissel admitted killing her husband, but pleaded not guilty by way of self-defense and provocation. Her lawyers said she killed her husband after a violent argument in their home.
A court of appeal rejected her appeal, which she then took to the higher court. In its judgment on Thursday, the Court of Final Appeal accepted two of three grounds of appeal put forward by Kissel's attorneys, including one concerning "hearsay evidence" from two witnesses who said that Robert had told them he suspected his wife of poisoning his whiskey and trying to kill him.
"The Judge had ruled admissible copious evidence ... which was logically probative of the deceased's perception of the state of the marriage and which would amply enable the jury to assess the contrasting ways in which each side was depicting the couple's relationship in the months preceding his death," the judgment said. "There was no need for them to receive the highly prejudicial evidence of suspected poisoning for that purpose."
"The appellant (Nancy Kissel) has therefore succeeded in showing that a material error was made in the admission of such evidence at her trial," it added.
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Calls placed to two of Nancy Kissel's lawyers seeking comment were not immediately returned.
The couple married in 1989 and moved to
Hong Kong in 1998, when Robert accepted a job with Goldman Sachs. They had three children together.
During the trial, Nancy Kissel alleged that the couple's relationship deteriorated in the five years prior to his death because he abused alcohol and cocaine and he became increasingly violent. The prosecution presented evidence claiming that Robert "had a pleasant character and personality and was a loving father," the judgment said.
The trial made headlines in Hong Kong as details of the couple's relationship emerged.

Iran braces for anti-government protests on key anniversary

Bracing for an onslaught of anti-government protests on an important national anniversary in Iran on Thursday, authorities imposed a virtual information blockade and warned that it will arrest and detain demonstrators until April if they take to the streets.
Iran this week celebrates the 31st anniversary of the Islamic Revolution, which culminates on Thursday, or 22 Bahman in the Persian calendar. It is a day when the country marks the end of its Western-backed monarchy and the start of an Islamic republic.
But since a disputed presidential election in June, protesters have turned public gatherings into rallies against President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who was declared the overwhelming winner of the race.
Such overt anti-government displays on key occasions have embarrassed and inflamed Iranian authorities, who have responded with mass arrests of protesters they denounced as anti-Islamic and against the revolution.

Undeterred, a coalition of Iranian reformist groups -- the so-called Green Movement -- urged opponents of the regime to come out once again in masses and stage non-violent protests on Thursday.
Police, wary of the potential that 22 Bahman gatherings could present, were out in full force.
Hoping to take some wind out of the protesters' efforts, crowds of flag-waving pro-government supporters turned up at Azadi, or Freedom, Square in central Tehran for a planned speech by
Ahmadinejad -- heightening the potential for deadly clashes between the two sides.
The government said that, if protesters disrupt state-sanctioned marches, they will be jailed until at least April 9, the end of the Persian holiday of Norooz. The holiday marks the start of spring.
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Residents in the Iranian capital said Wednesday that text messages on many messaging services have been blocked and Internet speeds have slowed to a crawl.
The Internet "comes on only a few minutes each day, but you never know when," one Iranian wrote in an e-mail to CNN, which he said took seven hours to send. "This has been going on for more than four days now. I contacted my Internet provider and they said it is out of their control."
"We have heard from users in
Iran that they are having trouble accessing Gmail," Google said. "We can confirm a sharp drop in traffic and we have looked at our own networks and found that they are working properly."
Accustomed to such blocks, Iranians have become savvy about alternative links allowing them to get around government filters so they can communicate via e-mail.
"Our phones are strictly followed and controlled," a young Iranian who participated in past protests said by phone from Tehran.
Speaking on condition of anonymity, the Iranian said that for the first time the satellite television signals in his neighborhood had been jammed.
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Human rights groups and opposition Web sites also have reported widespread arrests targeting journalists.
According to the Paris-based journalism watchdog Reporters Without Borders, at least eight journalists were arrested Sunday and Monday, bringing the total number of reporters now in prison to at least 65.
There were other reports that journalists trying to enter Iran this week have been denied visas by the government. CNN had requested a visa for a correspondent to cover the anniversary events and that application was denied.
Anti-government demonstrations began after the June 12 presidential vote, which re-elected hard-liner Ahmadinejad won over main opposition candidate
Mir Hossein Moussavi. But late December marked the deadliest clashes since the initial protests broke out last summer. At least seven people were killed and hundreds arrested as they took to the streets on Ashura, which occurred on December 27, witnesses said.
The Iranian government has denied that its security forces killed anyone and has blamed reformists for the violence.
Police arrested 4,000 people in the post-election crackdown.
Two men have been executed for participating in the demonstrations, and 10 have been sentenced to death and await appeal.

30 pounds of pot found inside pictures of Jesus

A marijuana bust along the U.S.-Mexico border revealed 30 pounds of the drug stuffed into framed pictures of Jesus Christ, the U.S. Customs and Border Protection agency said Wednesday.
"This is not the first time we have seen smugglers attempt to use religious figures and articles of faith to further their criminal enterprise," said William Molaski, port director of the agency's office in El Paso, Texas, in a statement.
"What some might find offensive or sacrilegious has unfortunately become a standard operating procedure for drug smugglers. This would include using religious symbols, children and senior citizens in their attempts to defeat the CBP inspection process."
Authorities said a 22-year-old woman in a Jeep from Juarez, Mexico, told federal border patrol officers that she had nothing to declare besides the framed art. The officers checked out the vehicle with Cesar, a federal drug-sniffing dog, who alerted them to three framed pictures of Jesus in the vehicle.
The officers pulled the backing of the pictures and found numerous bundles, authorities said. The woman was arrested.
The bust was one of three marijuana seizures made Tuesday at the El Paso point of entry. Officers said they seized 214 pounds of marijuana in the two other busts.

Unlocking a medical mystery: Stuttering

A new study brings researchers one step closer to unraveling a medical mystery that has perplexed scientists for thousands of years: What causes people to stutter?
Research appearing in Wednesday's New England Journal of Medicine reveals three genetic mutations in the brain cells of people who stutter. The cells are located in the part of the brain that controls speech, which suggests that genes could play a big role in the disorder.
"People have looked for a cause of stuttering for 5,000 years," said Dennis Drayna, a researcher at the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders, and a co-author of the study. "Many, many things have been suggested as a cause of stuttering. None of them have turned out to be true. For the first time today, we know one of the causes of this disorder."
"These mutations affect a process inside cells that degrades things that the cells don't need anymore," said Drayna. "This process is called the garbage can, or more like the recycling bin, of the cell. When this process gets interrupted, the cell goes haywire, and that causes problems."
These problems, according to the study, may explain why some people stutter.
Stuttering, also referred to as stammering, is a disruption in the normal flow of speaking. For people with the disorder, speech comes out in fits and starts, certain syllables may be prolonged or repeated, and for some, stuttering is accompanied by involuntary facial tics.
Previous studies have suggested genetics as one possible explanation for stuttering, along with developmental delays and confused speech processing in the brain. But that knowledge can only go so far, said Drayna.
"Just knowing a disorder is genetic doesn't really help us understand that disorder at a level that, for instance, doctors would like to know," said Drayna. "Once we have genes, we know much more about the causes of the disorder."
Knowing the genetic underpinnings of the disorder could unlock even more genes associated with stuttering, which could lead to more specific diagnosis and treatment.
"People who are helped by one type of therapy might for instance be the people with mutations in one of these genes, whereas the people who are helped by another therapy are people with mutations in another gene that we've identified," said Drayna. "For the first time we can now begin to ask this kind of question, why do some therapies work well in some people and not well in others?"
Roughly 3 million people in the United States stutter, according to the National Institutes of Health. About 60 percent of those with the disorder have a family member who also stutters. The condition is most common among children, although about 1 percent of people carry the condition through adulthood, according to the Stuttering Foundation of America.
Michael Liben, 25, has stuttered for as long as he can remember, "since I began speaking," said Liben, a law student in New York. "I remember my middle school graduation. It was my job to lead the Pledge of Allegiance and it took me a while to get started, and it was probably the lengthiest Pledge of Allegiance in the history of America."

Liben said he suspected a genetic connection with his stuttering -- his mother Sindy Liben also stutters -- but what is most encouraging to Liben, and the stuttering community in general, is the study's confirmation of what they already knew: Stuttering is a problem with neither social nor emotional origins.
"It's just great news for people who stutter to know that it's a gene," said Tammy Flores, executive director of the National Stuttering Association. "It's not anything else. It's a gene."
Added Drayna: "An important point that's reinforced by our findings is that stuttering, at its basis, is a biological disorder. Even today, people seem to think stuttering might be an emotional disorder, or even a social disorder, and it's really very unlikely that either of those two things are true. I think the sooner that stuttering is recognized as a biological disorder, people can get down to using that understanding ... to better treat the disorder."
In an editorial appearing in the journal, Simon E. Fisher, an investigator into molecular mechanisms underlying speech and language, poses the questions that linger despite the discovery of "stuttering genes": Why would dysfunction in certain cells affect how one speaks? Are there other undiscovered genes associated with stuttering? Could this discovery help us to understand whether early stutterers will continue to stutter through adulthood?
"As with other neurodevelopmental disorders that affect speech, the task of connecting the dots between genes and stuttering is just beginning," said Fisher, a fellow at the Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics at Oxford University.
Drayna emphasized that finding the genes for stuttering does not automatically mean a cure, but that better treatment and diagnosis is on the horizon. Groups like the National Stuttering Association are excited nonetheless.
"[Stuttering is] something that you will be able to identify," said Flores. "You will be able to couple that with speech therapy and support groups, and get help. It's very, very exciting to have all of this happening now."