VIDEO: BALOJI feat. KONONO n1 - KARIBU YA BINTOU on Vimeo

BALOJI feat. KONONO n1 - KARIBU YA BINTOU
by BALOJI

Electric finger piano (likembé): played by Konono N°1, the legendary Congolese band who collaborated with Björk & count Vampire Weekend and Beck amongst their biggest fans.

baloji.com
baloji.com/blog
myspace.com/baloji

Contact:
info@baloji.com

Music
Composition & Lyrics: Baloji Tshiani
Thanks to Konono N°1
Arrangements: Betis Didier Likeng / Cyril Harrison

Universal Music Publishing - Kléa Songs

Short film

Directors: Spike and Jones
DOP: Nicolas Karakatsanis
Producer: Annemie Decorte (Dr. Film)
Styling: Ann Lauwerys
Mask: Katrien Matthys

 

AUDIO: Dee Dee Bridgewater On JazzSet : NPR

Dee Dee Bridgewater On JazzSet

February 25, 2010

Dee Dee Bridgewater
Margot Schulman/Kennedy Center

Dee Dee Bridgewater performs at the 2009 Mary Lou Williams Women in Jazz Festival at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C.

 

Set List

"Afro Blue" (Santamaria, arr. Gomez)

"Long Time Ago" (Bridgewater lyric to "Footprints" by Shorter; arr. Gomez)

"Four Women" (Simone; arr. Gomez)

"Good Morning, Heartache" (Higgenbotham, Drake, Fisher; arr. Gomez)

"Compared to What" (McDaniels; arr. Gomez)

 

February 25, 2010

"Here I am in my more natural setting," Dee Dee Bridgewater says as her set begins. Besides starring on the Friday-night show at the 14th annual Mary Lou Williams Women in Jazz Festival at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., Bridgewater emceed the entire weekend.

Most of the music in this set comes from Red Earth, Bridgewater's Memphis-to-Mali CD, which she performed with guest musicians from West Africa in the capacious Kennedy Center Concert Hall — and on JazzSet in 2007.

Now, in the smaller Terrace Theater at the 2009 Women in Jazz Festival, pianist and arranger Edsel Gomez has recruited an A-team percussion section of Vince Cherico from New York and Luisito Quintero from Venezuela for the Dee Dee Bridgewater Quintet.

Bassist Ira Coleman is the musical director, featured on the introduction and underpinning to Bridgewater's reading of "Four Women," the Nina Simone portrait of a quartet of African-American women — Aunt Sarah, Safronia, Peaches, Sweet Thing.

Bridgewater then introduces one piece from her Billie Holiday project. In a performance from the spring of 2009, this was practically a premiere. Now "Good Morning, Heartache" is on the album Eleanora Fagin (1915-1959): To Billie With Love From Dee Dee.

We close with "Giggles" from drummer Terri Lyne Carrington and her group at the KC Jazz Club. Carrington is the emcee of the next Women in Jazz Festival, taking place May 20-22, 2010.

Credits

Rhonda Hamilton guest-hosts this edition of JazzSet. Dr. Billy Taylor is the artistic director and founder of the Women in Jazz Festival. Kevin Struthers is Director of Jazz with Jean Thill at the Kennedy Center.

via npr.org

 

PUB: Boston Review — Poetry Contest

Thirteenth Annual Poetry Contest

Deadline: June 1, 2010
Judge: Peter Gizzi
First Prize:
$1,500

Complete guidelines:
The winning poet will receive $1,500 and have his or her work published in the November/December 2010 issue of Boston Review. Submit up to five unpublished poems, no more than 10 pages total. Any poet writing in English is eligible, unless he or she is a current student, former student, or close personal friend of the judge. Manuscripts must be submitted in duplicate, with a cover note listing the author’s name, address, email and phone number; names should not be on the poems themselves. Simultaneous submissions are not permitted. Submissions will not be returned. A $20 entry fee ($30 for international submissions), payable to Boston Review, must accompany all submissions.

postmarked no later than June 1, 2010-->

All entrants will receive a one-year subscription to Boston Review, beginning with the November/December 2010 issue. The winner will be announced no later than November 1, 2010, on the Boston Review Web site. All poems submitted to the contest will be considered for publication in Boston Review.

Mail submissions to:

Poetry Contest, Boston Review
35 Medford St., Suite 302
Somerville, MA 02143

Read winning poems from past years:
John Gallaher (2009)
Sarah Arvio (2008)
Elizabeth Willis (2007)
Marc Gaba (2006)
Mike Perrow (2005)
Michael Tod Edgerton [PDF] (2004)
Susan Wheeler (2003)
Max Winter (2002)
D.A. Powell (2001)
Christopher Edgar
(2000)
Stephanie Strickland (1999)
Daniel Bosch (1998)

For more poetry in Boston Review, click here.

PUB: Marjorie J. Wilson poetry contest

The 10th Annual

Marjorie J. Wilson Award

Best Poem Contest

www.margiereview.com

 

Postmark Deadline: April 26th, 2010

Grand Prize:  $1,000

for Best Poem & Publication in MARGIE VOL. 9

ALL FINALISTS' POEMS WILL BE CONSIDERED FOR PUBLICATION!

 

Judge:

CARL PHILLIPS

The Internationally Acclaimed, Awards Winning Poet

              
              

ENTER ONLINE HERE

POSTAL SUBMISSION GUIDELINES: 

  • Submit 3 unpublished poems & a $15 entry fee payable to MARGIE, Inc.  (60 line limit per poem.)  $5 each per additional poem. 

  • Enclose a single cover sheet with your name, address & phone.  No names should appear on poems.

  • Simultaneous submissions accepted.  Only submit copies as poems will not be returned.  Include a S.A.S.E. to receive contest results.

  • Mail poems & entry fee POSTMARKED no later than April 26th, 2010

  • Send contest submissions & entry fee to:

MARGIE, P.O.B. 250, Chesterfield, MO., 63006

 

Questions?  Please email us at:  margiereview@aol.com"> margiereview@aol.com

 

PUB: Short story anthology of writings by Haitian women in Haiti & abroad

CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS

The Haiti I Knew, The Haiti I know, The Haiti I want to Know
Edited by Women Writers of Haitian Descent, Inc.
To be published in the United States through an independent press in English, French and Creole.
Distribution: International.


We are currently seeking short stories for our anthology. The Haiti I Knew, The Haiti I know, The Haiti I want to Know: Contemporary Writings by Haitian Women, an anthology of prose by women in Haiti, and women of Haitian descent living abroad, will strengthen the voice of Haitian women in the world of literature.

Through a sampling of various Haitian women's narratives, the literary legacy and unique history of the island will be highlighted in content and style. This collection will be unique yet use successful techniques from preceding anthologies. As in Lillian Castillo-Speed's anthology Latina: Women's Voices from the Borderlands, the work will include both fiction and nonfiction. Like Edwidge Danticat's anthology The Butterfly's Way: Voices from the Haitian Dyaspora in the United States, the book will have a thematic structure according to the contributions received.

Guidelines: Haitian women living on the island or women of Haitian descent living abroad are encouraged to tell their stories. Submissions may include fiction, creative nonfiction, personal essays and memoirs. Please only send unpublished work. No simultaneous submissions. Writings submitted will not be returned.
Deadline: June 30, 2010
Length: 3,000-5,000 words
Format: Pieces should be typed, double-spaced and paginated. Please include your mailing address, e-mail address, telephone number and a short bio on the last page.
Submitting: Electronic submissions are preferred. Send work electronically as a Word or Rich Text Format file (with .doc or .rtf extension) to M.J. Fievre at jessfievre@gmail.com. Put “Anthology” in the subject line.

Reply: Please allow until January 31st for a response. If you haven't received a response by then, please assume your work was not selected. An effort will be made to contact each writer.

For more information, please visit www.wwohd.org

 

VIDEO: Man-Up: The Documentary

This documentary will fully explore many of the facets of fatherlessness in an intense effort to show the magnitude of this social epidemic. Man-Up will take an uncompromising look at the lives that hang in the balance. You will hear personal testimonies of triumph and devastation as we navigate our way through the experiences of growing up without a father and the effects thereof. Again, our mission is to give a face to the faceless and a voice to the voiceless children who are now suffering and asking themselves the unanswerable question "why me?".

You will hear from the MEN who left their child behind; those who stayed and the fathers who are battling the court system for the right to see their children. You will also hear from the women who are raising these children alone and experience the pain and hurt they feel inside. We delve into the good, bad and the ugly scenarios that are played out everyday as men, women and even children battle this socially disparaging disease.

Man-Up: The Documentary will attempt to provide methods of healing as we talk to psychologists and socially conscience community activists and leaders. As we look for answers, in the end our hope is to pull back the delicately placed scab covering up the wounds that will never heal if we don't confront fatherlessness head on.

 

Over 24 million children live absent of their biological father.

90% of all homeless and runaway children are from fatherless homes

80% of rapists motivated by displaced anger come from fatherless homes

75% of all adolescent patients in chemical abuse centers come from fatherless homes

71% of all high school dropouts come from fatherless homes

63% of youth suicides are from fatherless homes

85% of all youths sitting in prison today grew up in a fatherless home

 

 

INFO: from BBC News - US jobless numbers hide scale of problem

US jobless numbers hide scale of problem

Te Ramos is a 60-year-old former construction worker who is now dependent on free food pantries and a soup kitchen.

By John Mervin
Business reporter, BBC News, New York

The headline number only reveals a small part of the problem.

An official US unemployment rate that hit 10% last year, and seems set to stay there or thereabouts for months yet, already makes grim reading.

Yet there's growing concern that even that large and unpleasant number doesn't do justice to the size and severity of America's problem with jobs, or the lack thereof.

Dig beneath the headline figure on each monthly jobs report and there are now plenty of other horrors to be found.

Take the problem of long-term unemployment. In the eyes of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, which does the counting, the long-term unemployed are people who have been unemployed for more than six months.

They now make up roughly 40% of all unemployed. That's more than six million people who have been out work since last summer at least.

Real deprivation

As America's politicians and media have tried to grasp the full extent of the country's economic problems, they have inevitably looked for comparisons with previous periods of recession and slow growth.

However you count them, the millions of unemployed are going to present the president with a huge problem for many months to come.

So a common comparison these days is the recession of 1982-83 - that's the last time America grappled with 10% unemployment.

Which means it's chilling to note that it now takes twice as long (more than 20 weeks) as it did in 1982-83 for an unemployed person to find their next job.

Unemployment is always nasty. But it's even worse when it's accompanied not just by stress and anxiety but by real deprivation.

That is the experience of increasing numbers of Americans as unemployment benefits run out before the next job can be found.

Yet even this doesn't do justice to the sheer scale of America's problem.

Bigger number

Read a little further through the Bureau of Labor Statistics' monthly report and jobless rates that are already way too high for comfort, only get higher.

President Obama
Unemployment may have taken Obama's focus away from healthcare

Like all developed economies, the US has arrived at its method of counting the unemployed over many years and via some controversial choices.

As a consequence, the headline unemployment rate, the one that's still stubbornly close to 10%, is in fact a rather narrow measure.

To be counted in that oft-reported tenth of the labour force you have to be out of work, and have actively looked for a job in the past four weeks.

It's the four weeks requirement that cuts out a lot of people who would undoubtedly like a job, if there were any jobs to be applied for, much less secured.

Don't worry, the Bureau does count those people - it just doesn't count them in the official unemployment rate, the one that gets reported first and most frequently by journalists battling for space and air time.

Instead, they get defined as things like "marginally attached" or "discouraged" workers.

This allows the Bureau to offer "alternative measures of labour underutilisation", which, to the untrained ear, sounds like awful gobbledygook and unemployment by another name.

And if you take the widest of these measures, which in plain English counts everyone who doesn't have a full time job, and blames that on economic reasons (as opposed to blaming it on being sick, old, or in training) then America's "labour underutilisation" rate went past 17% at about the time its "unemployment" rate hit 10%.

A rate of 17% presents everyone with a picture of an American economy where more than one in six people who want a job, can't get one.

Crisis

In this picture, President Obama's sudden burst of initiatives to create jobs, while the healthcare bill falls off the agenda, doesn't just look like a choice to move away from a losing battle.

Unemployed people at a jobs fair in Los Angeles
There are more people unemployed than the official data shows

Because if America's economy has moved out of recession, it remains mired in an unemployment crisis.

However you count them, the millions of unemployed are going to present the president with a huge problem for many months to come.

Whether they're "unemployed," "marginally attached" or "discouraged," they're all still suffering in what President Obama's economic advisor Larry Summers recently called the "human recession".

And while their lack of a job may not be counted in the headline numbers, come the November mid-term elections, their votes will be.

 

INTERVIEW: Geoffrey Philp - from Caribbean Literary Salon

Geoffrey Philp was born in Kingston, Jamaica. He is the author of a children’s book, Grandpa Sydney’s Anancy Stories; a novel, Benjamin, My Son; two collections of short stories, Uncle Obadiah and the Alien and Who's Your Daddy?: And Other Stories, and six poetry collections: Exodus and Other Poems, Florida Bound, Hurricane center, Xango music, Twelve Poems and A Story for Christmas, and Dub Wise.

His work has been anthologized in Small Axe, Asili, Gulf Stream, Florida in Poetry: A History of the Imagination, Wheel and Come Again: An Anthology of Reggae Poetry, Whispers from the Cotton Tree Root, the Oxford Book of Caribbean Short Stories and the Oxford Book of Caribbean Verse. Philp’s awards include an Individual Artist Fellowship from the Florida Arts Council, an artist-in-residence at the Seaside Institute, Sauza "Stay Pure" Award, Canute Brodhurst Prize, and most recently, the Daily News Prize (2009) from The Caribbean Writer.

He can be contacted through the following media:
Email: geoffreyphilp101@gmail.com
Blog: http://geoffreyphilp.blogspot.com


CLS: Mr. Philp, you have been blogging enthusiastically since 2005. What made you start doing it and how has it rewarded you?

Geoffrey Philp: I began blogging at the suggestion of my daughter and the rewards have been tremendous. I am not only doing something that I love, but it has served as a viable platform for advertising my work.

CLS: On your blog, you dedicate a significant number of articles on Caribbean writers. What are your thoughts on the present volume and quality of prose and poetry produced in the Caribbean?

Geoffrey Philp: I am amazed that we have so many active published writers in the Caribbean and its diaspora. The quality of the prose and poetry that has been produced in the past few years has been extraordinary. I’m thinking about, for example, the work of Jennifer Rahim, Frances Coke, Opal Palmer Adisa, Kwame Dawes, and Kei Miller to name a few.

I’m also gratified by the work of critics such as Heather Russell and Donna Aza Weir Soley, whose work has opened up a new critical appreciation of our writers.

CLS: You also teach class. Please tell us a little about that. How long have you been teaching and who are your students? What makes you love your work?

Geoffrey Philp: I have taught introductory creative writing classes to freshmen/sophomores at Miami Dade College and workshops for writers of every age for over twenty years now. Many students come into the class eager to express themselves, and they want to learn how to write short stories and poems. If they are willing, I teach them, for instance, the basics of a scene: narration, dialogue, setting, and point of view. One of the hardest things to do is to balance their exuberance against the cold hard fact of the craft which is writing and rewriting and rewriting…
Yet when they understand a simple concept such as character change through the beginning, middle, and end of the story, it makes everything worthwhile. I still receive books in the mail from students whenever they’ve published their first book or nth short story.

Knowing that I have helped someone to follow his/her passion is a wonderful feeling and it's why I teach.

CLS: We have seen various genres from your hand, among others short fiction, children’s books and poetry. Do you have a preference for any of these genres?

Geoffrey Philp: My writing starts with either an idea or a phrase or a character. The type of idea, phrase, or characters determines whether or not I will write a poem, children’s book, or short story. And then sometimes, I am fooled. The poem becomes a short story or the short story becomes a novel.

CLS: How has growing up in Jamaica influenced your writing and outlook on life?

Geoffrey Philp: Growing up in Jamaica, especially being a part of the post-Independence generation, has had a profound effect on my life. I grew up at a time when there was widespread disillusionment with the promises of Independence and at a time of growing social unrest that saw the movement of Rastafari from the ghettos into the middle class. It was also a time of tremendous creative expression. I’ve written about this period in this post: “A Terrible Beauty is Born”: Jamaica in the Seventies.
The concept of InI that is at the heart of Rastafari and reggae has influenced my life and my art in many ways. For example, Rastafari with its Afrocentric worldview made dig deep and to research the religions of West Africa. What I discovered was that the archetypal equivalents in Greek and Roman mythology existed in West African religions. Yet they also came with a difference.

Xango may be compared to Mars, but his cultural significance-- how the archetype is unconsciously acted out by Caribbean men--was of great interest to me. And as Nicolette Bethel has said the role of the artist is to manifest “the subconscious elements of collective cultures." And if these elements are ignored, then the culture “has consigned itself to having its culture change on it without realizing, comprehending, or affecting that change."

This is just one of the ways that growing up in Jamaica during that period influenced me and I wouldn’t trade it for anything.

CLS: How did you come to writing anyway?

Geoffrey Philp: I started writing poetry and was encouraged by my literature teacher at Jamaica College, Dennis Scott, to continue. I’ve never stopped.

CLS: What is your writing routine? Do you write in the morning, or perhaps at night, at home, or elsewhere? Any rituals you'd like to share?

Geoffrey Philp: I write at home in the mornings and on the weekends. In some ways rituals are good because they steady the mind, but the only worthwhile ritual that I know is sitting down, booting up the computer and writing.

CLS: What are you working on now?

Geoffrey Philp: I’m working on a children’s book, Anancy’s Christmas Gift.

CLS: Thank you for your time Mr. Philp!

VIDEO: The Neo-African-Americans

LET THE CONVERSATION BEGIN…

OP ED: from t r u t h o u t | Waterboarding Too Dangerous, Internal DoD Memo Reveals

Waterboarding Too Dangerous, Internal DoD Memo Reveals

by: Jeffrey Kaye, t r u t h o u t | News Analysis

photo
(Image: Lance Page / t r u t h o u t; Adapted: Snap®, Nowordz, Hayley Austin)

In recent weeks, former Bush speechwriter Marc Thiessen has been on a public relations campaign defending the efficacy of waterboarding, going so far as to say that the torture technique sanctioned by the Bush administration is not only safe, but is in line with the teachings of the Catholic Church.

On Tuesday, in an interview with "Fox News," John Yoo, the former Justice Department attorney who was the principal author of legal memoranda that cleared the way for CIA interrogators to waterboard "war on terror" detainees and subject them to other brutal torture techniques, asserted that waterboarding was harmless.

Please click this link to listen to an interview with Jeffrey Kaye on the Peter B. Collins show.

In his defense of the practice, Yoo cited the thousands of US servicemen who have undergone SERE training and said, "we don't think it amounts to torture because we would not be doing it to our own soldiers otherwise."

However, a previously unreleased internal Department of Defense (DoD) memo, summarizing a review of the Navy SERE program in late February - early March 2007, reveals  that there was fierce criticism within the DoD of the Navy SERE school in North Island, San Diego, for being the only SERE facility to still use waterboarding in its training program.

The memo, obtained by Truthout, stated that the use of waterboarding left students "psychologically defeated" and impaired in the ability to develop "psychological hardiness."

The attempt to remove waterboarding from Naval survival school training goes back to at least 2005, which was also the period when then-Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney Steven Bradbury was fashioning a series of legal opinions that approved waterboarding as an "enhanced interrogation" technique. Bradbury cited the use of waterboarding on numerous SERE students over the years, supposedly without reported serious injury or prolonged mental harm, as relevant in approving it as not meeting the legal criteria for torture.

The Joint Personnel Recovery Agency memo from Fort Belvoir, Virginia, is marked "For Official Use Only," and addressed to the headquarters of the departments of the Navy and the Marine Corps, and copied to the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Global Security Affairs. US Air Force Col. Brendan G. Clare signed it.

SERE stands for Survival, Evasion, Resistance, Escape, and SERE schools exist across the military services, but the Joint Personnel Recovery Agency (JPRA) is considered the "Executive Agency" for all the SERE schools. The aim of SERE "Code of Conduct" training is to prepare US military personnel for possible capture and torture by an enemy that does not follow Geneva conventions guidelines.

The Clare memo stated, in part:

3. Area of Concern: The JPRA official stance is that the water board should not be used as a physical pressure during Level C SERE training. This position is based on factors that have the potential to affect not only students but also the whole DoD SERE program. The way the water board is most often employed, it leaves students psychologically defeated with no ability to resist under pressure. Once a student is taught that they can be beaten, and there is no way to resist, it is difficult to develop psychological hardiness. None of the other schools use the water board that leaves the San Diego school as a standout.

In an attachment to Colonel Clare's memo, "Observations and Recommendations," JPRA indicates that the waterboard technique as used in the SERE schools is "inconsistent" with the JPRA philosophy that its training and procedures be "safe, effective" and provides "a positive learning experience."

The water board has always been the most extreme pressure that required intense supervision and oversight because of the inherent risks associated with its employment.... Forcing answers under the extreme duress of the water board does not teach resistance or resilience, but teaches that you can be beaten. When a student's ability to develop psychological resiliency is compromised... it may create unintended consequences regarding their perception of survivability during a real world SERE event. Based on these concerns and the risks associated with using the water board, we strongly recommend that you discontinue using it [underlined in the original].

According to a "Talking Paper" attached to the memo, JPRA addressed its concerns regarding waterboarding with the commander of the San Diego SERE program going back to 2005. The paper indicated that waterboarding continues at the California SERE School because it is "an emotional issue with former Navy POWs." The talking paper, dated October 11, 2007, was incisive regarding criticism of the North Island program. Colonel Clare indicated that three of the six SERE schools had been visited by Congressional staffers, and that "It's only a matter of time before Navy SERE School (W) is visited and the Navy has to explain and justify the continued use of this instructional method and JFCOM/JPRA is asked, why it was allowed to continue."

Furthermore, the paper indicated that JPRA felt it had "exhausted all efforts" at lower levels of bureaucracy, and indicated the issue should be brought to the attention of officers at the JFCOM [Joint Forces Command] Flag level, with an eye to preventing "an embarrassing situation" for the military, and "discretely prevent a risky and documented ineffective training technique." As of October 2007, there were no DoD restrictions on physical pressures applied during SERE training, including the waterboard.

Colonel Clare indicated that he specifically brought his concerns to Air Force Gen. Lance L. Smith, Commander, JFCOM, in December 2006, but was told that lacking anything in writing, "I should 'stay in my lane.'" (General Smith left JFCOM in November 2007 and is now retired.)

The Navy SERE school in Brunswick, Maine, discontinued the use of waterboarding in its training curriculum after a SERE psychologist found via "empirical medical data ... elevated levels of cortisol in the brain stem caused by stress levels incurred during water boarding." Cortisol is a stress hormone released by the adrenal glands as part of the body's fight-or-flight mechanisms. Excess cortisol can lead to chronic stress, impaired cognitive abilities, thyroid problems, suppressed immune functioning, high blood pressure, and other health problems.

The OPR Report and the PREAL Manual

A great deal has been written about the purported safety of waterboarding. Recently, former Vice President Dick Cheney has advocated its continued use, and told ABC "This Week" that he was "a big supporter of waterboarding."

The issue came to prominence again when the Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR) report was released February 19. The report capped a four-and-a-half-year-long investigation into misconduct by Justice Department attorneys in the writing of memos and other written materials used to justify the use of harsh interrogation techniques ordered by the White House and the CIA.

In each of the released three drafts of the OPR report, there is a short section, introduced without comment, on a May 7, 2002, SERE "Pre-Academic Laboratory (PREAL) Operating Instructions" manual. We do not know when or how the Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) obtained this manual, but it's possible that it was supplied by the same means that other JPRA/SERE material was delivered to OLC.

The August 2002 torture memos drafted by Yoo and former OLC attorney Jay Bybee, as well as memos written in 2005 by former OLC acting head Bradbury, had relied in part on assurances from the SERE program and personnel that the waterboard technique was not physically harmful, was used upon SERE students, albeit at a lesser degree of application, and was, therefore, with medical monitoring, safe to use.

The PREAL document had noted, as OPR pointed out, that SERE training was different from "real-world conditions." Under the SERE techniques, the SERE trainee could "develop a sense of 'learned helplessness'" during training.

The interrogator must recognize when a student is overly frustrated and doing a poor job resisting. At this point the interrogator must temporarily back off, and will coordinate with and ensure that the student is monitored by a controller or coordinator. (Pages 40-41 of the  OPR Final Report.)

Despite the warnings that, even at SERE training school level, the dangers of waterboarding (and other SERE techniques) required monitoring, with the implication that the dangers were even worse in "real-world conditions," neither the OPR report, nor the memorandum written by Associate Deputy Attorney General David Margolis, who reviewed the final OPR report, indicated that SERE itself had decided the dangers were too great to include waterboarding in its training. It is not known when waterboarding was ceased at the bulk of the SERE schools, but it appears that it had been discontinued for the reasons described above at all but the North Island SERE school by the time Bradbury was writing his OLC opinions, which like the Yoo/Bybee memos approved the use of waterboarding.

"Learned Helplessness"

According to a related SERE document, dated September 26, 2007, written by SERE Human Factors Chief Gary Percival Ph.D., "Waterboarding consists of immobilizing an individual and pouring water over their face to simulate drowning." It elicits a gag reflex in the victim, "making the subject believe his or her death is imminent." The document noted that when waterboarding is "poorly executed," it "can cause extreme pain and damage," including broken bones from pulling against restraints. As a result, and in line with risks associated with other SERE techniques, at SERE school both medical and psychological monitoring is considered vital to protect students from injury. Dr. Percival indicated that JPRA did not support use of waterboarding in SERE training, as it "does not teach resilience or resistance," and "risks promoting learned helplessness."

As the SERE techniques were "reverse-engineered" by SERE psychologists and CIA contractors, John Mitchell, Bruce Jessen, and possibly others, for use by the CIA in early 2002 (or late 2001), the requirements for the presence of both medical and psychological personnel at the interrogation site was written into the torture protocols. Besides possible physical damage or even death, the presence of psychologists, in particular, was meant to provide monitoring capacity to prevent the acquisition of a state of "learned helplessness" in the prisoner.

A 2001 document written for the Human Factors Directorate of JPRA, "Scientific Implications for Code of Conduct Training Across the Captivity Spectrum," co-written by Dr. Percival and Dr. J. Bruce Jessen, described learned helplessness:

When students feel they are faced with unsolvable problems, their performance and retention are significantly reduced. Training models that induce learned helplessness are worse than no training at all.

According to the American Heritage Medical Dictionary, learned helplessness (LH) is "A laboratory model of depression in which exposure to a series of unforeseen adverse situations gives rise to a sense of helplessness or an inability to cope with or devise ways to escape such situations, even when escape is possible."

The original experiments on LH, performed by former psychologist and former American Psychological Association president Martin Seligman, in the mid-1960s, and published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology with Steven Maier as "Failure to Escape Traumatic Shock," exposed dogs to a situation where they were faced with inescapable electrical shocks. Within a short period of times, the dogs could not be induced to escape the situation, even when provided with a previously taught escape route. Drs. Seligman and Maier theorized that the dogs had "learned" their condition was helpless. The experimental model was extended to a human model for the induction of clinical depression and other psychological conditions.

According to New York Times reporter Scott Shane, James Mitchell was an admirer of Dr. Seligman's writings on LH, and told him so at a meeting at Dr. Seligman's home in December 2001, where "a small group of professors and law enforcement and intelligence officers gathered ... to brainstorm about Muslim extremism." CIA psychologist Kirk M accompanied Dr. Mitchell. Hubbard.

According to the OPR report, in late July 2002, OLC attorneys received a psychological assessment of Abu Zubaydah "and a report from CIA psychologists asserting that the use of harsh interrogation techniques in SERE training had resulted in no adverse long-term effects" (p. 62). In the CIA's Office of Inspector General (OIG) report on the use of "enhanced interrogation techniques," (EITs) released last year, the proposal to use SERE-like techniques on Zubaydah, and other prisoners, originated in the CIA's Counter-terrorism Center and the Office of Technical Services (OTS). The report stated:

CIA's OTS obtained data on the use of the proposed EITs and their potential long-term psychological effects on detainees. OTS input was based in part on information solicited from a number of psychologists and knowledgeable academics in the area of psychopathology....

OTS also solicited input from DoD/JPRA regarding techniques used in its SERE training and any subsequent psychological effects on students.

Moreover, the CIA OIG report remarked that the subsequent Yoo/Bybee memos of August 1, 2002 were "based, in substantial part, on OTS analysis and the experience and expertise of non-Agency personnel and academics concerning whether long-term psychological effects would result from use of the proposed techniques."

It is not known if Dr. Hubbard, or Drs. Jessen or Mitchell, or even psychologist Dr. R. Scott Shumate, who accompanied Mitchell to the Thailand interrogation of Zubaydah in April 2002, were among those in the CIA who guaranteed "no adverse long-term effects" for the torture techniques proposed. Dr. Shumate was the chief operational psychologist for the CIA's Counter-terrorism Center at the time, and is reported to have left the Zubaydah interrogation in protest over the use of SERE techniques.

Dr. Seligman denied that he had any connection with the implementation of the CIA's torture program. In a recent article, he described his association with the SERE program:

I gave a three-hour lecture sponsored by SERE (the Survival, Evasion, Resistance, Escape branch of the American armed forces) at the San Diego Naval Base in May 2002. I was invited to speak about how American troops and American personnel could use what is known about learned helplessness to resist torture and evade successful interrogation by their captors. This is just what I spoke about.

I was told then that since I was (and am) a civilian with no security clearance that they could not detail American methods of interrogation with me. I was also told then that their methods did not use "violence" or "brutality." James Mitchell and Bruce Jessen were present in the audience of between 50 and 100 others at my speech, and that was, to the best of my knowledge, the sum total of my "assisting the CIA."

The San Diego base is the site where the controversial continuation of waterboarding students in SERE training continues. Dr. Seligman did not describe under what circumstances he was told he could not be given details about the US interrogation program or even why the subject came up.

Dr. Seligman now says he is "grieved and horrified" over the use of the learned helplessness theories in the construction of the CIA's torture protocols. Yet, when I wrote to Dr. Seligman in August 2007 to ask, "what is your position on the use of your research by others, and on psychologists involved in military/CIA interrogations under the current administration?," Dr. Seligman replied: "The only 'position' I am comfortable staking out is 'Good science always runs the risk of immoral application. It goes with the territory of discovery.'"

The Margolis Memo, SERE and the Waterboard

In a memo to the attorney general vacating the decision of the OPR report to charge OLC torture memo authors Yoo and Bybee with "professional misconduct" and refer them for bar discipline, Margolis supplied his own analysis of the use of the SERE material. He described SERE training as "relevant to the threshold question of whether everyone subjected to the waterboard suffers severe physical pain or suffering." Furthermore, Margolis stated that Yoo and Bybee relied on the psychological assessment of Zubaydah in order to assess if Zubaydah "would suffer severe mental pain or suffering as a result of the waterboard."

Margolis felt the Yoo/Bybee memo relied too much on the SERE experience, and not enough on the monitoring of Zubaydah or others by CIA medical personnel and psychologists, or on the CIA's psychological assessment of Zubaydah. But the evidence of the recently revealed 2007 JPRA memo on waterboarding shows that the SERE schools themselves had serious doubts that waterboarding could be made safe, even under controlled conditions. This doubt had led them to campaign vigorously within the Pentagon bureaucracy to end the use of the waterboard at the remaining SERE school where it was used.

There is no indication in his memo that Margolis was aware of this situation, nor made an attempt of his own to investigate the facts behind the CIA or OLC assertions regarding waterboarding and its use by SERE.

As for the Zubaydah psychological evaluation, it is clear the evaluation was written specifically to get permission for waterboarding, and not to undertake a serious psychological evaluation of the prisoner. The report is amateurishly and hastily written, and is mostly a compilation of claims about Zubaydah that have since been refuted or even dropped by the government, e.g. that Zubaydah was a top al-Qaeda official, that he wrote the al-Qaeda resistance manual etc.

While Margolis could say that both Yoo and Bybee were not competent to judge the validity of the psychological evaluation of Zubaydah, and that they relied on the statements of the CIA psychologists in the case, nevertheless, it is notable that the psychological evaluation was only produced after Yoo had indicated in a July 13, 2002, letter to CIA acting General Counsel John Rizzo that consultation with "experts" would constitute the "due diligence" necessary to contest a charge of "specific intent" in a torture case. A psychological evaluation could be considered such a consultation with experts. Yoo also cited as examples of such "due diligence" surveys of professional literature and "evidence gained from past experience." 

Creative Commons License
This work by Truthout is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.

NOTE: Part of the reason of post this article is because of its relevance in helping us understand "learned helplessness," or why more enslaved people did not fight back, did not try to run. Remember Harriet Tubman's prescient insight: (paraphrase) I could have gotten more of us out if I could have convinced them that they were enslaved. In far too many ways we are still victimized by the belief that you can't fight the system because we can't win. "Learned helplessness!" What a concept. If one session of waterboarding can produce learned helplessness, what could three or four hundred years of chattel slavery induce?

—Kalamu