Archive for May, 2009

31
May

Tori’s Law: Do Amber Alerts Provide False Security?

The abduction and suspected murder of 8 year-old Woodstock (Ontario) resident Victoria (Tori) Stafford has reignited the debate over whether restrictions should be loosened on the use of Amber Alerts. Tori was last seen on April 8, 2009, walking away from her school with an unidentified woman. An extensive police search and persistent media attention turned up little evidence and suspicion quickly fell on the mother. These suspicions were eventually disproved as 28 year old Michael Rafferty and 18 year old Terri-Lynne McClintic, also residents of Woodstock, were eventually charged with Tori’s abduction and murder.

Woodstock police came under heavy fire for not issuing an Amber Alert. Officially an acronym for America’s Missing: Broadcasting Emergency Response, The Amber Alert is a child abduction bulletin board system used by police across the United States and Canada. Once the criteria (which vary between states and provinces) have been met, an alert for a suspected abduction can be issued to commercial radio stations, television stations and LED billboards. Email and wireless Amber alerts have also become common. According to its website, the Amber Plan has led to 443 successful recoveries, each involving one or more children. Woodstock police explained that an Amber Alert was not originally issued for Tori Stafford’s disappearance because the case did not meet OPP criteria – specifically, there was no description for a suspect or vehicle.

Tori StaffordFollowing the arrest of Raffery and McClintic, an online petition was launched urging changes to the Amber Alert System. “Tori’s Law” (boasting over 50,000 signatures as or writing) proposes that an Amber Alert should be issued for any person under 16 if a parent deems a child’s absence to be out of character relative to their daily routine. Police would no longer require a description of the suspect or the vehicle. The petition rationalizes that had an Amber alert been issued shortly after Stafford’s disappearance, a passerby may have noticed the blue Honda civic that was caught on tape mere minutes after the abduction and in turn alerted police – possibly preventing Tori’s assumed murder.

Indeed, Tori’s case has similarities to the abduction and murder from which the Amber Alert was born. Nine year old Amber Hagerman was abducted while riding her bike near her grandparents’ Texas home and murdered. While the killer was never found, an autopsy on Hagerman’s body determined she had been alive for two days. Had an emergency alert system been in place at the time of the abduction, there may have been ample opportunity for a member of the public to spot the suspect or the getaway vehicle (both known via eyewitness accounts) before Amber’s murder. Loosening the criteria for issuing an Amber Alert could also aid the helplessness parents feel during the first hours of abduction.

However, some serious doubts have also been raised concerning the effectiveness of an extended Amber Alert system. If Tori’s Law were to be enacted in its proposed form, parents could have a no-questions Amber alert issued every time their children missed a commuter train or visited a forbidden boyfriend/girlfriend. The public could soon become fatigued by the paranoia resulting from over-saturation of Amber alerts – many of which will amount to little more than over-protective parents. Police resources would be similarly stretched, taking away attention from actual emergencies.

The Amber Alert Plan in its present form has also been criticized as ineffective. A team at the University of Nevada conducted a study on hundreds of American Amber alert cases between 2003 and 2006. The study determined that Amber Alerts played little to no role in the eventual return of abducted children:

  • Of cases where the child was returned safely, only 13.8% were directly attributable to tips obtained via the Amber emergency alert system.
  • Only 10.5% of the cases involved rescue from clearly dangerous situations

Furthermore, the alerts were rarely issued for the nightmare scenarios characterized by the Tori Stafford case:

  • Only 30% of the amber alerts covered cases where a child was abducted by a stranger. 20% of the cases involved runaways, lost children or hoaxes, while the remaining half of cases resulted from abduction from a parent or other family member
  • 45% of the abductions were committed by a parent

Finally, Amber Alerts were shown to do very little to prevent nightmare scenarios from ending negatively:

  • Based on earlier data, the average child that is kidnapped and murdered dies within 3 hours. In U. Nevada’s study, only 36.7% of Amber alerts were issued within 3 hours of the actual abduction.
  • Merely 16% of victims were recovered within double of the target duration (i.e. 6 hours).

Despite the damning evidence presented in this study, parental fears of child abduction will persist and cases like Tori Stafford’s –however rare and unpreventable- will continue to provoke public outrage. The worst outcome would be that the public no longer feels safe and resorts to vigilantism, which could lead be many innocent people being tried and convicted in the court of public fear. Due to this risk, the legal system must continue to develop measures that reduce the number of abductions and more importantly increase public confidence that the system is working for the most helpless among us.

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26
May

Movie Review – Manufacturing Dissent

Title: Manufacturing Dissent
Release: 2007
Genre: Documentary
Run Time: 97 Minutes
Publisher: Liberation Entertainment
Rating: 70%

Few filmmakers can claim to have a greater impact on American political culture than Michael Moore. His initial release, Roger & Me, revolutionized the modern documentary by casting the filmmaker as truth-seeking protagonist. Moore’s relentless pursuit of then GM CEO Roger Smith about his company’s decision to move manufacturing jobs to Mexico (and thus decimating the economy of Flint, Michigan) provided the perfect mix of comedy and social commentary. Moore’s quirky yet infectious approach would be further refined in several subsequent documentaries, including Bowling for Columbine and the anti-war Fahrenheit 9/11.

Michael Moore took his role as left-wing agitator to the extreme, creating a cottage industry for counter documentaries that question his political intentions, dishonest editing of footage and truthfulness of his factual claims. Most of these films, among them Fahrenhype 9/11, Celsius 41.11 and Michael Moore Hates America, are also American and decidedly right wing in nature. However one documentary stands alone in the group. It is Canadian both in origin and presentation, created by Debbie Melnyk and Rick Caine (previously known for their work on Citizen Black). While not counter-partisan, their film raised as many or more disturbing questions about the intentions of Michael Moore as its more fervent brethren.

Filmmaker Michael Moore

Manufacturing Dissent is a Michael Moore style documentary, only casting Melnyk as the truth-seeking protagonist and Moore as the evasive object of interest. Along her ill-fated journey, Melnyk interviews a plethora of Moore’s current and former friends. Most are in the former category and portray Moore as an egomaniac not so concerned with finding justice for the little guy as he is with making money and a name for himself. The interviewees pull few punches in their assessment of the award-winning filmmaker:

  • A former writer for the publication Rock n Roll confidential alleges a young publisher Michael Moore used some articles for his own local paper without paying the proper royalties. Moore is also accused of not paying his staff
  • The infamous Mother Jones controversy is covered in moderate detail, with former employees of the magazine describing Moore as a tyrant who demoralized his employees and sanitized the image of the Nicaraguan Sandinistas – a revolutionary group often seen as too extreme even for the American anti-Reagan left.
  • Producers and others involved with Roger & Me allege timeline manipulations, staged events and most startlingly that Michael Moore actually received two interviews with Roger Smith (both ended up on the cutting room floor, so to boost the dramatic effect of GM’s depravity)
  • In stark contradiction to the anti-war sentiment contained the documentary Fahrenheit 911, Moore’s private foundation was discovered to have owned and sold stocks in defense contractors that profited from the Iraq invasion – most notably Honeywell and Halliburton (the latter being publicly associated with none other than George W. Bush’s VP, Dick Cheney)

The intended and well-demonstrated irony in Manufacturing Dissent is that Michael Moore reacts very badly when confronted with Michael Moore style gotcha journalism – much worse than, say, Roger Smith. The unintended irony of the film is that it can be discounted for the same reason as most of Moore’s documentaries. On several occasions, Melnyk swoops in on Moore during public appearances, demanding his undivided attention to tough questions even though other cameras are rolling, before getting silenced by Moore’s omnipresent security. Very seldom do targets put on the spot in this manner answer gracefully and thoughtfully, suggesting that the viewer is not getting both sides of the story.

Michael Moore probed for Roger & Me

More importantly, Melnyk misses the opportunity to explain in detail how Michael Moore actually manufactures dissent. For instance, it’s not enough to chase around the CEO of GM and indirectly present his supposed evasion as a reason to rebel against GM’s decision to move manufacturing jobs to Mexico – the economic incentives for moving jobs to Mexico (despite immediate relocation/retraining costs and reputation risk) must also be explored. What role did American unions and labour costs play? Is Mexico exploiting its own people to secure manufacturing jobs? Is GM merely a symptom of a much larger problem concerning US trade with third world countries? In terms of shaping opinion, it could be argued that ignoring the economic mechanics behind unpopular decisions like relocating GM jobs is just as critical as superimposing distraught civilians over clips of aloof political figures. Unfortunately, Manufacturing Dissent ignores these possibilities in favour of merely trying to make Moore sweat the same way he enjoys making other sweat.

Manufacturing Dissent is vindictive, somewhat disjointed and plays more like a lengthy episode of W5 than a documentary film. Conversely, it excels at probing the intentions of the man behind the Michael Moore myth without coming off as a right wing hit job, occupying that rare space in the documentary spectrum where politicized figures can be dissected without necessarily making a political statement. Given the cultural prominence of Moore’s films and the dogmatic zeal of his supporters, Manufacturing Dissent becomes nearly essential in understanding what drives this polarizing cultural icon.

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17
May

A Tribute to Nurses

Last week was National Nursing Week in Canada . The week was instituted to honour the contributions of nurses to the health care system and to society as a whole. In my opinion the event is particularly appropriate not only because nurses do play an important role in the world but because they often don’t get the recognition they deserve. While most of us can roll off the names of famous doctors (South African heart surgeon Christiaan Barnard and former US Surgeon General Dr. Everett Koop come to mind), when asked about celebrated nurses Florence Nightingale is usually the only immediately recognizable member of her profession.

Nursing has always held a special place in my mind because two of my aunts were nurses, Evelyn and Catherine, the sisters of my maternal grandmother and grandfather respectively. Both of them studied nursing in the 1930s in the city of Madison , Wisconsin . (Note: while I am Canadian, my mother’s entire family is American.) In those days nurses didn’t go to university or community college but trained directly in the hospital, with classrooms provided in the building for the theoretical work. So most of their education consisted literally of hands-on experience.

After graduation they both began working. Catherine was employed as a psychiatric nurse and eventually obtained a key administrative position at a mental institute just outside of Madison . Besides the doctors, she was basically head of the hospital. She married a physician herself – though I have always taken exception to the statement that girls go into nursing solely for the purpose of meeting a doctor! Ironically, despite a lifetime of caring for others, not only her patients but a stepdaughter with Down syndrome, Catherine died prematurely in her early sixties of heart disease.

Evelyn’s professional life also took a number of interesting turns. She served as a nurse in the American military in World War II and was stationed in England and France . On her return to the United States she became a nurse practitioner, a nurse with advanced training who is able to diagnose patients and carry out many of the functions physicians normally perform. Her career continued past retirement age until a few years before her death in her seventies. I like to think she was so good at what she did that her co-workers didn’t want to let her go!

I personally came into close contact with the nursing profession just over two years ago when I gave birth to my daughter Gabriella Michelle at Women’s College Hospital in Toronto . While the performance of one particular nurse there left much to be desired, the other nurses displayed both practical competence and personal compassion. I have to marvel at their great patience with some of my rather inane questions. For example, two days after the delivery I asked one of the night nurses whether my milk would come in (note: when a woman first gives birth she doesn’t produce actual milk but a yellowish substance called colostrum that provides the baby with immunities). The nurse smiled and said yes, it would, and sure enough, my breasts started making genuine milk the very next day. Looking back I laugh at the silliness of my inquiry – after all, having grown up on a farm I know that a cow will always produce milk after having a calf, so why should human females be any different? But the nurse was understanding of my fears as a first-time mother and didn’t try to belittle or dismiss me.

So please remember the nurses on National Nursing Week. RIP Evelyn and Catherine.

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