Monday, February 27, 2012

Language Counts NIMBY, NOOPER's and Pepper Spray

From January 2012

-by Jay Burney


One of the more clever phrases ever created is “Not in my backyard” or NIMBY. This pejorative phrase has been used to quickly characterize someone or some organization that is opposed to a particular project.  The phrase is supposed to make you think that the entity so characterized is a selfish unevolved slob that stands in the way of the kind of progress that will benefit humanity. This may be what you think when you hear the term.

This is often not close to the truth.

Campaigns or spokespersons for campaigns that use that slogan are most often financed and carried by a monetized agenda against those that stand up to prevent themselves and others from harm caused by that agenda.  The NYMBY is characterized as the obstructionist. Even though that NIMBY may in fact be operating from a knowledge platform that challenges and or DEMOLISHES  the point of view that the development or project is harmful and not beneficial.

In my mind,  NIMBY carries a heroic connotation rather than an obstructionist one. Standing up against the tyranny of the perceived majority, defending ones own property investments, and defending a community against a predatory wealth extractor that brings harm for generations to the planet are patriots engaged in constitutional freedoms that many generations of Americans have fought and died for.

The crusaders that champion the use of NYMBY characterization against the brave souls that risk everything to stand up to the onslaught are often the apostles of the extreme anti-environmentalists that evangelize an anti-democratic and anti life philosophy in favor of social, ecological, and often economic destruction.

I first heard the phrase back when lumber and paper interests were trying to eliminate those arguing against clear-cutting our native ancient forests.  The industry propagandists used the language to marginalize protestors and critical thinkers.  This made it easier for the silent majority to accept the violence and publically funded police and military forces used to “clear” the protestors. The emerging nuclear industry adopted the language and strategies against those opposed to power plants and waste repositories that represented profitability for the industry and have harmed human health. The campaigns have continued by corporate agendas in the oil and gas industry and others that have gamed the system to allow for legalized and profitable pollution.  Whenever I hear the phrase NYMBY I have come to think that there is a campaign underway to soften up the public for a soon to come clash that may mean violence and oppression.

A new phrase has begun to emerge in recent months, a phrase that is proudly waived as a banner by advocates for a saner and just world including climate change activists, renewable energy activists, habitat activists, and the 99% represented by the occupy movement. That phrase: NOOP. Not on our planet!

Speaking of Occupy-
Publicly funded police and military forces have a long held tradition of defending the oligarch’s interests from the 99%. The violent clearing of occupation sites across the America and the world in recent months should outrage any citizen that has a child that wants a future that works. Privatization of police and military forces funded by taxpayers and bolstered by laws that many think abrogate the Constitution, have eroded accountability and responsibility while increasing suppression and harm to American citizens here and abroad.

One small sampling of how we blind ourselves to truth involves the dangerous and caustic agent- pepper spray. It is advertised as “humane” in the same way that rubber bullets are advocated as “humane.” These are crowd control devices.  Compared to National Guardsmen opening up on the kids at Kent State, it may be a more fair comparison, but pepper spray and rubber bullets are part and parcel of the violent and repressive actions that a police state is willing to terrorize peaceful citizens with. And they do cause physical harm and injury. Sometimes it is permanent. The use of these agents against peaceful citizens that are engaged in their constitutional rights is reprehensible and undemocratic. More and more and under the guidance of secret Homland Security initiatives, local police forces are becoming more militarized.  This is a deeply disturbing development.

When the UC Davis security forces recently used pepper spray against defenseless students, following weeks of other police forces using the substances on occupy protestors, Fox News aired a snickering yuk yuk story characterizing pepper spray as a harmless “food” substance. By some accounts the report made people think that pepper spray is a nutritional and edible product. It is not. It is designed to stop and disable an adult human.

Rachael Maddow on her MSNBC show came up with a really good analysis of the real impact of commercial pepper spray used by police forces at all levels. She described that the chemical heat that comes from peppers is from a substance called capsasin. She displayed a chart called the Scoville Scale, designed by Wilbur Scoville to compare the powers and strengths of capsasin in various peppers and substances.


                           Scoville Scale

     - A Sweet Bell Pepper               0 Scoville Units (SU)

     - Poplano Pepper-                     1,000-2,000 SU

     - The Hottest Tabasco Sauce    2,500-3,000 SU

     - Jalapeño Pepper-                   3,500-8,000 SU

     - Cayenne Pepper-                  30,000-50,000 SU 
   (put a teaspoon of that in your mouth, or in your hands)

      - Habanera Chile-                    200,000-350,000 SU 
                          Workers handling this use gloves.

       -Bhut Jolokia, or Ghost Pepper, known as the hottest pepper on earth

                                                      -1,000,000 SU

       -  Concentrated Commercial Pepper Spray

                                                      -2,000,000 -5,3000,000 SU

        -  Pure Capsaicin, 15,000,000 SU

Deborah Bloom, author of the book “The Poisoners Handbook” says that commercial pepper spray is off the charts in terms of chemical power.  The capsaicin is not only designed to disable a person but when sprayed into eyes causes a caustic reaction including cellular disruption, pain, and immediate shock. Repeated exposure to pepper spray can cause permanent damage to eyes, skin, and the repertory and nervous systems.

Rachael Maddow

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26315908/#45410896

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