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The Biden Administration and All Things Politics


Current culture wars include calls against critical race theory, restrictions on transgender athlete competition, banning books in school libraries, abolition of diversity, equity and inclusion programs, restrictions on transgender medical care for children, challenges to reproductive rights and the anti-woke movement. 

Lost in this conversation is the notion that cultural wars, like other wars, are claiming lives.


In children, the leading causes of death are unintentional injury, suicide and homicide.  A common link among these pediatric deaths is firearms. Just over the past year, firearms passed accidents as the leading cause of death in children. Despite recognition of this problem and a seemingly endless stream of mass shootings using assault-style weapons, there has been little, if any, legislative action to address gun safety issues. In fact, gun control regulations may be moving backward.  Five years after the shooting massacre in Parkland, Fla., which resulted in the murder of 14 children and three adults, culture wars are now calling for open carry laws with minimal restriction in that state.

Conservative culture war proponents claim that mental health issues underlie mass shootings and mental and behavioral health should be addressed to curb the problem.  We also see bipartisan recognition of the escalating mental health crisis affecting children and in the U.S., along with a clarion call to address it.

However, culture wars are interfering with these efforts.  Under the guise of parental rights, guidance counselors in some states are banned from having open, confidential conversations with children about what bothers them. School mental health programs in some areas are prohibited from focusing on social and emotional learning, which can help children deal with stress. Culture wars now mean that the notion of parental rights is also being applied to education in unclear ways, but not when it comes to gender-affirming care where personal parental and child medical decisions are ignored. 

At a time when children need less, not more stress in their lives, students and teachers in many states are having to deal with political-induced stresses. Culture clashes in schools for the sake of parental rights now reach down into influencing what books children can read at a time when fewer children read books, what subject matter teachers can discuss at a time there are massive teacher shortages, and how Black studies can be taught.  

We are also seeing states now refusing to participate in a critically important national survey to assess the well-being of youth, meaning that assessing the state of pediatric mental health will be even more challenging.

Without making a judgment related to causality, we need to recognize that gun-related deaths, suicides and homicides are greater in states where these culture clashes are influencing legislation than in those where they are not. 

In young adults from 25 to 45 years old, the leading cause of death is unintentional injury, with drug overdoses predominating.  Rates of overdose deaths have increased by 30 percent over the past three years. In 2022, more than 100,000 people died of drug overdoses, with young adults predominating.

Culture wars have led to the stigmatization of the drug user rather than the recognition that action is needed for death prevention efforts and treatment.

Shifting to those individuals who are 55 years of age and older, we find that COVID-19 is the third leading cause of death, following cancer and heart disease. When COVID-19 vaccines became available at the end of 2020, there was national enthusiasm for vaccination and long lines at vaccination centers.  However, by early 2021 we saw the rise of COVID-19 vaccine disinformation and the rising influence of the anti-vaccine movement in Republican Party politics as this was recognized as a political wedge issue. By the spring of 2021, the U.S. saw a decline in vaccination rates.  The sad fact about vaccination culture wars is that political affiliation is one of the greatest risk factors for COVID-19-related deaths.   Adjusting for age, COVID-19 deaths are higher in red counties than in blue counties, with rural America hit particularly hard.
 

Current culture wars include calls against critical race theory, restrictions on transgender athlete competition, banning books in school libraries, abolition of diversity, equity and inclusion programs, restrictions on transgender medical care for children, challenges to reproductive rights and the anti-woke movement. 

Lost in this conversation is the notion that cultural wars, like other wars, are claiming lives.


In children, the leading causes of death are unintentional injury, suicide and homicide.  A common link among these pediatric deaths is firearms. Just over the past year, firearms passed accidents as the leading cause of death in children. Despite recognition of this problem and a seemingly endless stream of mass shootings using assault-style weapons, there has been little, if any, legislative action to address gun safety issues. In fact, gun control regulations may be moving backward.  Five years after the shooting massacre in Parkland, Fla., which resulted in the murder of 14 children and three adults, culture wars are now calling for open carry laws with minimal restriction in that state.

Conservative culture war proponents claim that mental health issues underlie mass shootings and mental and behavioral health should be addressed to curb the problem.  We also see bipartisan recognition of the escalating mental health crisis affecting children and in the U.S., along with a clarion call to address it.

However, culture wars are interfering with these efforts.  Under the guise of parental rights, guidance counselors in some states are banned from having open, confidential conversations with children about what bothers them. School mental health programs in some areas are prohibited from focusing on social and emotional learning, which can help children deal with stress. Culture wars now mean that the notion of parental rights is also being applied to education in unclear ways, but not when it comes to gender-affirming care where personal parental and child medical decisions are ignored. 

At a time when children need less, not more stress in their lives, students and teachers in many states are having to deal with political-induced stresses. Culture clashes in schools for the sake of parental rights now reach down into influencing what books children can read at a time when fewer children read books, what subject matter teachers can discuss at a time there are massive teacher shortages, and how Black studies can be taught.  

We are also seeing states now refusing to participate in a critically important national survey to assess the well-being of youth, meaning that assessing the state of pediatric mental health will be even more challenging.

Without making a judgment related to causality, we need to recognize that gun-related deaths, suicides and homicides are greater in states where these culture clashes are influencing legislation than in those where they are not. 

In young adults from 25 to 45 years old, the leading cause of death is unintentional injury, with drug overdoses predominating.  Rates of overdose deaths have increased by 30 percent over the past three years. In 2022, more than 100,000 people died of drug overdoses, with young adults predominating.

Culture wars have led to the stigmatization of the drug user rather than the recognition that action is needed for death prevention efforts and treatment.

Shifting to those individuals who are 55 years of age and older, we find that COVID-19 is the third leading cause of death, following cancer and heart disease. When COVID-19 vaccines became available at the end of 2020, there was national enthusiasm for vaccination and long lines at vaccination centers.  However, by early 2021 we saw the rise of COVID-19 vaccine disinformation and the rising influence of the anti-vaccine movement in Republican Party politics as this was recognized as a political wedge issue. By the spring of 2021, the U.S. saw a decline in vaccination rates.  The sad fact about vaccination culture wars is that political affiliation is one of the greatest risk factors for COVID-19-related deaths.   Adjusting for age, COVID-19 deaths are higher in red counties than in blue counties, with rural America hit particularly hard.
I am kind of interested to hear how the anti-vaccine group justifies the differences in red vs blue locations for COVID related deaths. I mean, there will be a justification, I am just curious to hear what it is. No one in today's world, well very very few people, are capable of admitting they may have been wrong and actually changing their opinion. Opinions are so tightly tied to our sense of self that is makes sense this is the case, but it is also sad how bad we are at adjusting to new information. Unless, of course, that information is inflammatory and reinforces our pre-conceived biases. Hence why disinformation is so so powerful. We really do live in the propaganda age. Never has outright propaganda been so effective in swaying huge proportions of our society in so many ways. It is very reminiscent of the demagogues of the early 20th century who brainwashed millions by controlling the media cycle and making disinformation the status quo.
 
No shot. That was 100% the same person.
How do you explain the registration date then? You think Jazzy came into this with multiple accounts? They might still have other sleeper accounts ready to spring on the Gen Dis section?
 
How do you explain the registration date then? You think Jazzy came into this with multiple accounts? They might still have other sleeper accounts ready to spring on the Gen Dis section?
JazzyFresh has been banned before. I'm not going to cross-reference, but it would not surprise me if the SteakandEggs account creation date coincided with an earlier ban. It's also possible he ran two accounts, to keep his GD posting from spilling over to the team board. Maybe they really are separate people. I don't particularly care.
 
How do you explain the registration date then? You think Jazzy came into this with multiple accounts? They might still have other sleeper accounts ready to spring on the Gen Dis section?
Yes. Trolls usually create several different accounts so they can continue to spam message boards.
 
Where does trump currently choose to live? Oh thats right, mar a lago. Which is in florida lol. What an idiot.
 
This is awesome! The primary is going to be a blood bath.
The scary thing is it might determine which psychopath gets into the white house. We are so ****ed. Lame duck Biden or swamp-man Trump/DeSantis as the next pres? Man this is a rough stretch for the country. Feels like a death-spiral. Did the entire country become one huge "Saw" movie? Where is the clown on the tricycle to tell us what the next game is going to be? Here's hoping for jumper cables on the balls that go off every time you cast a vote!! (that is for @Rubashov of course, he loves that ****)
 
The scary thing is it might determine which psychopath gets into the white house. We are so ****ed. Lame duck Biden or swamp-man Trump/DeSantis as the next pres? Man this is a rough stretch for the country. Feels like a death-spiral. Did the entire country become one huge "Saw" movie? Where is the clown on the tricycle to tell us what the next game is going to be? Here's hoping for jumper cables on the balls that go off every time you cast a vote!! (that is for @Rubashov of course, he loves that ****)
Ya if its Biden vs Desantis then im just going to sit it out. Unless something happens during the campaigns/debate/etc right before the election to make me hate one of the candidates as bad as trump (possible) or make me really really like one of the candidates (nearly impossible at this point)

If trump runs then whoever is running against him will get my vote. That is probably the best thing trump has done by getting into politics. Made people go out and vote......... even if its simply out of spite lol. God I hate trump.
 
If DeSantis is the Republican nominee, and that's 100% what I'm expecting, then that will pretty much solidify me as a Democratic voter for the foreseeable future. I've voted both ways (voted for McCain, Dole and either none of the above or third party in Romney/Obama and Gore/Bush) but DeSantis is a very specific threat to my family. He, and Trump, have made it abundantly clear that they want to do harm, specific tangible harm, to people I love. If they want to be my enemy and Republican voters are cool with the harm they want to cause to me and my family then I'll accept them on their terms as an enemy of mine. I'd be ****ing stupid not to.

I'm not a Democrat but I will be enthusiastically supporting Democrats for the foreseeable future. Republicans are making clear that they don't want me to not just not vote for them but they don't want me to be part of "their" America. **** them I'm every bit the American that they have ever been and I'll continue to fight for the America I believe in.
 
Where does trump currently choose to live? Oh thats right, mar a lago. Which is in florida lol. What an idiot.
It looks like Trump hates Florida, Democrats hate Florida. I hear that DeSantis is doing a terrible job in Florida. I hope people don't move to that crappy state.
 
It looks like Trump hates Florida, Democrats hate Florida. I hear that DeSantis is doing a terrible job in Florida. I hope people don't move to that crappy state.
Myself? I love florida. Im always trying to get my company to open a facility in miami so I can transfer. Or I would settle for hawaii.

I have some close friends that recently moved near tampa florida. I get pretty jealous when they post pictures of them at the beach while its snowing outside here.
 
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