Bruce Schneier has written an article about Living in a Code Yellow World:
In 1989, handgun expert Jeff Cooper invented something called the Color Code to describe what he called the "combat mind-set." Here is his summary:
In White you are unprepared and unready to take lethal action. If you are attacked in White you will probably die unless your adversary is totally inept.
In Yellow you bring yourself to the understanding that your life may be in danger and that you may have to do something about it.
In Orange you have determined upon a specific adversary and are prepared to take action which may result in his death, but you are not in a lethal mode.
In Red you are in a lethal mode and will shoot if circumstances warrant.
Cooper talked about remaining in Code Yellow over time, but he didn't write about its psychological toll. It's significant. Our brains can't be on that alert level constantly. We need downtime. We need to relax. This is why we have friends around whom we can let our guard down and homes where we can close our doors to outsiders. We only want to visit Yellowland occasionally.
Since 9/11, the US has increasingly become Yellowland, a place where we assume danger is imminent. It's damaging to us individually and as a society.
He continues:
Those of us fortunate enough to live in a Code White society are much better served acting like we do. This is something we need to learn at all levels, from our personal interactions to our national policy. Since the terrorist attacks of 9/11, many of our counterterrorism policies have helped convince people they're not safe, and that they need to be in a constant state of readiness. We need our leaders to lead us out of Yellowland, not to perpetuate it.
What are my fellow Soylentil's views on Bruce Schneier's assessment?
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 25 2015, @03:01PM
i think there's a mistake:
we are not all the same machine-brain. this "cortisol" brain chemical exist more or less in every person but not at the same amounts.
one cannot classify "threat" in grams, seconds or meters and then say this amount of cortisol (kg or liters) was consumed.
the question is, do some brains "learn nothing" and just keep producing cortisol or do
some brains protect themselves from unconscious (damaging) cortisol production by building new neural path-ways?
(are some brains cortisol addicted?)
i think that is it's okay to be aware of possible dangers ... all the time ... at the right time ^_^
going to the zoo? see that tiger behind the moat and fence ten meters away? did you build the fence? how deep is the moat? are the tigers hungry?
fastest way out (past the fat guy tbh) .. check.
nothing wrong with that.
howevery: looming nuclear strike? cortisol? no way. that's just too big!