Society's ChildS


Heart - Black

The economy, social media and drug use: 'Deaths of despair' soaring among Generation Z and millennials

despair
© Pixabay / 3938130
Young Americans are killing themselves in record numbers, the victims of a confluence of economic and sociological factors that have singled them out - even above a nationwide surge in so-called "deaths of despair."

Suicide rates among teens and young adults aged 15 to 24 - the older end of "Generation Z" - spiked in 2017, reaching their highest point since 2000, according to a study published Tuesday in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA). They've risen 51 percent in the past 10 years, buoyed by rising rates of anxiety and depression along with social media and drug use, and the figures may be even higher, since some intentional overdoses are not counted as suicides.

Young men saw the steepest rise in deaths, according to the JAMA study, though women are catching up to them at an alarming pace. Teens and young adults report higher rates of anxiety and depression than previous generations, and multiple studies in recent years have shown that social media use exacerbates both conditions, creating a self-perpetuating feedback loop that can have tragic consequences.

But Generation Z is simply following in the footsteps of its predecessors. The much-maligned millennial generation, defined by the Census Bureau as those born between 1982 and 2000 (meaning some are included in the JAMA study), are also killing themselves in record numbers. Drug-related deaths among ages 18 to 34 have increased 108 percent since 2007, while alcohol-related deaths are up 69 percent and suicides are up 35 percent, according to a report published last week by Trust for America's Health. While millennials have long been written off as entitled, spoiled snowflakes, the media and society are belatedly realizing that they aren't just layabouts unmotivated to exit their parents' basement - this "despair" has a cause, and it's primarily economic.

People

Landmark case: Botswana decriminalizes gay sex

Gay Pride Botswana
© APActivists celebrate in Gaborone, Botswana, Tuesday June 11, 2019. Botswana is the latest country to decriminalize gay sex when the High Court rejected as unconstitutional sections of the penal code punishing same-sex relations with up to seven years in prison.
Botswana became the latest country to decriminalize gay sex on Tuesday, a landmark case for Africa, as the High Court rejected laws punishing it with up to seven years in prison.

Jubilant activists in the packed courtroom cheered the unanimous decision in the southern African nation that is seen as one of the continent's most stable and democratic. The ruling came less than a month after Kenya's High Court had upheld similar sections of its own penal code in another closely watched case.

"Botswana is the ninth country in the past five years to have decriminalized consensual same-sex relationships," U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric said.

"Consensual same-sex sexual relationships remain criminalized in at least 67 countries and territories worldwide," he told reporters at U.N. headquarters in New York.

Arrow Down

Tennessee city dissolves its police department at special meeting due to lack of budget

A Ridgetop Police Department patrol car
© Nicole Young/Robertson County TimesA Ridgetop Police Department patrol car.
The city of Ridgetop, Tennessee, has disbanded its police force after a special-called meeting Monday night.

"It was all budget," said Ridgetop Mayor Tony Reasoner. "We can't afford it. Hopefully, and I'm going to float this idea with the board, but I think we need a 4-5 member board of citizens to come up with ideas on our future. Do we need a full-time or a part-time police department, or do we let the sheriff ... cover it?"

The Ridgetop police department had a budget of $429,000, said Reasoner, who also serves as the city's fire chief. He's been with the city since 1989.

Shoe

Sidelined by trans males, female high school athlete speaks out for women's sports rights with Tucker Carlson

Selina Soule
© dailysignal.comFemale athlete Selina Soule
Two transgender male athletes kept high school track runner Selina Soule from advancing in the New England girls' track regionals. Soule needed to be in the top six runners to advance, but came out eighth because the two biological males were also competing as transgender girls. She is now taking legal action with Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) to uphold her rights under the federal law providing equal access to women in education, known as Title IX.

Fox News' Tucker Carlson hosted Soule and ADF attorney Christiana Holcomb Monday night. "I've gotten nothing but support from my teammates and from other athletes," Soule said. "But I have experienced some retaliation from school officials and coaches."

This retaliation began after Soule's parents complained to the school principal, she said, saying she has received difficult requests to complete during practice that did not occur before she spoke out against transgender males competing in girls' sports. She is told that if she cannot fulfill these requests, then she cannot compete at all.


Arrow Up

Women exceed men in fair exam for Juntendo University medical school

Japanese protest rally
© Asahi ShimbunProtesters rally against unfair entrance exams for medical schools in front of Juntendo University in Tokyo's Bunkyo Ward.
Female applicants outperformed their male counterparts in the entrance exam for Juntendo University's medical school, which had previously rigged the system to give men an unfair advantage toward admission.

Of the 1,679 women who took the fiscal 2019 exam, 139, or 8.28 percent, passed. Among the men, 170 of 2,202 applicants passed the exam for a success rate of 7.72 percent, Juntendo University said on June 17. It was the first time in seven years for women to have a higher pass rate than men at the private university in Tokyo. "This is a result of abolishing the unfair treatment of female applicants and repeat applicants," the university said in a statement.

In 2018, a number of medical schools were found to have manipulated the exam criteria to give first-time male exam takers an advantage over female applicants and those who had previously failed the exam.

The dean of Juntendo University's medical school in December last year raised a few eyebrows when he tried to justify the rigging of the exam system.

"Women mature faster mentally than men, and their communication ability is also higher," he said at a news conference. "In some ways, this was a measure to help male applicants." The university said it corrected its unfair practices for the fiscal 2019 exam and added female teachers to the teams that conducted interviews with the applicants.

Bullseye

Judge lets off drug user stating 'he should suffer no more for dabbling in cocaine' than former Lord Chancellor Michael Gove

Judge Owen Davies
Judge Owen Davies did not jail a convicted drug user
A Judge let off a cocaine user after pointing out that Michael Gove had got away with the same crime.

He said the defendant should not be punished for being caught with a drug the Tory leadership contender admitted taking.

Judge Owen Davies QC gave Giedrius Arbaciauskas a 12-month conditional discharge.

He could have jailed the Lithuanian for up to seven years - but no further action will be taken if he keeps his nose clean.

Referring to Mr Gove's previous top job at the Ministry of Justice, the judge said of Arbaciauskas: "He should suffer no more for dabbling in cocaine than should a former Lord Chancellor."

Rocket

Rocket hits Basra oil headquarter site of Exxon, Royal Dutch Shell

exxon iraq
© Reuters / Essam Al-SudaniIraqi soldier guards at the entrance of the West Qurna-1 oilfield, operated by ExxonMobil
A rocket was fired at the headquarters of a number of global oil companies, including ExxonMobil, west of Basra, Iraq on Wednesday, injuring three Iraqi workers.

Iraqi police said the rocket hit the Burjesia residential and operations headquarters, but no responsibility has been claimed for the short-range Katyusha missile that landed just 1,000 yards from Exxon's operation and residential area. Royal Dutch Shell PLC and Italian Eni SpA also operate out of the site.

The US evacuated hundreds of diplomatic staff from its Baghdad embassy in May, citing threats from Iran. Exxon staff were also evacuated at the time, and had just begun to return to Basra before this attack. After the rocket incident, Exxon said it was evacuating 21 foreign staff immediately.

There have been two attacks on bases housing US military personnel in Iraq in the last few days.

Comment: Is a pattern developing here? See:


Propaganda

Readers call out NYT for abetting war against Iraq, now Iran

New York Times headquarters
New York Times headquarters
The New York Times is out again this morning and the newspaper that so tarnished its reputation by drumming the march to war in Iraq 17 years ago hasn't learned its lessons. The scorecard on the paper's offerings on Iran today is miserable:
  • Zero reporting/skepticism about the actual facts of the attacks on tankers and other U.S. provocations.
  • An "analysis" that makes it seem like "hardliners on both sides" want increased confrontation, even war.
  • One passing reference to the fact that a decade ago "Israel was repeatedly talked down from attacking Iran's nuclear facilities." But zero reporting about the Israeli connection today.
  • No reporting about the Donald Trump-Sheldon Adelson-John Bolton connection.
The one mild exception to the ineptitude in the Times is an analysis of the evidence by Eliot Higgins of bellingcat - who doesn't get to the point, that the evidence is only from one side and unconvincing, till the very end of a long article. His key sentence - "Nothing presented as evidence proves that the object was placed there by the Iranians." - should have opened his article, not been buried 3 paragraphs from the end.

The milquetoast editorial that the Times ran yesterday against escalation but approving of sanctions on Iran ("Dialogue between the Trump administration and Iranian government would be wise, though Iran may prove unwilling to talk") didn't even make it into the print edition.

The most remarkable exception to this pattern is the "Readers' Comments" on the NYT editorial. There were 473 of them before the Times closed the discussion, and we could not find a single one that is supportive of war or of U.S. efforts to continue pressure on Iran. So Bret Stephens gets to spur on a war in his Times column, but the paper's readers are universally against the idea. Moreover, they hold the Times responsible and see through the equivocations in the editorial. Several point out that the press was the handmaiden of the Iraq disaster.

Megaphone

Uruguayans take to the streets to protest 5G technology

5G network
As reported recently, Uruguay was the first country in Latin America to install a commercial 5G network. Despite making history, protests recently erupted in the Maldonado region over the potential health risks associated with 5G technology.

In Summary

Residents in Maldonado's La Barra and El Tesoro neighborhoods demanded the removal of recently installed 5G antennas. Demonstrators urged officials not to install any more devices until it is certain whether or not they are harmful.

"5G is killing us," said one of the protesters during a protest on June 8. "Antennas were placed in La Barra and Nueva Palmira for the time being, but (authorities) will do it throughout the country."

Nowadays, many countries are racing to install 5G networks throughout the world. So far, Uruguay joins other nations such as Japan, Spain, the United States, among others, in pioneering these innovations.

Comment: See also: Objective:Health #15 - The Dangers of 5G & WiFi - With Scott Ogrin of Scottie's Tech.Info


Stock Down

Boeing's newest problem: Pilots are too weak to use the cockpit hand-crank

boeing 737 cockpit
One of the biggest flaws keeping Boeing's 737 MAX 8 grounded has nothing to do with AI and advanced flight-control software. Instead, it's an issue of whether all pilots will have enough upper body strength to turn a crank - a surprisingly low-tech hangup in a scandal that was catalyzed by malfunctioning software.

Boeing has scrambled to redesign the 737 MAX and its software to eliminate the safety flaws that contributed to the crash landings of two jets in under six months from October to March. All told, 346 people died after the 737's MCAS anti-stall software misfired, driving the planes into deadly downward spirals.

Now, the latest obstacle for Boeing, which hadn't been reported before WSJ published a story on Wednesday morning, appears to be convincing regulators that all pilots will possess the upper body strength to turn a crank that controls a panel in the rear of the plane. That panel, in turn, can change the angle of the plane's nose, potentially saving it from the types of malfunctions that afflicted the two planes that crashed. Apparently, during times of crisis, when the plane is moving unusually fast at an unusually steep angle, the crank can become extremely difficult to move.