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Losing Young Americans at Alarming Rates

  
Via:  Vic Eldred  •  last year  •  8 comments

By:   Shmuel Klatzkin (The American Spectator USA News and Politics)

Losing Young Americans at Alarming Rates
In a wake up call, the Wall Street Journal reports on alarming increases in youth death rates in America.

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In Search of Wisdom Losing Young Americans at Alarming Rates The Wall Street Journal breaks a deeply disturbing story on how we live now. byShmuel Klatzkin May 20, 2023, 10:47 PM Shutdowns during COVID (moo photograph/Shutterstock.com)

Human attention is valuable. There are innumerable things happening around us every moment, without letup. Yet wondrously, we are able sift through the chaos and devote our working focus to things that help us, and leave the rest of the teeming world to our peripheral vision.


Valuing serial distractions over unbroken commitment, we reap the whirlwind, as our children, detached from the wholeness that sustained their parents and grandparents, blow away in the hurricane wind of our narcissism.

Education teaches us the patterns of things, enabling us to better judge where focus is needed. We gain competence and confidence in our understanding of how things work, leaving us free to increase knowledge by turning back to things we overlooked before. For the universe was never diminished simply because we didn't pay it attention. Our models reduce its complexity only for specific purposes. When I need to drive my car, I can't pay much attention to the motion of the leaves of tree as the wind ruffles them. When I am painting the trees, I do not pay attention to the cars on the road nearby. When I fall in love, I have a hard time paying attention to anything else.

What has happened to our attention as we have fallen in love with our electronic information culture? Amazing, isn't it? And literally so.

The better a maze is, the more difficult it is to keep our direction clear. And we have never known a maze of our own device that has been better than this.

Thursday's Wall Street Journal's front page confirmed the stark reality of just how much we have gotten lost when it comes to something that really matters — the life-or-death matter of health itself.And more specifically, the life-or-death danger to those who need our protective attention most, and who are our most serious responsibility: our children.

"Young Americans Are Dying At Alarming Rates," reads the headline. As we have been amazed, distracted, and misled, we have let a health disaster happen in our country.

A graph on the front page in the Journal, right next to the article, shows how drug overdose deaths, which were around 70,000 (yes, 70,000) in 2019 reached just shy of 110,000 for the year 2022. It was the second year in a row with such deaths over 100,000.

Drug overdoses are only a part of the larger picture of decreasing health that has reversed the trend that began after World War II of steady and dramatic improvements in health and longevity, driven not only by spectacular medical advances and better nutrition but also by increasing safety in everything from automobiles to smoke detectors in homes to the good results of widespread water safety education.

Much of the increase in health in these years was shown by youth, as infant deaths decreased steadily and as older children were now immunized from polio, whooping cough, and other infectious diseases. And today, the decrease in health is led by youth as well. Suicide rates among teenagers began increasing in 2007; homicide deaths among them began their steady increase in 2013. A sudden spike in transportation-caused death among teens began in 2019; the same with death by poisoning (overdosing). Once started, all these trends have continued to rise, with suicide alone showing a temporary dip but which has since resumed its climb.

Where has our attention been while this has been happening? Why has it taken so long to get front-page traction in such a major source as WSJ? Certainly, we have been distracted. Certainly, we have been misled.

For from February 2020 onward, those who had effective control over the media that serve as today's public space enforced a maniacal narrowing of our entire societal attention. Only one problem demanded our attention — COVID — and every other concern was taken off the table, forcibly. Ask the recovering addicts who could not meet in their church in California. Ask the people whose beloved family members died alone and comfortless. Ask the scientists and physicians whose reputations and livelihoods were shredded because they proposed that the shutdowns and the isolation and the elimination of reasoned scientific debate were bringing damage that probably was worse than what they were supposedly alleviating.

And ask the children. By the spring of 2020, we had decisive evidence that children's danger from COVID was minimal, comparable to diseases that they face every year that we addressed without severe countermeasures. But our leadership decided that the kids might increase the adults' risk. And therefore, we chose to destroy the fabric of our children's lives, not for their sake, but for the sake of their parents. We used our children as human shields. We made ourselves safe without caring too much about what it would do to them.

At least, cowardice is understandable as a response to a danger. But it was becoming clear as we went through 2020 that there was no real increased danger to adults from schools being open. Evidence was suggesting that the danger to adults from schools that opened up (as in some states and as in Sweden) was not significantly greater than the places that we were beginning to allow open, such as stores. But we were in the maze, in the funhouse, and we had lost direction.

Somehow, we have stumbled out of the maze. Such a story as this would not have appeared in any major outlet two years ago. Free of the maze, our attention is slowly being turned back to the most urgent of concerns. The Journal story bears witness:


Though Covid-19 itself wasn't a major cause of death for young people, researchers say social disruption caused by the pandemic exacerbated problems, including worsening anxiety and depression.

Note the lingering effect of the Great Misdirection — the pandemic caused the social disruption, says this article, not those in power who chose, as Jay Bhattacharya points out, to abandon the accumulated best practices learned in public health in favor of the totalitarian model of complete shutdown that was being brutally enforced by the communist leadership in China. No, the pandemic didn't do that. We did. It was a choice, our choice, and a bad choice.

Yet aside from a point or two, the sustained focus this article brings to the damage, the affective portrayal of its victims, and the prominent placement of the article are all promising. The article's author, Janet Adamy, puts it in plain English:


School closures, canceled sports and youth activities and limitations on in-person socializing all worsened a burgeoning mental-health epidemic among young people in the U.S. Social media … has helped fuel it by replacing successful relationships with a craving for online social attention that leaves young people unfulfilled, and exposes them to sites that glamorize unhealthy behaviors such as eating disorders and cutting themselves.

Well, with "cutting themselves," it does depart from the plain English standard. Perhaps in another year they might talk plainly about what exactly is the most well-known unhealthy cutting behavior. How ironic that the author who brought us the character whose name must not be said has had the courage to name plainly the exact kind of unhealthy behavior that is rendering our children, variously, permanently infertile or incapable of sexual pleasure, or both. Bless you, Ms. Rowling.

On that front, too, there are the adults using the youth as their human shields.

And while we're at it, let's borrow a few more trillion and stick the bill on our children and grandchildren. We're emulating Groucho Marx in Night at the Opera, who on getting the check in the restaurant, exclaims, "This is an outrage!" then hands it to his date, saying to her, "If I were you, I wouldn't pay it!"

In the movie, it's funny. In the real world, a lot of kids aren't laughing. Not because all or most of them know all the political, medical, or cultural details. But in the brokenness of a world in which everything is ephemeral, the ones who are broken first are the ones who should be sheltered by our own responsible commitment. Valuing serial distractions over unbroken commitment, we reap the whirlwind, as our children, detached from the wholeness that sustained their parents and grandparents, blow away in the hurricane wind of our narcissism.


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Vic Eldred
Professor Principal
1  seeder  Vic Eldred    last year

We lost them many decades ago

 
 
 
Hallux
Professor Principal
1.1  Hallux  replied to  Vic Eldred @1    last year

How many decades and to what?

 
 
 
Vic Eldred
Professor Principal
1.1.1  seeder  Vic Eldred  replied to  Hallux @1.1    last year

Since the late 60's.  As to what we lost them to; let us start with the drugs you have running rampant up in Vancouver.

 
 
 
Tacos!
Professor Guide
2  Tacos!    last year

I would love to see better progress in the fight against opioids and other dangerous drugs (particularly fentanyl). But I have to take exception the Covid hysteria.

But our leadership decided that the kids might increase the adults' risk.

Might? They absolutely increase the risk. This was particularly true early on, when we didn’t have a clue how to treat it, much less deter its spread. Kids in school have always spread disease. Every Fall, kids go back to school, spread viruses, bring them home, and get their parents sick. This is common sense, or it should be.

And therefore, we chose to destroy the fabric of our children's lives, not for their sake, but for the sake of their parents.

First of all, we attacked the routine of everyone’s lives, not just kids. It’s not like kids, in particular, were singled out.

Second, wouldn’t the death of one or more parents tend to have some impact on the kids? We hear all the time about how important it is for parents to be in the lives of kids, but now it’s all “fuck the parents?” This section of this article makes it sound like parents selfishly and cowardly threw their kids in harms way and ran to safety. That’s ridiculous.

 
 
 
JBB
Professor Principal
3  JBB    last year

Gunshot is now the #1 killer of young Americans!

 
 
 
SteevieGee
Professor Silent
4  SteevieGee    last year

What a disjointed rambling rant about nothing.

All my kids and grands are thriving right now.  We're having a big party with the extended family today as we do usually 3-4 times a year.  Family is the key to success and happiness for children and olds alike.  I'm making lemonade and coleslaw.

 
 
 
Tessylo
Professor Principal
4.1  Tessylo  replied to  SteevieGee @4    last year

Aren't they all?

 
 
 
Drinker of the Wry
Senior Expert
4.2  Drinker of the Wry  replied to  SteevieGee @4    last year

What a disjointed rambling rant about nothing.

Exactly, about nothing.  Relative to the country as a whole the rapidly growth death rate of children, teens and young adults isn’t that significant.  The primary causes are :

  • suicides
  • homicides
  • drug overdoses
  • alcohol
  • car accidents

Family is the key and if your child died for the first four reasons, you obviously failed.

 
 

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