Addiction and the Loss of Common Sense: The Global Destruction of Childhood
Editor’s Note
What passes as ‘normal’ in America and Britain reflects a generic loss of common sense. This is the predictable result of three generations of Fabian Social programming with the finesse of such as Pope G. B. Shaw and a bevy of Cardinals and Bishops such as Harold Wilson, Tony Blair and Gordon Brown. There are Americans of course, but these felons hardly qualify as Apostles of the cunning British tyranny.
The edited transcript below deserves a most careful reading by the few who’ve retained their sanity or those in search of the confirmation that justifies their many queries.
Dr. Gabor Maté not only gives well reasoned answers-to and observations-on the current maladies that warrant the term ‘pathocracy’ rather than democracy as a descriptive for the occidental malaise, but he also affirms the recommendation of Prophet Mohammad who told his polity to flea to the desert and live like the Bedouin (indigenous inhabitants) of Arabia when the malaise took hold of their urban domains. Why? The reason is simple, as indigenous people will be the only societies left with ‘common sense’ intact enough for the attainment of eternal success.
I am a victim of the ‘abuse’ he cites and found myself in an ongoing cycle of its continuum as a parent when the ‘stress’ of professional training and parenting overwhelmed my ability to cope. Only the catastrophic loss of wife, children and home served to awaken me from the madness. I was lucky. Most are not.
Please, do not skip this reading; especially those of you from countries that have adopted or adapted to the British cunning and call it ‘progress’. If you wish to understand the concomitant social destruction and demise of health and healthy familial relations that accompany Kentucky Fried Chicken, McDonald-Douglas and Reality TV, I urge you to read on. – oz
How We’ve Created a Nation Addicted to
Shopping, Work, Drugs and Sex
By Amy Goodman, Democracy Now!
Posted on December December 26, 2010
http://www.alternet.org/story/149325/
(edit here by oz)
While the relationship between emotional stress and disease, and mental and physical health more broadly, is often considered controversial within medical orthodoxy, Dr. Gabor Maté argues too many doctors seem to have forgotten what was once a commonplace assumption, that emotions are deeply implicated in both the development of illness, addictions and disorders, and healing.
Dr. Maté is the bestselling author of four books: When the Body Says No: Understanding the Stress-Disease Connection; Scattered: How Attention Deficit Disorder Originates and What You Can Do about It; and, with Dr. Gordon Neufeld, Hold on to Your Kids: Why Parents Need to Matter More than Peers; his latest is called In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts: Close Encounters with Addiction.
In our first conversation, Dr. Maté talked about his work… I asked Dr. Maté to talk about his patients.
DR. GABOR MATÉ:
The hardcore drug addicts that I treat, are, without exception, people who have had extraordinarily difficult lives. And the commonality is childhood abuse. In other words, these people all enter life under extremely adverse circumstances. Not only did they not get what they need for healthy development, they actually got negative circumstances of neglect. I don’t have a single female patient in the Downtown Eastside who wasn’t sexually abused, for example, as were many of the men, or abused, neglected and abandoned serially, over and over again.
And that’s what sets up the brain biology of addiction. In other words, the addiction is related both psychologically, in terms of emotional pain relief, and neurobiological development to early adversity.
If you look at the brain circuits involved in addiction—and that’s true whether it’s a shopping addiction like mine or an addiction to opiates like the heroin addict—we’re looking for endorphins in our brains. Endorphins are the brain’s feel good, reward, pleasure and pain relief chemicals. They also happen to be the love chemicals that connect us to the universe and to one another.
Now, that circuitry in addicts doesn’t function very well, as the circuitry of incentive and motivation, which involves the chemical dopamine, also doesn’t function very well. Stimulant drugs like cocaine and crystal meth, nicotine and caffeine, all elevate dopamine levels in the brain, as does sexual acting out, as does extreme sports, as does work-a-holism and so on… most people who try most drugs never become addicted to them. And so, there has to be susceptibility. And the susceptible people are the ones with impaired brain circuits, and the impairment is caused by early adversity rather than genetics… the human brain develops under the influence of the environment… from the evolutionary point of view we developed large heads and walk on two legs. Means: large head, narrow pelvis —> we have to be born prematurely… Much of our brain development — that other animals do safely in the uterus — for us has to occur in the environment, hence, which circuits develop and which don’t depend very much on environmental input.
When people are mistreated, stressed or abused, their brains don’t develop the way they should. It’s that simple. Unfortunately, my profession, the medical profession, puts the emphasis on genetics rather than the environment, which, of course, is a simplistic explanation that takes everybody off the hook. This means that if people’s behaviors and dysfunctions are regulated, controlled and determined by genes, we don’t have to look at child welfare policies, we don’t have to look at the kind of support that we give to pregnant women, we don’t have to look at the kind of non-support that we give to families.
Most children in North America now have to be away from their parents from an early age because of economic considerations. And especially in the States, because of the welfare laws, women are forced to find low-paying jobs far away from home, often single women, and not see their kids for most of the day. Under those conditions, kids’ brains don’t develop the way they need to. Therefore, if it’s all caused by genetics we don’t have to look at those social policies; we don’t have to look at the politics that disadvantage certain minority groups and cause them more stress, cause them more pain, which predisposes them for addictions; we don’t have to look at economic inequalities. If it’s all genes, then we’re all innocent and society doesn’t have to take a hard look at its own attitudes and policies.
AMY GOODMAN: Can you talk about the approach of criminalization versus harm reduction, how you think addicts should be treated, and how they are, in the United States and Canada?
DR. GABOR MATÉ:
The first point to get there is that if people who become severe addicts, as shown by all the studies, were for the most part abused children, then we realize that the war on drugs is actually waged against people that were abused from the moment they were born, or from an early age on. In other words, we’re punishing people for having been abused. That’s the first point.
The second point is, is that the research clearly shows that the biggest driver of addictive relapse and addictive behavior is actually stress. In North America right now, because of the economic crisis, a lot of people are eating junk food, because junk foods release endorphins and dopamine in the brain. So that stress drives addiction.
Now imagine a situation where we’re trying to figure out how to help addicts. Would we come up with a system that stresses them to the max? Who would design a system that ostracizes, marginalizes, impoverishes and ensures the disease of the addict, and hope, through that system, to rehabilitate large numbers? It can’t be done. In other words, the so-called “war on drugs,” which, as the new drug czar points out, is a war on people, actually entrenches addiction deeply. Furthermore, it institutionalizes people in facilities where there’s really no care at all. We call it a “correctional” system, but it doesn’t correct anything. It’s a punitive system. People suffer more and come out more entrenched in their addiction than they were when they went in.
AMY GOODMAN: You were born in Nazi-occupied Hungary?
DR. GABOR MATÉ: Well, ADD has a lot to do with that. I have attention deficit disorder myself. And again, most people see it as a genetic problem. I don’t. It actually has to do with those factors of brain development, which in my case occurred as a Jewish infant under Nazi occupation in the ghetto of Budapest. And the day after the pediatrician—sorry, the day after the Nazis marched into Budapest in March of 1944, my mother called the pediatrician and says, “Would you please come and see my son, because he’s crying all the time?” And the pediatrician says, “Of course I’ll come. But I should tell you, all my Jewish babies are crying.”
Now infants don’t know anything about Nazis and genocide or war or Hitler. They’re picking up on the stresses of their parents. And, of course, my mother was an intensely stressed person, her husband being away in forced labor, her parents shortly thereafter being departed and killed in Auschwitz. Under those conditions, I don’t have the kind of conditions that I need for the proper development of my brain circuits. And particularly, how does an infant deal with that much stress? By tuning it out. That’s the only way the brain can deal with it. And when you do that, it becomes programmed into the brain.
Therefore, if you look at the preponderance of ADD in North America now and the three millions of kids in the States that are on stimulant medication and the half-a-million who are on anti-psychotics, what they’re really exhibiting is the effects of extreme stress, increasing stress in our society, on the parenting environment. Not bad parenting. Extremely stressed parenting, because of social and economic conditions. And that’s why we’re seeing such a preponderance.
So, in my case, that also set up this sense of never being soothed, of never having enough, because I was a starving infant. And that means, all my life, I have this propensity to soothe myself. How do I do that? Well, one way is to work a lot and to gets lots of admiration and lots of respect and people wanting me. If you get the impression early in life that the world doesn’t want you, then you’re going to make yourself wanted and indispensable. And people do that through work. I did it through being a medical doctor. I also have this propensity to soothe myself through shopping, especially when I’m stressed, and I happen to shop for classical compact music. But it goes back to this insatiable need of the infant who is not soothed, and they have to develop, or their brain develop, these self-soothing strategies.
AMY GOODMAN: How do you think kids with ADD, with attention deficit disorder, should be treated?
DR. GABOR MATÉ: Well, if we recognize that it’s not a disease and it’s not genetic, but it’s a problem of brain development, and knowing the good news, fortunately—and this is also true for addicts—that the brain, the human brain, can develop new circuits even later on in life—and that’s called neuroplasticity, the capacity of the brain to be molded by new experience later in life—then the question becomes not of how to regulate and control symptoms, but how do you promote development. And that has to do with providing kids with the kind of environment and nurturing that they need so that those circuits can develop later on.
That’s also, by the way, what the addict needs. So instead of a punitive approach, we need to have a much more compassionate, caring approach that would allow these people to develop, because the development is stuck at a very early age.
In the United States right now, there are three million children receiving stimulant medications for ADHD. And there are about half-a-million kids in this country receiving heavy-duty anti-psychotic medications, medications such as are usually given to adult schizophrenics to regulate their hallucinations. But in this case, children are getting it to control their behavior. So what we have is a massive social experiment of the chemical control of children’s behavior, with no idea of the long-term consequences of these heavy-duty anti-psychotics on kids. And I know that Canadians statistics just last week showed that within last five years, 43—there’s been a 43 percent increase in the rate of dispensing of stimulant prescriptions for ADD or ADHD, and most of these are going to boys. In other words, what we’re seeing is an unprecedented burgeoning of the diagnosis.
This is what I would call the destruction of American childhood, because ADD is just a template, or it’s just an example of what’s going on. In fact, according to a recent study published in the States, nearly half of American adolescents now meet some criteria or criteria for mental health disorders. So we’re talking about a massive impact on our children of something in our culture that’s just not being recognized.
AMY GOODMAN: I want to go to this point that you just raised about the destruction of American childhood. What do you mean by that?
DR. GABOR MATÉ: Well, the conditions in which children develop have been so corrupted and troubled over the last several decades that the template for normal brain development is no longer present for many, many kids. And Dr. Bessel Van der Kolk, who’s a professor of psychiatry at Boston—University of Boston, he actually says that the neglect or abuse of children is the number one public health concern in the United States. A recent study coming out of Notre Dame by a psychologist there has shown that the conditions for child development that hunter-gatherer societies provided for their children, which are the optimal conditions for development, are no longer present for our kids. And she says, actually, that the way we raise our children today in this country is increasingly depriving them of the practices that lead to well-being in a moral sense.
This is to say that children are no longer having the support for the way they need to develop… the essential condition for the physiological development of these brain circuits that regulate human behavior, that give us empathy, that give us a social sense, that give us a connection with other people, that give us a connection with ourselves, that allows us to mature—the essential condition for those circuits, for their physiological development, is the presence of emotionally available, consistently available, non-stressed, attuned parenting caregivers. Now, what do you have in a country where the average maternity leave is six weeks? These kids don’t have emotional caregivers available to them. What do you have in a country where poor women, nearly 50 percent of them, suffer from postpartum depression? And when a woman has postpartum depression, she can’t be attuned to the child.
AMY GOODMAN: And what about fathers?
… What we have to understand here is that human beings are not discrete, individual entities, contrary to the free enterprise myth that people are competitive, individualistic, private entities. What people actually are are social creatures, very much dependent on one another and very much programmed to cooperate with one another when the circumstances are right. When that’s not available, if the support is not available for women, that’s when they get depressed. When the fathers are stressed, they’re not supporting the women in that really important, crucial bonding role in the beginning. In fact, they get stressed and depressed themselves. The child’s brain development depends on the presence of non-stressed, emotionally available parents. In this country, that’s less and less available. Hence, you’ve got burgeoning rates of autism in this country. It’s going up like 20- or 30-fold in the last 30 or 40 years.
In other words—see, it never used to be that children grew up in a stressed nuclear family. That wasn’t the normal basis for child development. The normal basis for child development has always been the clan, the tribe, the community, the neighborhood, the extended family. Essentially, post-industrial capitalism has completely destroyed those conditions. People no longer live in communities which are still connected to one another. People don’t work where they live. They don’t shop where they live. The kids don’t go to school, necessarily, where they live. The parents are away most of the day. For the first time in history, children are not spending most of their time around the nurturing adults in their lives. And they’re spending their lives away from the nurturing adults, which is what they need for healthy brain development.
AMY GOODMAN: Talk about how the drugs, Gabor Maté, affect the development of the brain.
DR. GABOR MATÉ: In ADD, there’s an essential brain chemical, which is necessary for incentive and motivation, that seems to be lacking. That’s called dopamine. And dopamine is simply an essential life chemical. Without it, there’s no life. Mice in a laboratory who have no dopamine will starve themselves to death, because they have no incentive to eat. Even though they’re hungry, and even though their life is in danger, they will not eat, because there’s no motivation or incentive. So, partly, one way to look at ADD is a massive problem of motivation, because the dopamine is lacking in the brain. Now, the stimulant medications elevate dopamine levels, and these kids are now more motivated. They can focus and pay attention.
However, the assumption underneath giving these kids medications is that what we’re dealing with here is a genetic disorder, and the only way to deal with it is pharmacologically. And if you actually look at how the dopamine levels in a brain develop, if you look at infant monkeys and you measure their dopamine levels, and they’re normal when they’re with their mothers, and when you separate them from mothers, the dopamine levels go down within two or three days.
So what we’re doing is we’re correcting a massive social problem that has to do with disconnection in a society and the loss of nurturing, non-stressed parenting, and we’re replacing that chemically. Now, the drugs—the stimulant drugs do seem to work, and a lot of kids are helped by it. The problem is not so much whether they should be used or not; the problem is that 80 percent of the time a kid is prescribed a medication, that’s all that happens. Nobody talks to the family about the family environment. The school makes no attempt to change the school environment. Nobody connects with these kids emotionally. In other words, it’s seen simply as a medical or a behavioral problem, but not as a problem of development.
AMY GOODMAN: Talk about holding on to your kids, why parents need to matter more than peers.
DR. GABOR MATÉ: Amy, in 1998, there was a book that was on the New York Times best book of the year and nearly won the Pulitzer Prize, and it was called The Nurture Assumption, in which this researcher argued that parents don’t make any difference anymore, because she looked at the—to the extent that Newsweek actually had a cover article that year entitled “Do Parents Matter?” Now, if you want to get the full stupidity of that question, you have to imagine a veterinarian magazine asking, “Does the mother cat make any difference?” or “Does the mother bear matter?” But the research showed that children are being more influenced now, in their tastes, in their attitudes, in their behaviors, by peers than by parents. This poor researcher concluded that this is somehow natural. And what she mistook was that what is the norm in North America, she actually thought that was natural and healthy. In fact, it isn’t.
So, our book, Hold on to Your Kids: Why Parents Need to Matter More than Peers, is about showing why it is true that children are being more influenced by other kids in these days than by their parents, but just what an aberration that is, and what a distortion it is of normal human development, because normal human development demands, as normal mammalian development demands, the presence of nurturing parents. You know, even birds—birds don’t develop properly unless the mother and father bird are there. Bears, cats, rats, mice. Although, most of all, human beings, because human beings are the least mature and the most dependent for the longest period of time.
AMY GOODMAN: Can you talk about the importance of attachment?
DR. GABOR MATÉ: Attachment is the drive to be close to somebody, and attachment is a powerful force in human relationships—in fact, the most powerful force there is. Even as adults, when attachment relationships that people want to be close to are lost or threatened somehow, we get very disoriented, very upset. Now, for children and babies and adolescents, that’s an absolute necessity, because the more immature you are, the more you need your attachments. It’s like a force of gravity that pulls two bodies together. Now, when the attachment goes in the wrong direction, i.e., instead of to the adults but to the peer group, childhood developments can be distorted, development is stopped in its tracks, and parenting and teaching become extremely difficult.
AMY GOODMAN: You co-wrote this book, and you both found, in your experience, Hold on to Your Kids, that your kids were becoming increasingly secretive and unreachable.
DR. GABOR MATÉ: Well, that’s the thing. You see, now, if your spouse or partner, adult spouse or partner, came home from work and didn’t give you the time of day and got on the phone and talked with other people all the time and spent all their time on email talking to other people, your friends wouldn’t say, “You’ve got a behavioral problem. You should try tough love.” They’d say you’ve got a relationship problem. But when children act in these ways, we think we have a behavioral problem, we try and control the behaviors. In fact, what they’re showing us is that—my children showed this, as well—is that I had a relationship problem with them. They weren’t connected enough with me and too connected to the peer group. So that’s why they wanted to spend all their time with their peer group. And now we’ve given kids the technology to do that with. So the terrible downside of the internet is that now kids are spending time with each other—
AMY GOODMAN: Not even in the presence of each other.
DR. GABOR MATÉ: That’s exactly the point, because, you see, that’s an attachment dynamic. One of the basic ways that people attach to each other is to want to be with the people that you want to connect with. So when kids spend time with each other, it’s not a behavior problem; it’s a sign that their relationships have been skewed towards the peer group. And that’s why it’s so difficult to peel them off their computers, because their desperation is to connect with the people that they’re trying to attach to. And that’s no longer us, as the adults, as the parents in their life.
AMY GOODMAN: So how do you change this dynamic?
DR. GABOR MATÉ: Well, first we have to recognize its manifestations. And so, we have to recognize that whenever the child doesn’t look adults in the eye anymore, when the child wants to be always on the Skype or the cell phone or twittering or emailing or MSM messengering, you recognize it when the child becomes oppositional to adults. We tend to think that that’s a normal childhood phenomenon. It’s normal only to a certain degree.
AMY GOODMAN: Well, they have to rebel in order to separate later.
DR. GABOR MATÉ: No. They have to separate, but they don’t have to rebel. In other words, separation is a normal human—individuation is a normal human developmental stage. You have to become a separate, individual person. But it doesn’t mean you have to reject and be hostile to the values of the adults. As a matter of fact, in traditional societies, children would become adults by being initiated into the adult group by elders, like the Jewish Bar Mitzvah ceremony or the initiation rituals of tribal cultures around the world. Now kids are initiated by other kids. And now you have the gang phenomenon, so that the teenage gang phenomenon is actually a misplaced initiation and orientation ritual, where kids are now rebelling against adult values. But it’s not because they’re bad kids, but because they’ve become disconnected from adults.
AMY GOODMAN: Dr. Maté, there’s a whole debate about education in the United States right now. How does this fit in?
DR. GABOR MATÉ: Well, you have to ask, how do children learn? How do children learn? And learning is an attachment dynamic, as well. You learn when you want to be like somebody. S o you copy them, so you learn from them. You learn when you’re curious. And you learn when you’re willing to try something, and if it doesn’t work, you try something else.
Now, here’s what happens. Caring about something and being curious about something and recognizing that something doesn’t work, you have to have a certain degree of emotional security. You have to be able to be open and vulnerable. Children who become peer-oriented—because the peer world is so dangerous and so fraught with bullying and ostracization and dissing and exclusion and negative talk, how does a child protect himself or herself from all that negativity in the peer world? Because children are not committed to each others’ unconditional loving acceptance. Even adults have a hard time giving that. Children can’t do it. Those children become very insecure, and emotionally, to protect themselves, they shut down. They become hardened, so they become cool. Nothing matters. Cool is the ethic. You see that in the rock videos. It’s all about cool. It’s all about aggression and cool and no real emotion. Now, when that happens, curiosity goes, because curiosity is vulnerable, because you care about something and you’re admitting that you don’t know. You won’t try anything, because if you fail, again, your vulnerability is exposed. So, you’re not willing to have trial and error. [this is the real Malay Dilemma – oz]
And in terms of who you’re learning from, as long as kids were attaching to adults, they were looking to the adults to be modeling themselves on, to learn from, and to get their cues from. Now, kids are still learning from the people they’re attached to, but now it’s other kids. So you have whole generations of kids that are looking to other kids now to be their main cue-givers. So teachers have an almost impossible problem on their hands. And unfortunately, in North America again, education is seen as a question of academic pedagogy, hence these terrible standardized tests. And the very teachers who work with the most difficult kids are the ones who are most penalized.
AMY GOODMAN: Because if they don’t have good test scores, standardized test scores, in their class—
DR. GABOR MATÉ: They’re seen as bad teachers.
AMY GOODMAN:—then they could be fired. They’re seen as bad teachers, which means they’re going to want to kick out any difficult kids.
DR. GABOR MATÉ: That’s exactly it. The difficult kids are kicked out, and teachers will be afraid to go into neighborhoods where, because of troubled family relationships, the kids are having difficulties, the kids are peer-oriented, the kids are not looking to the teachers. And this is seen as a reflection. So, actually, teachers are being slandered right now. Teachers are being slandered now because of the failure of the American society to produce the right environment for childhood development.
AMY GOODMAN: Because of the destruction of American childhood.
DR. GABOR MATÉ: That’s right. What the problem reflects is the loss of the community and the neighborhood. We have to recreate that. So, the schools have to become not just places of pedagogy, but places of emotional connection. The teachers should be in the emotional connection game before they attempt to be in the pedagogy game.
Amy Goodman is the host of the nationally syndicated radio news program, Democracy Now!.
© 2010 Democracy Now! All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/149325/
One response to “Addiction and the Loss of Common Sense: The Global Destruction of Childhood”
Tun Dr. Mahathir bin Mohamad
Chairman of the Kuala Lumpur War Crimes Commission
Dear Tun Dr. Mahathir bin Mohamad,
It is with great respect and admiration that I send this open letter, commending you for your valiant efforts toward the recent prosecution of former Bush administration officials who are guilty of war crimes for their endorsement and use of torture. In these trying times, it is clear that International Criminal Court operates with a mandate of selective justice, and is wholly unwilling to acknowledge the crimes committed by the United States of America and the former colonial powers. It is for that reason that the actions taken by the Kuala Lumpur War Crimes Commission are so significant and groundbreaking. While some may criticize the commission because it has not been recognized by the United Nations and cannot impose legal sentences, the court operates within the framework of international law and its findings can be used to guide future investigations into these matters.
As Chairman of the Kuala Lumpur War Crimes Commission, I implore your organization to investigate one of the most significant events in modern history, and that is the destruction of the World Trade Centre on September 11th, 2001. At just eleven years old, I witnessed the demise of World Trade Centre towers and the subsequent issuance of aggressive foreign and domestic policy in the United States. Since emerging from the trauma and pain caused by the events of September 11th, scientific forensic evidence has brought forward numerous inconsistencies disproving the official account of events. There is no precedent for steel framed high-rise buildings to collapse from fire, the World Trade Centre Twin Towers and Building 7 are the only buildings in history to have ever collapsed due to excessive heat from office fires.
In the irregular rapid onset of destruction, the Twin Towers exhibited nearly free fall acceleration through the path of greatest resistance, while multi-ton steel sections ejected laterally, indicating an explosion from within the building. While over one hundred first responders reported witnessing explosions and flashes, isolated explosive injections can be seen 20-40 stories below the demolition front when viewing footage of the collapse. 90,000 tons of concrete, metal decking, and steel frames were completely pulverized. The New York City Fire Department would discover several tons of molten metal in the debris. Evidence of melted steel is documented in reports issued by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). How were office fires measured at 1400°F able to produce 2700+°F molten metal? Furthermore, Building 7 was 47-story skyscraper and a plane did not hit it. It suffered small pockets of short-lived fires – and yet, it completely collapsed in less than seven seconds at near free-fall acceleration.
The walls of Building 7 collapsed inwards, an unmistakable sign of controlled demolition, leaving no portion of the building left standing. I would like to bring to your attention a peer-reviewed study issued by The Open Chemical Physics Journal in 2009 titled, “Active Thermitic Material Discovered in Dust from the 9/11 World Trade Center Catastrophe.” Scientists concluded that microspheres formed from molten iron and unignited explosive thermitic chips were indeed present in the dust samples produced by the destruction of the World Trade Centre. You may be familiar with the organization, Architects & Engineers for 9/11 Truth, a non-partisan association consisting of over 1,600 architects and engineers who support a new investigation into the events of September 11th, 2001. For further insight into their findings, I would like to recommend two of their studies, “29 Structural/Civil Engineers Cite Evidence for Controlled Explosive Demolition in Destruction of All 3 WTC High-Rises on 9/11” and “The NIST Analyses: A Close Look at WTC 7.”
The work of these brave and admirable architects and engineers provides us with undeniable validation to investigate their findings and ask difficult questions. While some resort to slander and demonization of those who question the official version of events, is it not entirely warranted to fully investigate an issue of such momentous importance when credible individuals publish such reports? It is clear that the destruction of these buildings were meticulously pre-planned events, using new and long established techniques of controlled demolition. It is the responsibility of those who stand for justice and international law to ask those difficult questions, and prosecute those responsible for these heinous acts of killing and wanton destruction. Once more Tun Dr. Mahathir bin Mohamad, I implore you as Chairman of the Kuala Lumpur War Crimes Commission to conduct a new investigate into the destruction of the World Trade Centre on September 11th, 2001 on behalf of all that suffered and lost loved ones on that terrible day, and the thousands who have been killed in belligerent wars fought in retaliation of this contrived act of terrorism. Thank you for all you have done for the people of Malaysia and the world.
Sincerely,
Nile Bowie
Kuala Lumpur
July 2nd, 2012
JKR 1258 Jalan Telok, Off Jalan Gasing, P.O Box 288,Petaling Jaya, Selangor Darul Ehsan 46000, Malaysia