Thứ Năm, 26 tháng 10, 2017

News on Youtube Oct 26 2017

COLD WAR 2: United States and Russia 'heading for conflict' says bombshell report

It states tensions between the countries are at the lowest point since the height of the Cold War, saying the chance of a full-on confrontation has shot up.

The shocking report – called "An accident waiting to happen: Trump, Putin and the US-Russia relationship" – was penned by Dr Bobo Lo, of the Lowy Institute.

Dr Lo states relations between the two superpowers has reached this critical stage due to a number of factors.

These are the election of Donald Trump in the US last year, Russian President Vladimir Putin's tough foreign policy that has been met with sanctions and finally the countries just generally not seeing eye-to-eye.

The ongoing North Korea crisis has also added fuel to the flames as both countries disagree on how to deal with the threat from Kim Jong-un.

In the shocking report, Dr Lo says the time is now to figure out whether "Moscow and Washington can manage their many differences and avoid a dangerous escalation of tensions." But the Russia expert says this dialling down of tensions may not even be possible, explaining: "The best-case scenario for the relationship in the short to medium term may be one of mutual containment, reminiscent of the Cold War.

"However, even this relative stability appears elusive.". But Dr Lo says this breakdown of relations has been a gradual thing that came to a head following the Trump's election.

Despite the President saying he wanted to have a good relationship with Putin, allegations of Russian interference in the US election have made this impossible.

"The ongoing scandal of Kremlin involvement in the US election, and the Trump camp's ties with Russian security agencies have made Russia among the most toxic of issues in Washington," Dr Low states.

"The storied personal dynamic between Trump and Vladimir Putin has proved more a hindrance than a help.".

Dr Lo claims the future for relations between the US and Russia looks bleak, stating: "The best-case scenario in the short to medium term might be a relationship not unlike that between the United States and the Soviet Union during the Cold War.

"Such a scenario, however, seems increasingly unlikely. Many of the problems that dogged relations during the George W.

Bush and Obama eras have become more serious, and could generate new crises." He adds: "However, there are real doubts as to whether mutual 'strategic containment' is sustainable in an increasingly fluid and volatile world. The potential for accidents is considerable..

For more infomation >> COLD WAR 2: United States and Russia 'heading for conflict' says bombshell report - Duration: 3:46.

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Donald Tusk wants EU army THIS YEAR 'to defend borders from migrants and hostile states' - Duration: 4:25.

Donald Tusk wants EU army THIS YEAR 'to defend borders from migrants and hostile states'

The European Council President called for the 27-nation superstate to introduce Permanent Structured Cooperation on Defence (PESCO) to protect the bloc from the effects of the migrant crisis, hostile bordering states and forces that risk tearing the bloc apart.

He added the EU should be prepared to spend huge amounts on the project, which will come with its own centralised headquarters and ambitious plans for EU military missions abroad.

Critics have repeatedly warned that the new system is a gateway to the creation of an EU army, although Brussels itself denies this and says it is just facilitating better military cooperation.

It goes hand in hand with plans for a centralised European Defence Fund, which is designed to help create an EU defence industry and reduce reliance on foreign powers like the US for military equipment.

Mr Tusk said: "We are a territorial community, which means that we have a common territory and common external borders. "Our duty is to protect them.

"The migration crisis has made us aware, with full force, of the need to rebuild effective control of our external borders, while the aggressive behaviour of certain third countries, and the destabilisation around Europe, has made us aware of the need to defend our territory.

"For this reason we want to launch PESCO by the end of this year.

"In order to protect our external borders, we must build a model of durable and efficient financing on a bigger scale than ever before." Mr Tusk, one of the EU's top three officials, went on to call on the Parliament to protect Europe's "heritage".

He added: "Secondly, We are a cultural community, which doesnt mean that we are better or worse - we are simply different from the outside world. "Our openness and tolerance cannot mean walking away from protecting our heritage.

"We have the right and obligation to care for what distinguishes us from other cultures - not in order to be against someone, but to be ourselves.

"Without a feeling of superiority, but with a feeling of justified pride." Last month the bloc's foreign affairs chief Federica Mogherini insisted PESCO should be ready to go in time for January 2018, over a year before the UK is due to leave the union.

British ministers, including Boris Johnson and Michael Fallon, have been signing up to the EU's military plans on the basis that they will lay down a loose marker for post-Brexit security cooperation.

However, the EU sees the commitments as legally binding, and respected military commander Major-General Julian Thompson has previously warned it will not be easy for the UK to "extricate" itself in the future.

He told express.co.uk: "The UK believes it is approving military structures for the other 27, but the EU is completely clear that agreements, unfortunately, apply to the UK as full participants.".

For more infomation >> Donald Tusk wants EU army THIS YEAR 'to defend borders from migrants and hostile states' - Duration: 4:25.

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2,000-Year-Old Mosaic Returned to Italy From United States - Duration: 0:54.

For more infomation >> 2,000-Year-Old Mosaic Returned to Italy From United States - Duration: 0:54.

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The inter-relationship of mental health states: Language matters - Duration: 9:10.

The diagram that you have in front of you

helps us understand mental health and mental illness

better.

In our field, we are often confusing each other

by the language that we use.

When we use a phrase such as mental health issue,

nobody really knows what we're talking about.

A mental health issue could be a two-year-old having a temper

tantrum, or it could be a 17-year-old

in the middle of a psychotic break,

or it can be a 16-year-old girl with severe panic attacks so

bad that she can't go to school, or it

can be a 20-year-old college student who is housebound

because of social anxiety.

Those things are all very, very different,

and it is really important that we understand

what we're talking about.

Because if we don't understand what we're talking about,

if we don't use the right language,

how can we intervene effectively?

On this triangle at the bottom, you

will see a category that says, no distress, problem,

or disorder.

That is many of us much of the time.

We're having fun with our friends and with our families.

We're off at school doing our work.

We're enjoying ourselves in a recreational activity,

or even asleep.

So much of the time over a 24 hour period,

we can be in that zone of having no distress, no problem,

or no disorder.

On the other hand, all of us experience,

over the course of pretty well every single day,

mental distress.

And mental distress is the brain's signal to us

that we have a problem in our environment

that we have to deal with.

And this signal tells us we need to adapt,

we need to solve the problem.

The signal, which we call the stress response,

is the basis of resilience.

It's the basis of adaptation.

And once we successfully solved the problem,

the stress response goes away.

We no longer feel distressed, and we have

another arrow in our quiver.

We have not only become more resilient,

but we have developed new skills.

And we need to ensure that we don't protect

young people for these slings and arrows

of outrageous fortune.

Because it is through engaging with the normal stressors

of life that we develop the capacity to become

successful adults.

The next part on this triangle is

labeled mental health problems.

And mental health problems also arise

from environmental stressors, but these are stressors

that are quite intense.

They're not like taking an exam, or going for a job interview,

or not making the school basketball team,

or being rejected on your request for a romantic evening

with someone that you fancy.

These are serious things like your parent died,

or you've lost your job, or you're moving to a new country.

And they also elicit a stress response.

And this stress response is also normal.

When someone dies, it's normal to grieve.

When you lose your job, it's normal to feel demoralized.

And when we have these feelings, we

reach out to other people for support,

and guidance, and assistance.

But we don't need psychiatrists or clinical psychologists

if we lose our job.

We need a job.

And here we have to be very careful not to medicalize

normal human experience.

Mental health problems can be difficult.

They can be challenging.

They can hurt emotionally.

But as a species, we've learned how

to get through these things, and we count on each other

to help us.

We also have socially sanctioned healers that assist.

If we're religious, we go to our religious leaders.

If we're more secular, we often go to people like counselors.

That can be quite helpful.

And we always rely on family and friends.

At the top of the triangle are mental disorders.

These are the illnesses that are found in ICD or DSM

categorizations.

They are internationally agreed upon as diagnoses.

And they're very different than a mental health problem.

And they're very different than the mental distress signal.

They require therapeutic evidence-based interventions

provided by people who have been specially

trained in how to do that.

And we don't progress from distress to disorder.

This is not a spectrum.

This is not a continuum.

We can feel unhappy and distressed,

and we can feel very unhappy if we have a disorder.

Those emotions occur across each of these components.

And this is really important.

This and is we can be in every single one of these states

at the same time.

For example, an individual can have attention deficit

hyperactivity disorder, ADHD, which is a mental disorder.

They can be dealing with the loss of a loved one,

say their mother, so they're going through grief.

They can be experiencing distress.

They didn't make the school basketball team.

And they can be having no distress, no problem,

or no disorder at the moment, as they're

hanging out with their friends, enjoying watching a movie.

And these things can be happening

all in the same period of time.

All these are components of mental health.

We can have mental health and mental illness

at the same time.

These are not separate categories.

And it's very important that we tailor our interventions

to the state in which the person is in.

Intervening for normal expected mental distress

can cause problems for young people.

It can make it difficult for them to learn how to adapt.

It can lead to things like learned helplessness.

I can't do with.

A mental health problem that requires additional supports,

but it doesn't require medications,

and it doesn't require CBT, cognitive behavioral therapy,

or specialized clinical psychological treatments.

However, if somebody has a mental disorder,

then we have to provide best evidence-based treatments

for them.

And so let's use the language correctly.

If we mean mental distress, let's

use words such as disappointed, disgusted,

angry, pessimistic, distressed, to clarify what state we're in.

If we're dealing with a mental health problem,

let's use words like sorrowful, demoralized, grieving,

despairing.

Those are good words to describe a mental health problem.

And if we're describing the mental disorder,

well, let's use the word depression.

If we use the word depression for every single one

of those states, I have no idea what you're talking about,

and you have no idea about what I'm talking about.

It's really essential.

Our language has many different ways

of expressing the nuances of all these important emotional

states.

Let's not confuse them.

Confusion can lead to inappropriate treatment.

Confusion can lead to protecting people

from the challenges of life that they need to embrace themselves

in order to become successful, independent, resilient

human beings.

So let's think about our language.

When we're using the word depression,

let's use it to mean depression and not

every single negative emotional state that we experience.

For more infomation >> The inter-relationship of mental health states: Language matters - Duration: 9:10.

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States of Consciousness Sleep Disorders - with Dr Z - Duration: 6:39.

Hi gang.

Now we're going to talk about sleep disorders in terms of impacts on states of consciousness.

If you have a sleep disorder, it can definitely impact your consciousness.

It can lead to an altered state.

So we're just gonna talk about the really big ones, the first one being insomnia, which

is either the inability to fall asleep, the inability to stay asleep, or you could be

one of the one's who has both the inability to fall asleep and the inability to stay asleep.

In insomnia, what happens because you can't sleep enough, you don't get enough of the

cycles of sleep between 2 and 5, bouncing up and down all night, that allows you to

get the mental restoration that you need in order to function properly.

And that can lead to an altered state.

Now somnambulism, which is a fancy way of saying sleep walking, and sleep talking take

place during stages 3 and 4, deep sleep.

For the most part, these are not issues.

For people who are sleep talkers, you can have conversations with people in the middle

of the night.

They will not remember them the next morning because they're in deep sleep.

So their brain is not really there.

Sleep walkers, same thing.

Tends to not be a problem unless the person is putting themself in danger, unless the

person is walking down the middle of the street, unless the person is driving their car while

they're still asleep.

Then it becomes a problem.

In those situations, wake the person up.

They may be groggy.

They may be disoriented.

They may be unaware of what's happening because they are in deep sleep when they're sleep

walking.

But them being dizzy and confused is better than them being injured.

Now, sleep walking and sleep talking - remember that takes place during deep sleep - which

is exactly what sleep terrors and night terrors are.

If you can think of it this was - sleep terror and night terror is basically sleep walking

and sleep talking a scary movie.

The person's brain is not really online, not functioning.

Their brain is kinda gone.

Their body is acting out what looks like a scary movie.

People in sleep terrors/night terrors, because they're in deep sleep, very difficult for

them to wake up.

If you do manage to wake them up, they're going to be disoriented and they're not going

to realize they're yelling and screaming woke up the whole family.

Now sleep terrors/night terrors we believe are due to neurological immaturity, so it's

quite possible that people can grow out of it.

It's also quite possible for the neurological issue of sleep terrors/night terrors to run

into adulthood, especially in families where there is the predisposition.

Now sleep terrors/night terrors completely different than nightmares.

A nightmare takes place during stage 5, REM sleep, when you are dreaming.

People who are dreaming and having bad dreams, they will wake up, whether a child or an adult.

They will figure out how to get comforted.

They may not go back to sleep, but they are aware that it's a dream because they were

in the sleep [dream] cycle.

People in the sleep terror/night terror, acting out a scary movie, it's not a dream.

If you wake them up, they will not understand why.

Narcolepsy is the sudden and overwhelming urge to go to sleep, usually due to excitation.

It's a neurological disorder.

Someone gets really excited, they fall asleep.

The lady on the right was being interviewed.

Must have been a very exciting experience because she all of a sudden fell asleep.

The dog in the vet's arms on the left, awake.

All of a sudden the dog gets excited - Boom.

Again, it's a neurological disorder.

You get overly excited, your body's reaction is to shut down.

It can be controlled with medication for some.

Unfortunately for some people with narcolepsy, they have restrictions on their lives.

There are some careers that they cannot do and there are some things they cannot do.

For example, driving may be something they never get to do because all of sudden falling

asleep when you're overly excited while you're driving gets very dangerous to you, the narcoleptic,

and very dangerous to everyone else on the road.

Now the last sleep disorder that we're going to talk about that can definitely impact your

levels of consciousness, your awareness, is sleep apnea.

What happens in sleep apnea is that someone transitions from light sleep to deep sleep,

they stop breathing.

And if you look at the picture on the left, you will see the tongue kind of falling down

and blocking the back of the throat.

The person cannot breathe.

And when you cannot breathe, you gasp [gasping sound], taking a big breath which brings you

from deep sleep into light sleep.

That means you don't get the cycles of sleep that you need.

You don't get to go from stage 2 to 5, back to 2, back to 5 all night long.

You don't get the restoration that comes from those cycling.

Some people with sleep apnea are more likely to have high blood pressure, higher risk of

heart disease, higher risk of stroke, high risk of kidney disease.

Also more likely to make mistakes or have accidents because they're not getting the

restoration.

Now fortunately, if you look at the picture on the right, there are remedies for sleep

apnea.

That is the CPAP system, and what they have found is if they can force positive air into

the nose and sometimes the mouth - in this case, the picture does only include the nose

- of a person with sleep apnea, it prevents their throat from being blocked.

They sleep all night long.

They can get those restoration cycles of sleeping, and they can actually reduce their risks for

high blood pressure, heart disease, stroke, and also reduce their number of accidents

and mistakes.

So those are the basic sleep disorders that can interfere with your ability to function

properly.

So thank you.

Bye-bye.

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