Showing posts with label survival. Show all posts
Showing posts with label survival. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 1, 2014

The Growing Acceptance of the Assad Regime’s Survival


On the last day of last year, the Wall Street Journal ran a powerful indictment of President Obama’s Syria policy. No, it wasn’t an editorial or op-ed (although the Journal has run plenty of those too). Rather, this was a news article by Adam Entous and Siobhan Gorman, and the indictment was delivered not by the president’s political adversaries but by his own officials, particularly in the intelligence community.


The article explains that the intelligence agencies have retracted their previous assessments that it was only a matter of time before Bashar Assad fell–a staple of the president’s own rhetoric from the start of the full-blown uprising in 2011 until early 2013. No longer. In 2013 Iran and Hezbollah increased their commitment to Assad while the U.S. and its allies made no comparable commitment to the rebels, preferring instead to strike a deal for Assad to give up his chemical weapons–while he goes right on pulverizing the opposition and any civilians unlucky enough to be caught in his indiscriminate attacks. The result:


The intelligence assessments that once showed Mr. Assad on the verge of defeat now say he could remain in power for the foreseeable future in key parts of the country bordering Lebanon and the Mediterranean coast. The U.S. doesn’t think he will be able to retake the whole country again, U.S. intelligence agencies believe. Areas outside his control are fracturing into warring enclaves along ethnic and sectarian lines, abutting a new al Qaeda-affiliated haven that sweeps from Syria into Iraq.



There was nothing inevitable about this division of Syria between Shiite and Sunni extremists, as I have been arguing for some time. It came about because the Iranians went all-in and the U.S. didn’t. As the Journal notes: “Through it all, U.S. intelligence and military officers watched the evolution with alarm from the sidelines, at least one step behind developments on the ground.” Thanks to this American hesitancy and confusion, the article notes, quoting “a longtime American diplomat in the region,” it now looks “like Messrs. Assad, Nasrallah and Soleimani have ‘won’.”


The flip side of a victory for Assad and his patrons in Hezbollah and Tehran is that the U.S. has lost. Obama’s defeat in Syria hasn’t been nearly as costly, at least so far, in American blood or treasure as President Bush’s temporary defeat in Iraq, from 2003 to 2007–but it is likely to prove more enduring and more damaging to American interests in the region because there is no “surge” on the horizon to save the day. In Syria the situation is likely to go from grim to grimmer, and drag down fragile neighboring states, notably Iraq and Lebanon, along with it into the vortex of sectarian bloodletting.




Commentary Magazine



The Growing Acceptance of the Assad Regime’s Survival

Sunday, December 1, 2013

After survival, preemies face life challenges


Children’s health




3 hours ago


Alexis Clarke

Laurie Clarke


On the left, Alexis Clarke sleeps. The photo was taken in the first days of her life, when she was barely as big as her mother’s hand. On the right, Alexis sleeps in her mom’s lap in a recent photo.



As the smallest baby ever delivered at the University of California, San Diego Medical Center, Alexis Clarke has amazed even her doctors. Born six months ago weighing barely 11 ounces — less than a can of soda — little Alexis now tops the scales at more than 7 pounds and is almost ready to go home with her parents.


Her mother, Laurie Clarke, is full of gratitude for her daughter’s progress. “In all honesty, even 10 years ago we may not have had the same outcome,” said Clarke, 34, a first-time mother from Carlsbad, Calif. “We are so lucky.” 


Alexis was born after she’d been in the womb just over 25 weeks; a typical pregnancy lasts 40 weeks. Babies born before 37 weeks are considered premature, but with medical and technological advances, it’s no longer unusual for very preterm babies to survive. The key, in general, is a steroid for mothers and a drug for their babies.


Alexis’ journey has been marked by ups and downs. Just as her parents thought she was ready to be discharged in time for Thanksgiving, one of her doctors told them she needed emergency eye surgery. Then a small cough raised concerns that she’d contracted whooping cough, prompting her to be put into isolation (tests came back clear). But an MRI of her brain delivered the good news that her development seems to be proceeding normally. 


Alexis Clarke

Laurie Clarke


This is the first photo Alexis’ parents took of their tiny baby girl.



Baby Alexis is hardly the tiniest preemie born, but her journey from neonatal intensive care to home is typical of other extremely premature babies. In 2011, less than 1 percent of live births in the U.S. were considered “extremely preterm,” delivered before 28 weeks. That represents more than 28,000 babies. Meanwhile, the total number of premature births in the U.S declined last year to 450,000, or 11.5 percent, the lowest preterm birth rate in 15 years.


“In the past six years we’ve had babies survive that we didn’t think could survive,” Dr. Krishelle Marc-Aurele, one of Alexis’ doctors, told NBC San Diego.


Some hospitals are divided on treating babies born in the “gray zone,” between 23 and 25 weeks. In the U.S, up to 90 percent of neonatal units resuscitate babies born as soon as 23 weeks. Younger than that and most doctors believe a baby is not viable. “The lower level of viability is inching down,” said Dr. John Muraskas, who resuscitated the smallest surviving baby on record, Rumaisa Rahman, born in 2004 weighing 9.2 ounces.


Muraskas, a professor of pediatrics and neonatal/perinatal medicine at Loyola University Medical Center, said the key treatments began in the 1990s and have made all the difference.


Now doctors routinely give moms on the brink of delivering too soon two doses of steroids to help the baby or babies’ lungs mature quicker and strengthen the blood vessels in the brain. That reduces the risk of a premature infant developing a brain bleed.


Once born, preemies receive surfactant, a drug administered through a breathing tube into their lungs that makes them stronger and less stiff, and able to breathe independently sooner.


There have been some other strides made as well. For one thing, March of Dimes chief medical officer Dr. Ed McCabe says neonatal intensive care units are no longer loud and brightly lit. “Now we know it’s better to make it darker and quieter to mimic the environment in the womb,” said McCabe.


When it comes to survival, babies who don’t even weigh in at a pound sound alarming. But gestational age is actually more important than weight. The longer a baby stays in the womb, the better she does.


Alexis Clarke

Laurie Clarke


Baby Alexis is growing stronger by the day – here she is on Nov. 15.



Gender matters too. For reasons still unknown to researchers, girls born early are hardier than boys. About 80 percent of girls born at 25 weeks survive to celebrate their first birthday compared to 75 percent of boys, said Muraskas. The risk of serious disabilities such as blindness, deafness or severe cerebral palsy is 10 percent for girls and 15 percent for boys born at 25 weeks.


More common are mild or moderate outcomes that include behavioral problems, learning disabilities and some degree of cerebral palsy. Recent research has also suggested an association between prematurity and autism.


Muraskas worries that long-term effects of being born extremely premature aren’t always considered. “We try to err on the side of life,” he said. “The problem with our field is that we don’t have a crystal ball.”


Neither did Beverly Roach, whose twin daughters were born in 1986 at 25 weeks, the same as Alexis Clarke. Roach, of Plainview, N.Y., recalls being offered surfactant for her twins as part of a research study, but she decided against it because the government had yet to approve the drug. Steroids weren’t an option because one of the twins’ amniotic sacs had ruptured. 


Now 27, the twins still bear the marks of being born too soon. Ellen, who weighed 1 pound, 8 ounces, has a shunt in her head to drain the fluid in her brain caused by hydrocephaly. She can’t read and can’t hold a job, but she can walk and talk. 


Robyn, who weighed 1 pound, 11 ounces, wears hearing aids and graduated from high school. Cerebral palsy leaves her unaBLe to drive, but she dates and works an office job two days a week at an early-intervention school. Roach calls her daughters “the light of my life.”


Within the past few years, both sisters moved to group homes, where they’ve made friends.


Sometimes, Roach will call to ask if she can come visit only to be told no. “They’ll say, Mom, we’re going out,” said Roach. “They’re going out on a Saturday night and I’m at home.”






After survival, preemies face life challenges

Saturday, November 2, 2013

How drug companies price patients out of survival

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How drug companies price patients out of survival

Friday, November 1, 2013

How to hide from Predator Drones UAV – Unmanned Aerial Vehicles Survival Guide


How to hide from Predator Drones UAV – Unmanned Aerial Vehicles Survival GuideUS Crow


The General Atomics Predator Drone is an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) typically operated by US Air Force AFSC 1U0X1, UAS – Unmanned Aerospace System Sensor Operators. Drones are equipped with the AN/AAS-52 Multi-spectral Targeting System, armed with GBU-12 Paveway II laser guided munitions, camera (generally used by the pilot for flight control), a variable aperture infrared camera (for low light/night), and a variable aperture day-TV camera. The Predator Drone is an armed, multi-mission, medium-altitude, long endurance remotely piloted aircraft (RPA) that is employed primarily in a killer/scout role as an intelligence collection asset and secondarily against targets.  


The aircraft can employ two laser-guided AGM-114 Hellfire missiles which possess a highly accurate, low collateral damage, and anti-armor/anti-personnel engagement capability. The MQ-1B Predator handles reconnaissance while MQ-9 Reaper is used primarily “in a hunter/killer role,” and secondarily for intelligence. The drone endurance is more than 40 hours and the cruise speed is over 70kt. The air vehicle is equipped with UHF and VHF radio relay links, a C-band line-of-sight data link which has a range of 150nm and UHF and Ku-band satellite data links.


The targeting system is a primary threat. The MQ-1B carries the Multi-spectral Targeting System (MTS-A) which integrates an infrared sensor, a color/monochrome daylight TV camera, an image-intensified TV camera, a laser designator and a laser illuminator into a single package. The effective operational radius of the aircraft is about 459 miles.


How to hide from Predator Drones UAV – Unmanned Aerial Vehicles FLIRUAV remote sensing functions include electromagnetic spectrum sensors, gamma ray sensors, biological sensors, and chemical sensors. A UAV’s electromagnetic sensors typically include visual spectrum, infrared, or near infrared cameras as well as radar systems. Click here to download the JFCOM UAS – A detailed explanation of drone operations, schematics, and capabilities that include;


  • Full-color nose camera that the pilot uses primarily to navigate the craft

  • Variable aperture camera (similar to a traditional TV camera)

  • Variable aperture infrared camera for low-light and night viewing

  • Synthetic aperture radar (SAR) for seeing through low visibility

Why are drones a threat to Americans?


DOJ Eric Holder recently wrote about the use of drones on American soil;


“For example, the president could conceivably have no choice but to authorize the military to use such force if necessary to protect the homeland in the circumstances like a catastrophic attack like the ones suffered on December 7, 1941, and September 11, 2001,” – Eric Holder Attorney General of the United States – Department of Justice


The federal government has increased hostile behavior towards law-abiding constitutional citizens that simply wish to live free. If you have read our previous article The American Government Continues to Target Preppers, you are fully aware that the Department of Homeland Security (the guys who now control domestic drones) have classified survivalists, preppers, veterans and constitutional conservatives as potential terrorists. In addition to DHS targeting Americans, purchasing millions of rounds of ammunition, and a couple thousand UPV – Urban Pacification Vehicles, while states like Colorado force retailers to report citizens who purchase food in bulk as ‘suspicious’. As of March, 2013 – the FAA has authorized over 106 Government ‘Entities’ to fly domestic drones.


To be adequately prepared means understanding the fundamental dynamics of drone evasion and survival. Over the past few years people have scrambled for ways to evade and disable predator drones. Militias and military organizations with the proper equipment are capable of disabling drones via the use of;


  • Manned Aerial Fighters

  • Surface/Ground to Air Missiles SAM/GTAM

  • Theoretical Aerial Mines (Weather balloon perimeter grid equipped with impact detonated mines)

  • MANPADS/MPADS Shoulder launched SAM/GTAM

  • Anti-Drone Technology such as EW/ECM Data link Jammers

  • GPS/RF Jamming Technology for Micro-drones (You can easily build your own)

  • There has been some success in shooting down large fast flying US military drones – similar to the BAU - using small arms fire; AK47s, M16, Shotguns and Etc.

  • Russian Issued Sky Grabber Software for Signal Hacking

Knowing how to disable a predator drone sounds good but the reality is drone technology continues to advance and their weaknesses will be quickly addressed. Luckily, drone technology isn’t there yet and can be tricked with some rudimentary tactics.


Hiding from drones with clothing


The UAV Predator Drone is equipped with infrared scanners that are able to identify a target by its heat signature i.e. thermal radiation. Adam Harvey of Stealth Wear has designed counter surveillance clothing. These ‘Anti-Drone’ garments are designed with a metalized fabric that protects against thermal imaging surveillance.  Seen here →http://ahprojects.com/projects/stealth-wear


You can make your own counter-surveillance garments using a bit of ingenuity and a little investing. Materials such as metalized Mylar, Aluminum, Gold, Plexiglas and various types of pigment coatings will block IR (Infrared Radiation) Detection – a drone’s primary target identification system. You can also ready the usCrow How to Effectively Avoid FLIR and Aerial Detection Article for further details.


Hiding from drones with debris and the environment


Remember the end-scene from Predator, where Arnold Schwarzenegger covered his body with mud to avoid being detected by the alien predator that was using IR Detection? Now Americans citizens are utilizing the same method in real life. People across the country are covering their vehicles and habitats with mud, applying leaves and other foliage that matches the topography and blending in. Mud will block IR to a certain degree but it has it’s limitations due to the nature of infrared radiation. However, this method will hide your vehicle and home from drones using Non-IR standard camera viewing modes. Drones are built to hover, and their cameras are often taking fixed-viewpoint shots for long periods of time, or switching angles at particular intervals. A car traveling across the drone camera’s field of vision will do so for a brief period of time before disappearing, so a crude disguise has merit.


Other ways to avoid drone detection


In Timbuktu, a drone evasion tip sheet has been discovered. This tip sheet was written by Muslim extremist Al-Qaeda operatives who have been targeted by US Armed Forces with Predator Drones. This tip sheet illustrates several mundane methods employed by the insurgents that include using reflective glass or Plexiglas on roof/car tops, hiding under trees, underneath dense concrete structures, affixing woven reed mats to vehicles, and using counter-surveillance techniques such as; using mannequins, dolls, and staged equipment to trick drone operators. With the primary focus being placed upon visual camouflage and evasion, these techniques warrant merit. However, if your location has been identified and a strike package has been authorized, there is no real defense other than a solid prayer.


Do you have drone evasion tips? Comment below and help your community. The time is quickly approaching where lines will be drawn in the sand and you will be forced to choose between a life on your knees or death on your feet.


http://uscrow.org/2013/03/24/how-to-hide-from-predator-drones-uav-unmanned-aerial-vehicles-survival-guide/






How to hide from Predator Drones UAV – Unmanned Aerial Vehicles Survival Guide

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Grizzly Bear Survival: Yet Another Reason Not To Shoot Yellowstone Wolves


Pro-wolf-shooting activists should check out this study to see just how beneficial wolves are to the Yellowstone ecosystem–and the survival of one of its most iconic animals.



A Grizzly Bear In Yellowstone National Park

A Grizzly Bear In Yellowstone National Park Wikimedia Commons



Even though every respectable regulatory service says shooting wolves in and around Yellowstone National Park is bad for everyone involved, wolves are still being shot. Well, add one more paper to the pile: a new study published in the Journal of Animal Ecology finds that the reintroduction of wolves to Yellowstone has had a positive effect on the population of…wait, what? Grizzly bears? How?


Putting together the puzzle pieces of a diverse ecosystem like Yellowstone is tricky; shooting wolves is like pulling out a piece of an enormous Jenga game. Some parts seem unaffected, some parts are distinctly less balanced, and eventually the whole game will crash. This study looks at how the wolf affects the ecosystem as a whole, and, as we thought, wolves are an essential part of the health of Yellowstone.


The iconic, endangered-in-the-U.S. grizzly bear relies on lots of fruit, especially berries, when preparing for its winter hibernation. High in sugar and containing lots of important vitamins, the berries, including serviceberry, chokecherry, buffaloberry, twinberry, huckleberry, and others, and make up a substantial portion of the grizzly’s diet in the summertime. A lower amount of berries has been found to have a negative effect on the survival and reproductive abilities of grizzlies the following year.


There have been quite a few low-berry years lately. That problem, says the study, can be attributed to the lack of wolves in Yellowstone: wolves typically prey on the abundant elk herds in the park. Elk eat berries, just like the bears do. But without wolves, the elk population has exploded, which means there’s hardly any berries left for the bears. So the bears aren’t as well fed, which makes them less healthy.


And it’s not even just as simple as that. The elk are eating so many berries, including the entire berry shrubs, that animals that rely on the shrubs, like bees and butterflies, are also in decline. The bears, without access to the fruit they’d normally be eating, have to eat more meat, which means they sometimes prey on elk, but just as often on livestock nearby. And that makes the ranchers angry, and the ranchers shoot bears or wolves or whatever else they feel like, because Wyoming does not know or care how ecosystems work. (Neither does Friends of the Yellowstone Elk Herd, a pro-hunting organization.)


But the reintroduction of wolves, the study finds, has had a marked improvement on that entire system. The researchers, from Oregon State University and Washington State University, analyzed grizzly bear scat and found that the percentage of berries in the scat has doubled since the reintroduction of the wolves. Turns out the two most iconic animals of Yellowstone depend on each other in more ways than we thought.


[via PhysOrg]




Popular Science – New Technology, Science News, The Future Now



Grizzly Bear Survival: Yet Another Reason Not To Shoot Yellowstone Wolves

Saturday, June 15, 2013

Czech PM in survival struggle after court keeps aide in custody

OSTRAVA, Czech Republic (Reuters) – Coalition partners of Czech Prime Minister Petr Necas said they were considering whether they could stay in government with him on Saturday after a court ordered the detention of his close aide on corruption charges.


Reuters: Top News



Czech PM in survival struggle after court keeps aide in custody

Czech PM in survival struggle after court keeps aide in custody

OSTRAVA, Czech Republic (Reuters) – Coalition partners of Czech Prime Minister Petr Necas said they were considering whether they could stay in government with him on Saturday after a court ordered the detention of his close aide on corruption charges.


Reuters: Top News



Czech PM in survival struggle after court keeps aide in custody

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Doomsday preppers: All about Kathy Harrison

Kathy Harrison describes herself as the Doris Day of Doom, something which makes me think that under the wonderful grandma exterior lurks the heart of a vicious warlord. I\’m on to you Kathy, don\’t you forget about it.


1. New Madrid fault – electric power, gas, rolling power failures (2% chance)


Of the electricity and power related disaster cir***stances observed on the show up to now, an earth quake on the New Madrid fault seems to be by far the most devastating. In contrast to solar related EMP activities, a serious earth quake along New Madrid would be a long term upset in the ability to get power from the grid.


Rolling blackout might be expected, however not the frying of electric products. Yet again, this is taken with a grain of salt because of Doomsday Preppers history of simplifying prepper\’s inspirations. I feel that if you are truly concerned with getting ready for grid-level electrical issues, it will be wise to buy generators or renewable energy sources.


2. Kathy and Bruce get political


Kathy and Bruce self identify as New England liberals and take a political position against firearms. This doesn\’t really seem sensible to me. Guns are a device much like anything else. If there was a political party opposed to water purifiers, do you feel people will be opposed to obtaining those for preparation reasons?


There is a specific amount of bravery required for people to be doomsday preppers in the present day in the face of social norms. It is a radical lack of awareness to believe that one doesn\’t need security in a survival scenario. Living in a non-urban area, there are factors apart from raiders to need a gun. Let\’s say a bear smelled food in their home? You aren\’t likely to get him to go away with common politeness.


3. Growing food and barter


Neglecting the ability to defend it, the idea of stockpiling resources as a way to barter in a post-apocalyptic world is an extremely intelligent mindset. Regrettably, it gives the more obsessed of us a good reason to extend their prepping beyond what they would ever require. Kathy and Bruce have a great idea when it comes to honey.


The knowledge that honey does not spoil is generally true. Honey has supposedly even been present in edible form in pyramids. Due to the sugar content within it, honey will destroy any cellular organism (including bacteria) by drawing the moisture from it via osmosis. This is the same principle behind salting meat. However, if honey can draw moisture from the air, once it reaches a particular point it might in fact spoil. As always, appropriate storage is very important.


4. Community involvement


Kathy and Bruce\’s dedication to developing a community is remarkable and will serve them well in a post-apocalyptic situation. The ability to go ahead with life as normal in a community is really important to sustaining sanity and avoiding cabin fever. Not to mention, if they could get over their fear of guns they can have a fearsome squad going on. Kathy may be the leader.


Thank you for reading! Terrance Franklin writes about nutrition and survival on a number of sites on the web. For more information on doomsday preppers, be sure to check out doomsday preppers. And for even deeper reading, follow the link at this site



Doomsday preppers: All about Kathy Harrison