Adam Weinstein

Adam Weinstein

Engagement Editor

I'm Mother Jones' engagement editor and Tumblrizer, specializing in explanatory journalism and new-media reporting. As a Navy vet and ex-Iraq contractor, I'm also committed to articulating all things martial—good, bad, and weird—to new audiences.

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Adam Weinstein is Mother Jones' engagement editor, having previously served the magazine as its national security reporter and copy editor. Before that, he worked at the Wall Street Journal, the Village Voice, and the Tallahassee Democrat. He's written for the New York Times, New York magazine, GQ, and Newsweek. A Navy veteran, two-day Jeopardy champion and ex-political scientist, he also did a recession-fueled stint as a military contractor in Iraq. For more about Adam and his writing, click here.

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Is the Pentagon Planning to Inject Us With Super-Human Invincibility Juice?

| Fri Dec. 14, 2012 4:13 AM PST

Gentlemen, please start your military-Obamacare forced-vaccination conspiracy engines.

The mystical Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) is soliciting proposals from really smart people "for the development of nucleic acid platforms capable of in vivo host production of a transient immune prophylaxis for adults." Put simply, it appears the Defense Department's brain trust wants an injectable form of blood plasma "that is universal, safe, adaptable, and scalable to protect the US population." It would be capable of morphing inside the human body to protect soldiers and civilians alike from...from what, exactly? "[E]merging or uncharacterized threats." It's kind of like Star Wars for your immune system.

Loud-Ass TV Ads Are About to Be Outlawed

| Wed Dec. 12, 2012 10:19 AM PST
Fear not, Fido. You won't need that mute button anymore!

Listen up, TV advertisers: Big Brother is muting you! Well, not entirely. But beginning at midnight tonight, new Federal Communications Commission rules will bar television networks from blasting viewers with those excessively loud, screamy commercial breaks. At last you can retrieve your sanity from Empire Carpet and the KIA Hamsters. (The rules will not, however, get those damn kids off your lawn.)

Adopted a year ago Thursday, the rules "will require commercials to have the same average volume as the programs they accompany," the FCC says. The commission was prompted to action last year when Congress passed the "Commercial Advertisement Loudness Mitigation Act"—the CALM Act. (Never mind the irony of regulating ads with legislation that sounds like it was named in a focus group.)

The enactment raises a host of questions—for example, what will happen to companies that make "volume leveling adaptors"?—and the FCC has set up a handy Q&A site for consumers. It includes pearls of wisdom such as this:

Q: What can I do about loud commercials until the new rules take effect?

A: Manually controlling volume levels with the remote control remains the simplest way to reduce excessive loudness levels.  The "mute" button on your TV remote is also useful to control excessively loud audio...

Seriously, though, the site needs your help in identifying rogue advertisers and their networks ("Tell Us About Loud Commercials"). So starting tomorrow morning, if this happens to you, simply report the violators to 1-888-TELL-FCC:

Breaking: The US Military Can't Decide Whether to Be Nice to Afghans

| Tue Dec. 11, 2012 11:20 AM PST
An Afghan National Army trains during an exercise in Herat Province, Feb. 2, 2011.

Does a new draft of an Army manual on cultural sensitivity blame boorish Americans for attacks by Afghan soldiers? That's what the Wall Street Journal suggested Tuesday. The newspaper, which got its hands on a copy of the as-yet unreleased handbook, reports that it advises US troops in Afghanistan to shut up about politics, religion, women, homosexuality, and other potentially divisive issues around locals, lest they stoke the sorts of tensions that lead to "green on blue incidents"—violence against American forces by their ostensible military allies. 

Most Americans Are Still Too Fat to Defend America

| Mon Dec. 10, 2012 12:49 PM PST

Armchair warriors and Halo heroes, the military would like you to upgrade to Wii Fit now. As the Washington Post's svelte war-zone reporter Ernesto Londoño reported Monday, Uncle Sam's fighting forces are really busy weeding out corpulent corporals:

Under intense pressure to trim its budget, the Army is dismissing a rising number of soldiers who do not meet its fitness standards, drawing from a growing pool of troops grappling with obesity.

Obesity is now the leading cause of ineligibility for people who want to join the Army, according to military officials, who see expanding waistlines in the warrior corps as a national security concern.

Londoño reports that discharges for overweight soldiers have busted through the roof (or, if you prefer, through the floor) in recent years: "During the first 10 months of this year, the Army kicked out 1,625 soldiers for being out of shape, nearly 16 times the number eased out for that reason in 2007, the peak of wartime deployment cycles." (You can find more historical data on Army discharges here.) The Navy, too, is cracking down on physical-test failures, discharging 40 percent more fitness-deficient sailors than in previous years.

Here's the thing, though: This might be good news for the military.

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