Maybe it's just an effect of getting older, but the percentage of people making big mistakes and horrible judgements seems to be rising. So I wonder if there's an underlying cause. Some hypotheses:
- Roman Lead Pipe Theory: Environmental or food/water pollutants, like microplastics or PFAS
- Obesity-related and age-related mental decline in our older, fatter population
- Reduced social interaction, and increased daily hours on the internet consuming lower-quality information. i.e. Internet Derangement Syndrome, iPad kids
- Peak consumerism, where getting more of whatever for lower prices is seen as the objective of life. This relates to all examples, including the consumption of free and entertaining misinformation rather than costly and dry journalism and science.
On a societal level, we seem to already be suffering the consequences. The pandemic killed or maimed hundreds of thousands more than it had to. The national debt is through the roof. The average person is getting more obese, and we cannot seem to solve the puzzle of how to make healthcare more affordable. And policy is now being made based on viral conspiracy theories.
More fuel for the fire:
1) PFAS and microplastics are only part of it, (though outside of not knowing what may happen with microplastics that can cross the blood-brain barrier, most appear to be more hormone disrupters, which cause their own problems), and believe it or not, lead is still an actual going concern as well. Gen X and the Boomers are both dealing with the end-game increasing side-effects of cognitive rot in our later years from childhood and adult lead exposure growing up through the 1980's, between leaded gasoline, lead in household paint, lead on tires, lead in toys, lead in our water pipes...
...and speaking of lead in the water pipes, we're hitting a crisis point with our own water supply and the lead pipes distributed throughout it in the nation, which is now getting thrown under the bus with current policy changes gutting the EPA, among other things. What sent Flint, Michigan over the edge was corrosion. A switch in water source and increase in acidity stripped off the years of corrosion lining the lead pipes that kept the lead from leeching as much into the water supply. You can buffer the water with phosphates to slow the leeching process down, but not a lot of municipalities do that unless they see lead level problems. Now, with the risk and rise of potential increased industrial pollution, including raw sewage restrictions being lifted in the US along with regulations for safe water, water chemistry's gonna start getting funky, and the funding for the ten year project to replace the lead water mains in our water supply's likely going to be cancelled/suspended/gutted. This means, we may have a repeat performance of Flint in multiple cities who haven't been able to switch over yet. Of course, this means literally more lead in the environment and the diet, and the consequences there-of.
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6454899/https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/chemical-study-ground-zero-house-flint-water-crisis-180962030/https://www.motherjones.com/?s=Rick+Nevin+lead+poisoninghttps://www.thenewlede.org/tag/lead-poisoning/2) First of all, the quality of food in our country is atrocious. Ask anyone who's lived here with obesity and either emigrated or traveled for any amount of time in another country, or thinner people from other countries who came for an extended stay in this country or immigrate only to find themselves gaining weight while here or losing it while abroad. And no, even though portion issues are a problem in this country, it's not portioning. It's mineral depleted from soil depletion, fertilized only with nitrogen, bathed in pesticides and herbicides, the animals are bred and engineered to fatten as quickly as possible and fed unnatural diets living miserable lives in CAFO feedlots, and way too much of our food supply, no matter what you eat, is somehow either directly or indirectly dependent upon
corn... especially the more processed the food is. We allow ingredients and chemicals in our food supply that are literally banned in the EU and a lot of other countries. Given the obesity link to cognitive decline, one might wonder if food quality isn't at least partially responsible for this problem.
https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/immigrants-u-s-arrive-thin-get-fat-flna1C9448563https://brieflyexplained.com/why-do-americans-lose-weight-while-traveling-abroad-and-gain-it-back-quickly-upon-returning/https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/soil-depletion-and-nutrition-loss/https://thehumaneleague.org/article/factory-farming-animal-crueltyhttps://www.scientificamerican.com/article/time-to-rethink-corn/https://www.salon.com/2021/09/25/how-america-became-dependent-on-corn-is-a-weird-story-of-genetics-and/https://foodrevolution.org/blog/banned-ingredients-in-other-countries/As far as any increase in age-related mental decline, see my notes on point #1 regarding lead exposure in the population.
This said, I think there needs to be a third category on point #2. The decline of empathy and increase in mental instability post-COVID, as a direct result of the virus itself and not the socioeconomic PTSD the lockdowns caused (elements that helped contribute to point #3). It's established that taurine helps with improving mental health outcomes, psychosis, anxiety, fear and paranoia. Low taurine levels have also been found to be a significant biomarker of long-COVID symptom severity, with taurine supplementation found to help reduce further symptom load in long-COVID patients. Long-COVID, of course, is more common in the unvaccinated portions of the population, and the unvaccinated portions of the population were also the segments most likely to wander around unmasked playing Typhoid Mary with the rest of the population. Given COVID appears to cause disruption with taurine metabolism, and taurine's link to mental health... draw your own conclusions.
https://theconversation.com/what-is-taurine-and-how-can-it-improve-psychosis-68747https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0304522https://time.com/6338434/vaccination-long-covid-risk/3) A lot of the reduced social interactions and low-quality information coming through social media needs to be laid at the feet of Alexander Dugin and Vladamir Putin. There's been a concerted effort to poison the well and cause social instability dividing us along every possible social fracture line of inequality in this country to destroy the global influence of the United States (for good or bad) for the sake of reshaping the world for Russia as the new top global superpower for the better part of nearly 30 years now. The rest can be laid at the feet of Curtis Yarvin and the fascist techbroligarchy following his teachings.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foundations_of_Geopoliticshttps://www.newyorker.com/news/the-weekend-essay/the-imperialist-philosopher-who-demanded-the-ukraine-warhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curtis_Yarvinhttps://www.commonwealmagazine.org/curtis-yarvin-thiel-carlyle-monarchism-reactionary4) This is a rough one to talk about, and I'll probably get hate for bringing it up. I think a lot of the consumer culture's endgame through the last few years of late-stage capitalism has been fed by the demands of shareholders demanding regular dividends and infinite stock growth in order to live off of the labor of millions of others instead of working themselves. *cough* That money has to come from
somewhere, so corporations decreased the quality of goods and their durability and used advanced psychology with advertising that cashed in on the miserable mental health state of the nation to drive sales further, to continue the illusion of infinite growth in a finite world. Unfortunately, infinite growth in a finite system is what a cancer is. Sorry to say, but the very values of this community have helped contribute to this problem. I'm not saying it's deliberate, so much as an unintended consequence that hasn't gotten much examination by those lounging in their golden nests.
https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2018/06/the-birth-of-a-new-american-aristocracy/559130/ (
https://archive.ph/8f6RR)
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-delusion-of-infinite-economic-growth/
So, yeah... fleshing out those points a bit, it seems like there are some active elements contributing to this clusterfrak that aren't getting much awareness or consideration. Nevertheless, the phase of empire in decline finally passed us by at this point. I'm not sure there's much to right this ship now given those in power and pulling the strings from the shadows are many of the same people responsible for contributing to and creating a lot of these messes in the first place. The irony is, the people of this community have the wealth, influence, and power to do something about a lot of this... but will instead sit on their nesteggs for the sake of self-preservation over taking the risk of undermining and undercutting the folks contributing to this wretched situation in hopes of remaining a part of the surviving aristocracy in case any push-back fails, not realizing that they've got just as much a target on their backs as the rest of us poor people suffering, because the 10% still isn't part of the 1%. We're all a part of the 99%.
But what do I know... I'm just some fool on the internet.
Anyway, have some extra talking points to whittle on while Rome is burning. Don't expect me to contribute much past this first post, however. I haven't the health or the chill these days to engage with much internet fighting anymore.
(Edited for errors.)