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a nation of sickos...Americans have never been sicker. Life expectancy in the United States continues to fall. An increasing number of people are anxious and depressed. And before you blame Covid-19 and lockdowns, it’s important to note that these problems existed long before a deadly pandemic brought the country and the world in general to a screeching halt.
Has the pandemic made things considerably worse? Of course. Nevertheless, according to a recent Mental Health America (MHA) report, in 2019, just before the pandemic hit the country, some 50 million American adults were experiencing mental illness. Worryingly, suicidal ideation is on the rise. In fact, as the MHA authors note, “the national rate of suicidal ideation among adults has increased every year since 2011-2012.” In particular, the country’s youth appear to be struggling, with a growing percentage of young Americans living with major depression. In 2020, according to MHA, more than 15 percent of youth “experienced a major depressive episode.” Today, 2.5 million youth in the U.S. live with severe depression. Some will read this and blame social media. Again, like Covid, of course social media plays a role. But we simply can’t keep blaming Instagram and TikTok for all of society’s ills. There are bigger issues at play here. As the MHA authors note, more than 60 percent of youth with major depression “do not receive any mental health treatment. Even in states with the greatest access, nearly one in three are going without treatment. In Texas, the bottom-ranked state for this indicator, nearly three-quarters of youth with depression did not receive mental health treatment.” Nationwide, less than a third of youth with severe depression receive regular mental health care. To compound matters, for both youths and adults, rates of substance use are increasing. This worrying trend was evident before the pandemic. In 2020, “7.74% of U.S. adults and 4.08% of youth had a substance use disorder in the past year.” It is human nature to blame others for our problems, to outsource the point of blame, if you will. It’s our employer’s fault, the government’s, Mark Zuckerberg’s—and maybe it is. Maybe they’re all to blame. Then again, though, maybe they’re not. Maybe it’s our own fault. When it comes to improving ourselves as human beings, the first step starts with self-ownership, a willingness to take responsibility for our own actions. Sure, it helps to have a strong community of friends and family members to help us, guide us, and offer support. But, ultimately, change comes from within. We have agency. In 2015, the psychotherapist Jonathan Alpert wrote a piece for the Chicago Tribune, asking “Have we become a nation of emotional lightweights?” “As a nation,” wrote Alpert, “we’ve turned toward meds as the solution for emotional pain.” He discussed an alarming rate of antidepressant use by teenagers and adults, and the fact that 10 percent of Americans were using antidepressant medication. “Among women in their 40s and 50s,” he noted, it was closer to 25 percent. Did all of these people really need to be medicated? he asked. The answer then was no. And the answer is still no. Do some of these people need medication? Of course. But not all. Since Alpert’s article, America’s dependency on antidepressants has grown significantly. I reached out to Alpert for comment, and the rather colorful psychotherapist was more than willing to assist. In his role as a psychological specialist, Alpert has noticed the perverse ways in which “being depressed, anxious, stressed, and sleep deprived have become a badge of honor for many people and celebrated,” he told me. “How often have you heard people say in a braggadocios way, “I worked 60 hours this week”? Or, “I’m so stressed”?” “For me,” he added, “that’s something to be worked on and improved—not celebrated. It doesn’t make you a better person to be overworked or to be chronically stressed. By changing the way society looks at these things, people can start to aim for being less stressed and anxious and achieving better balance in their lives.” I offered a little pushback here. Although many Americans still wear the likes of anxiety and stress like badges of honor, plenty don’t. Resilience, which psychologists define as the ability to adapt in the face of adversity, trauma, and tragedy, is sorely lacking. It’s the ability to pick yourself up and dust yourself off after falling off the horse. Sadly, in the U.S., more people appear to be falling off the horse, but fewer appear capable of picking themselves up. If in doubt, let me point you in the direction of college campuses, where safe spaces and trigger warnings have taken precedence over actual learning. Alpert agreed, then, somewhat rhetorically, asked the following: “What happened to striving for greatness and doing our best?” Good question. “Resilience, perseverance, and performing under pressure were at one time traits worthy of admiration,” he continued. Now, though, “we have world class elite athletes being celebrated, praised, and honored for not showing up and performing in the face of challenges and obstacles.” Alpert was, of course, referring to Simone Biles, an athlete who has spoken openly about her struggles with various mental health issues. The U.S., it seems, is very much a nation of “emotional lightweights.” At the same time, however, it has become a nation of physical heavyweights. In 2020, the national obesity rate stood at 42.4 percent. This was the first time in history that the national rate passed the 40 percent mark. A new, inglorious milestone. While the pandemic certainly made the obesity crisis worse, this crisis has been years, if not decades, in the making. It might sound obvious to say the following, but nothing, absolutely nothing, good comes from being obese. In fact, obesity makes everything considerably worse. After all, there is a strong association between obesity and anxiety, obesity and depression, obesity and suicidal ideation, as well as obesity and schizophrenia. Which comes first, obesity or, say, depression? Well, that is up for debate. What’s not up for debate, however, is the role obesity plays in contributing to various mental health issues. But perversely, obesity has become a “badge of honor” for many Americans. Although bullying and fat shaming should not be condoned, fat acceptance (or fat championing) shouldn’t be either. There is a distinct difference between body positivity and delusional thinking. Obesity is not something to be celebrated. But try telling that to a number of highly influential celebrities and publications, many of whom go to great lengths to promote unhealthy lifestyles. As Alpert puts it, by “accepting all body types, we’ve embraced obesity and being overweight.” Although he is “all for encouraging people to feel good about who they are, and their bodies, there’s a limit to body positivity.” He’s right. “By definition, obesity and being overweight is one’s weight being greater than what is considered healthy for his or her height. That said, weight should not be celebrated at the cost of one’s physical well-being as it leads people down a path that could potentially be harmful.” Indeed. An increasing number of Americans are headed down this perilous path. Some 21 percent of the country’s 12-19 year olds are now obese; 20 percent of 6-11 year olds are classified as obese as well. What we have here is the recipe for an imperfect storm. With less resiliency and ever expanding waistlines, the United States is thinking and eating itself into disaster. The previous line might sound hyperbolic, but it really shouldn’t. Millions of Americans are now too fat to work. And yes, Covid has certainly played a role, and social media has further fueled the atomization of society, but, at some point, we must accept responsibility for our own wayward actions. Then and only then is change possible. The United States is sick, incredibly so, and it appears to be getting sicker.
John Mac Ghlionn is a researcher and essayist. His work has been published by the likes of National Review, New York Post, South China Morning Post, and the Sydney Morning Herald. He can be found on Twitter at @ghlionn.
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bad behavior...
From David Brooks
In June a statistic floated across my desk that startled me. In 2020, the number of miles Americans drove fell 13 percent because of the pandemic, but the number of traffic deaths rose 7 percent.
I couldn’t figure it out. Why would Americans be driving so much more recklessly during the pandemic? But then in the first half of 2021, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, motor vehicle deaths were up 18.4 percent even over 2020. Contributing factors, according to the agency, included driving under the influence, speeding and failure to wear a seatbelt.
Why are so many Americans driving irresponsibly?
While gloomy numbers like these were rattling around in my brain, a Substack article from Matthew Yglesias hit my inbox this week. It was titled, “All Kinds of Bad Behavior Is on the Rise.” Not only is reckless driving on the rise, Yglesias pointed out, but the number of altercations on airplanes has exploded, the murder rate is surging in cities, drug overdoses are increasing, Americans are drinking more, nurses say patients are getting more abusive, and so on and so on.
Yglesias is right.
Teachers are facing a rising tide of disruptive behavior. The Wall Street Journal reported in December: “Schools have seen an increase in both minor incidents, like students talking in class, and more serious issues, such as fights and gun possession. In Dallas, disruptive classroom incidents have tripled this year compared with prepandemic levels, school officials said.”
This month, the Institute for Family Studies published an essaycalled “The Drug Epidemic Just Keeps Getting Worse.” The essay noted that drug deaths had risen almost continuously for more than 20 years, but “overdoses shot up especially during the pandemic.” For much of this time the overdose crisis has been heavily concentrated among whites, but in 2020, the essay observed, “the Black rate exceeded the white rate for the first time.”
In October, CNN ran a story titled, “Hate Crime Reports in U.S. Surge to the Highest Level in 12 Years, F.B.I. Says.” The F.B.I. found that between 2019 and 2020 the number of attacks targeting Black people, for example, rose to 2,871 from 1,972.
The number of gun purchases has soared. In January 2021, more than two million firearms were bought, The Washington Post reported, “an 80 percent year-over-year spike and the third-highest one-month total on record.”
As Americans’ hostility toward one another seems to be growing, their care for one another seems to be falling. A study from Indiana University’s Lilly Family School of Philanthropy found that the share of Americans who give to charity is steadily declining. In 2000, 66.2 percent of households made a charitable donation. But by 2018 only 49.6 percent did. The share who gave to religious causes dropped as worship service attendance did. But the share of households who gave to secular causes also hit a new low, 42 percent, in 2018.
This is not even to mention the parts of the deteriorating climate that are hard to quantify — the rise in polarization, hatred, anger and fear. When I went to college, lo these many years ago, I never worried that I might say something in class that would get me ostracized. But now the college students I know fear that one errant sentence could lead to social death. That’s a monumental sea change.
It has to be said that not every trend is bad. Substance use among teenagers, for example, seems to be declining. And a lot of these problems are caused by the presumably temporary stress of the pandemic. I doubt as many people would be punching flight attendants or throwing temper tantrums over cheese if there weren’t mask rules and a deadly virus to worry about.
But something darker and deeper seems to be happening as well — a long-term loss of solidarity, a long-term rise in estrangement and hostility. This is what it feels like to live in a society that is dissolving from the bottom up as much as from the top down.
What the hell is going on? The short answer: I don’t know. I also don’t know what’s causing the high rates of depression, suicide and loneliness that dogged Americans even before the pandemic and that are the sad flip side of all the hostility and recklessness I’ve just described.
We can round up the usual suspects: social media, rotten politics. When President Donald Trump signaled it was OK to hate marginalized groups, a lot of people were bound to see that as permission.
Some of our poisons must be sociological — the fraying of the social fabric. Last year, Gallup had a report titled, “U.S. Church Membership Falls Below Majority for First Time.” In 2019, the Pew Research Center had a report, “U.S. Has World’s Highest Rate of Children Living in Single Parent Households.”
And some of the poisons must be cultural. In 2018, The Washington Post had a story headlined, “America Is a Nation of Narcissists, According to Two New Studies.”
But there must also be some spiritual or moral problem at the core of this. Over the past several years, and over a wide range of different behaviors, Americans have been acting in fewer pro-social and relational ways and in more antisocial and self-destructive ways. But why?
As a columnist, I’m supposed to have some answers. But I just don’t right now. I just know the situation is dire.
Read more:
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/01/13/opinion/america-falling-apart.html
When the opinonists don't know anymore what's what, we know that the situation is dire. Let's hope that in a coughing fit of "unifying patriotism", Joe hypocrite Biden does not launch into false flag provocations of Russian and China...
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christmas loonies...
We’re often told that the United States is, was, and always has been a Christian nation. But in One Nation Under God, historian Kevin M. Kruse reveals that the idea of “Christian America” is an invention—and a relatively recent one at that. As Kruse argues, the belief that America is fundamentally and formally a Christian nation originated in the 1930s when businessmen enlisted religious activists in their fight against FDR’s New Deal. Corporations from General Motors to Hilton Hotels bankrolled conservative clergymen, encouraging them to attack the New Deal as a program of “pagan statism” that perverted the central principle of Christianity: the sanctity and salvation of the individual. Their campaign for “freedom under God” culminated in the election of their close ally Dwight Eisenhower in 1952.
But this apparent triumph had an ironic twist. In Eisenhower’s hands, a religious movement born in opposition to the government was transformed into one that fused faith and the federal government as never before. During the 1950s, Eisenhower revolutionized the role of religion in American political culture, inventing new traditions from inaugural prayers to the National Prayer Breakfast. Meanwhile, Congress added the phrase “under God” to the Pledge of Allegiance and made “In God We Trust” the country’s first official motto. With private groups joining in, church membership soared to an all-time high of 69%. For the first time, Americans began to think of their country as an officially Christian nation.
During this moment, virtually all Americans—across the religious and political spectrum—believed that their country was “one nation under God.” But as Americans moved from broad generalities to the details of issues such as school prayer, cracks began to appear. Religious leaders rejected this “lowest common denomination” public religion, leaving conservative political activists to champion it alone. In Richard Nixon’s hands, a politics that conflated piety and patriotism became sole property of the right.
Provocative and authoritative, One Nation Under God reveals how the unholy alliance of money, religion, and politics created a false origin story that continues to define and divide American politics to this day.
Read more:
https://history.princeton.edu/about/publications/one-nation-under-god-how-corporate-america-invented-christian-america#
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is confucius winning?...