Illustrating The Value Of Healthcare

by Chris Bodenner

…by biting off your opponent's finger?

Ventura County Sheriff's Capt. Frank O'Hanlon says about 100 people demonstrating in favor of health care reforms rallied Wednesday night on a street corner. One protester walked across the street to confront about 25 counter-demonstrators. O'Hanlon says the man got into an argument and fist fight, during which he bit off the left pinky of a 65-year-old man who opposed health care reform. A hospital spokeswoman says the man lost half the finger, but doctors reattached it and he was sent home the same night. She says he had Medicare.

Classical Improv

by Jonah Lehrer

When most people think about musical improvisation, they imagine Charlie Parker and John Coltrane, inventing melodies in smoky jazz clubs. But the act of musical improv isn't a 20th century invention. As Alex Ross notes in this fascinating article, "classical" music has long reserved a spot for improvisation by the performer. The cadenza, a spot at the end of the piece reserved for a display of virtuosity, was designed to encourage improvisation, as soloists figured out, on the fly, how to finish off a Mozart concerto:

Cadenzas sprang up in the early eighteenth century, when composers began indicating brief episodes where the performer should play freely, delaying a final cadence. They appeared not only in opera but also in instrumental pieces, especially in the closing sections of concerto movements. Musicians had been embellishing the score for centuries, and perhaps the cadenza was a way of bringing improvisation under control, corralling it. Mozart, as composer and pianist, brought the practice to its peak; one of his contemporaries stated that cadenzas should be dreamlike in their logic, expressing “ordered disorder,” and Mozart’s playing evidently had that quality. (He wrote out cadenzas for many of his concertos, so his performances may not always have been spontaneous.) Beethoven carried on the tradition—the darkly rumbling cadenza that he devised for Mozart’s D-minor Piano Concerto is a fascinating case of one composer meditating on another—but he also helped to kill it. In the first movement of the “Emperor” Concerto, the soloist is told not to make a cadenza but to play “the following”—a fully notated solo. Performers gradually stopped working out their own cadenzas, instead turning to a repertory of written-out versions. Opera singers retained more freedom, especially when it came to interpolating bravura high notes, but they, too, grew more cautious. Improvisation became the province of church organists and avant-gardists, the latter often taking inspiration from jazz

In recent years, there have been several interesting neuroscience experiments that attempt to get inside the head of performers as they engage in improv. One study, led by Charles Limb of the NIH and Johns Hopkins University, examined the brain activity of jazz musicians as they played on a piano. The musicians began with pieces that required no imagination, such as the C-major scale and a simple blues tune they’d memorized in advance. But then came the creativity condition: The musicians were told to improvise a new melody as they played alongside a recorded jazz quartet.

While the musicians riffed on the piano, giant magnets whirred overhead monitoring minor shifts in their brain activity. The researchers found that jazz improv relied on a carefully choreographed set of mental events, which allowed the musicians to discover their new melodies. Before a single note was played, the pianists exhibited a “deactivation” of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC), a brain area associated with planned actions and self-control. In other words, they were inhibiting their inhibitions, which allowed the musicians to create without worrying about what they were creating.

But it’s not enough to just unleash the mind?—?successful improv requires a very particular kind of expression. That’s why the fMRI machine also recorded a spike in activity in the medial prefrontal cortex, a fold of frontal lobe just behind the eyes. This area is often linked with self-expression?—?it lights up, for instance, whenever people tell a story in which they’re the main character. The scientists argue that this part of the brain is required for jazz improv because the musicians are channeling their artistic identity, searching for the notes that best summarize their style.

As Ross notes, this unique mental mode has a long and distinguished tradition within classic music and opera. I have a feeling Mozart would have enjoyed Miles Davis.

The T Word

by Patrick Appel

The NYT's editorial today is on point. A taste:

The government owes Americans a full investigation into the orders to approve torture, abuse and illegal, secret detention, as well as the twisted legal briefs that justified those policies. Congress and the White House also need to look into illegal wiretapping and the practice of sending prisoners to other countries to be tortured.

A few readers have written in because Andrew has repeatedly critiqued the paper for not using the word torture when describing Bush's interrogation policies. My understanding is that Andrew's beef is with the news section, not the editorial board. This isn't the first time that the editorial board has used the word.

Max Boot’s Untruth

by Andrew

Here we go again – the article of faith that keeps the neocons from owning Abu Ghraib as one of the signal achievements of their movement to expand freedom. Max Boot has no issues with waterboarding, or sleep deprivation, or stress positions. He has no issue with the torture techniques used against John McCain as long as America is authorizing the torture of prisoners. These are the tools necessary to end tyranny on earth. Then this:

I might add that the CIA techniques were very different from the gross abuses at Abu Ghraib. Notwithstanding Andrew’s unsupported claim that Abu Ghraib was “one of the test-sites for Cheney’s methods,” the actions there were carried out by a few wayward, low-level military personnel at this facility in Iraq and had no connection to the CIA’s high-level interrogation efforts, as numerous reports have shown.

No. False. Untrue. Most of the techniques shown at Abu Ghraib were exactly the same as Cheney's favored methods and exactly the same as methods found in every theater of combat by every branch of the armed services after Bush secretly withdrew the US from the Geneva Conventions the US helped found. The Senate Armed Services Committee report unanimously reported this.

Remember the stress positions – prisoners bent over with their arms tied to bars behind them? Bush-approved for the CIA. That mock execution with fake electric wires? We just have new evidence of mock executions from the CIA. Lynndie England tying a naked prisoner with a dog-leash? Al-Qahtani was treated exactly the same way under close supervision from Washington. All those accounts of beating and yelling at prisoners to keep them from sleeping to "soften them up" for interrogation? Approved by Cheney as well. Use of dogs to terrify Arab men? Approved by Bush and Cheney and Rumsfeld. Hooding? Standard operating procedure under Cheney. Forced nudity? Also approved by Bush. Are we supposed to believe that it was a pure coincidence that these Gitmo techniques suddenly appeared at Abu Ghraib after Gitmo's commander, Geoffrey Miller, was expressly sent to Abu Ghraib to Gitmoize it? Yes, that is was Boot is asking us to believe, because your lying eyes would expose the torture and abuse regime as a neoconservative project. 

The one murder at Abu Ghraib was from a Bush authorized technique – a stress position – compounded by beating. The rapes? They were indeed unauthorized by Bush, as were the sexual pyramids. But sexual humiliation and abuse? Routine at Gitmo, and deployed by female officers in Lynndie England fashion against Muslim males to exploit their religious and cultural beliefs to destroy their wills and break their minds.

Let me quote the Senate Armed Services Report that unanimously rebut Boot:

"The abuse of detainees at Abu Ghraib in late 2003 was not simply the result of a few soldiers acting on their own. Interrogation techniques such as stripping detainees of their clothes, placing them in stress positions, and using military dogs to intimidate them only appeared in Iraq after they had been approved for use in Afghanistan and GTMO. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld's December 2, 2002 authorization of aggressive interrogation techhniques and subsequent interrogation policies and plans approved by senior military and civilian officers conveyed the message that physical pressures and degradation were appropriate treatment for detainees in IUS military custody."

The neoconservatives need to be made to own Abu Ghraib. It was their signal achievement, the crowning symbol of an ideology of raw force as the instrument of pure power – even against a single defenseless individual in a windowless room, strapped to a board for a session of pure terror.

Thousands Of Allegations Of Fraud

by Patrick Appel

Katherine Tiedemann rounds up the news coming out of Afghanistan:

With 60 percent of the vote counted, Karzai is leading Abdullah 47.3 percent to 32.6 percent, still shy of the 50 percent needed to avoid a runoff (IEC). Of the some 130,000 of the 3.7 million votes counted so far that have been thrown out, nearly half of them have been for candidates who dropped out of the race (Pajhwok).

Staying Isn’t The Answer

by Patrick Appel

Juan Cole doesn't want the increased Iraqi civilian deaths in August to get in the way of withdrawing:

[T]he statistic will be taken advantage of by American hawks who object to the Status of Forces Agreement negotiated by George W. Bush with the Iraqi parliament, and affirmed by President Obama, and which specifies that all U.S. troops be out of Iraq by the end of 2011. For example, Ken Pollack at Haim Saban's Center within Brookings. Pollack makes the odd argument that the U.S. needs to remain in Iraq to prevent it from falling back into civil war. But the civil war he fears will recur is the one fought in 2006-2007, while the U.S. military was occupying Iraq! If it could not prevent the first one, how could the U.S. military prevent the second one? He cites some political scientists who he says argued that postcolonial states have high rates of recidivism in falling back into civil wars once they fight one, and that this rate is only ameliorated by the willingness of former colonial powers to intervene. This crackpot idea ignores the ways in which the colonial powers set these places up for civil wars in the first place. And I can think of lots of counter-examples. Nigeria's civil war did not recur, and British troops have not gone back there. Indonesia's massive civil conflict of the mid-1960s did not recur, and Holland has sent no brigades back to Jakarta. And in many cases, where civil wars have been transcended it has been despite imperial meddling (Nicaragua and El Salvador come to mind), not because of it.

The Art Of The Small Speech

by Patrick Appel

DiA gives Obama some advice about his upcoming healthcare speech and suggests a venue change:

[A] big-ticket, fill-the-rafters speech isn't what's missing in this campaign. Bill Clinton did that almost precisely 16 years ago, and while it was well received, it netted him nothing. What's missing is the one kind of presidential address Mr Obama has yet to try: the Oval Office speech.The soft, behind-the-desk address is something of an early TV-age relic. It's gotten easier to stage massive events, but there's a distinct appeal to the image of the president, elbows on the table where he just wrapped up work—at any desk, really—talking quietly to his short-term subjects.

Gonzo Opera

by Julian Sanchez

I'm half tempted to hop a train to Philly for the weekend to check out The Gonzales Cantata, a concert opera in which the former attorney general's gruelling 2007 hearings before the Senate Judiciary Committee are set to music and sung by a gender-inverted cast. It sounds sort of like Henry Purcell filtered through late John Adams, if that's your sort of thing. Honestly, I think more fertile material would've been the earlier NSA wiretap hearings, where Alberto Gonzales' persistent and repetitive evasions already sounded a bit like some kind of looping Philip Glass chorus. (Update: Apparently, there is an "I Don't Recall" aria.) Still, I'm almost shocked something like this hasn't been done before: as composer Melissa Dunphy points out in an interview with the Wall Street Journal, congressional hearings provide a unique mix of mannered formalism and absurd grandstanding that are ideally suited to operatic adaptation.