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New Study on Rising Suicide Rates in the US Suggests Capitalism Is Quite Literally Killing Americans

by Grit Post Editorial Board, June 11, 2018

A study released late last week showed that suicide rates have risen significantly across the country. The culprit appears to be capitalism.
t’s largely assumed that people who decide to kill themselves are suffering from a mental illness. Mental Health America estimates that 30 to 70 percent of Americans who end their own lives are suffering from either severe depression or bipolar disorder. However, according to a study conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), 54 percent of Americans who committed suicide in 27 states in 2015 had no known mental health condition.
The CDC study, which examined suicide rates in all 50 states between 1999 and 2016, found that the rate of Americans taking their own lives increased by an alarming 38 to 58 percent in 12 states, 31 to 37 percent in another 12 states, and 19 percent to 30 percent in another 12 states. The CDC found that on average, suicide rates jumped by more than 30 percent for all 50 states. The only state that saw a decrease in suicide rates was Nevada:

Alarming trends
(Data by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Map by Magazine for the Society for Science & the Public)

The fact that more than half of these suicides were not attributed to any mental illness in a majority of states for at least one year of the period the CDC studied is remarkable, and begs the question of what other factors led to thousands of Americans taking their own lives. CDC researchers discovered that, outside of problems with intimate partners, the prime causes of suicide for Americans with no known mental illnesses were primarily financial in nature.
“For those who died, circumstances surrounding their suicide included relationship or job problems, the loss of a home, legal troubles and physical health issues,” wrote Aimee Cunningham in the Magazine for the Society for Science & the Public. “These factors played a role whether suicide victims had a diagnosed medical condition or not.”
Such a significant increase in the rate of Americans killing themselves between 1999 and 2016 in 49 states merits research into national trends during that same time period. In 2011, The Federal Reserve Bank of New York (New York Fed) published a report showing that student debt had risen by 511 percent over a 12-year period. Student debt continued to increase at a catastrophic rate, with the New York Fed finding that the average American household has roughly 828 percent more student debt in 2017 than in 1999.
Home prices and healthcare premiums also increased precipitously from 1999 to today. Data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics found that, on average, housing is 51 percent more expensive in 2018 than it was in 1999. The Kaiser Family Foundation found that between 1999 and 2017, health insurance premiums increased by more than 200 percent. Last year, Quartz reported that of the $2 billion raised on crowdfunding site Gofundme between 2010 and 2016, $930 million was for healthcare expenses.

single premiums(Data and graph by Kaiser Family Foundation)

In the meantime, wage growth for the bottom 90 percent of American workers has been at a standstill since the start of the 21st century. Even though workers saw an average 15 percent increase in wages during the 1990s, data from the Economic Policy Institute (EPI) shows that the vast majority of wage earners saw no cumulative growth in real annual wages between 1999 and 2013 despite worker productivity increasing by approximately 71 percent. However, wages for the top 1 percent skyrocketed over that same time period.

productivity-compensation gap.pngtop 1% wages
When the troubling rise in American suicide rates is taken in context with the relentless redistribution of wealth from the bottom 90 percent to the top 1 percent that took place over the same period, the culprit behind the wave of suicides is abundantly clear. Working-class Americans — when faced with rapidly increasing costs of living and stagnant wages — are forced to work longer hours just to stay afloat. Tragically, for thousands of financially unstable Americans, the stress of providing for their household amidst crushing student debt, housing prices, and healthcare costs eventually became too much to bear.
America is rapidly becoming a place where only the rich can survive. If local, state, and federal governments don’t take drastic steps to correct the inequality plaguing society, the trend of rising suicide rates will only continue.
 

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Rosa
Rosa
Feb 17, 2020 11:46 AM

Complicit in the tragedy are mental health charities and the mainstream media who talk about ‘mental health’ issues in isolation.. As if our lives lived, the outside world, circumstances and our culture have no part to play. A criminally dishonest critique of human hurting. If someone becomes depressed and anxious because they are threatened with poverty and homelessness, then they are reacting appropriately. Their emotional response is a logical and appropriate response. But neoliberalism demands that we smile even though we might feel as if we are dying on the inside. If we show our pain we are weak and wanting. A thorn in society’s side. To show our true emotions would be to expose the exploitation and the suffering, so the abuser (capitalism) gaslights us into believing we are not being abused. If I tried hard enough I could be CEO someday. I just need to try harder. It’s… Read more »

Dan
Dan
Jun 24, 2018 7:52 PM

The parasitical system and their criminal friends at wallstreet hold people back and make people desperate, unable to get ahead. They siphon the public money and laugh all the way to the bank at our expense. Just look at the ridiculous costs here:
https://realitybloger.wordpress.com/2011/04/04/the-senate-how-much-does-it-cost/
You can quote as many “scholarly arguments” as you like but they are pointless and there’s no value in rebutting them if they don’t address the root cause, and instead address secondary causes. This is what restricts the debate and you’re the one trying to do it! The root cause is peoples “unfortunate circumstances arise because of the political and economic structures and belief systems forced upon them”. And IMO, Carlin just wiped the floor with your face addressing the root cause for 3 minutes, and that’s good enough for me. What diversion will you post next?

Gordon Meyer
Gordon Meyer
Jun 14, 2018 3:32 PM

“For those who died, circumstances surrounding their suicide included relationship or job problems, the loss of a home, legal troubles and physical health issues,” … so, is this trying to say that none of those things could place someone in a mental health state that is possibly situational that could lead them to make a suicide attempt? As someone diagnosed with a mental health condition, a suicide attempt survivor and a trained mental health crisis responder, I find this line of thinking a terrible reaction to the suicide rates that have been at epidemic levels for longer than most people can even imagine. When almost all health resources have stated, around 25% of the world’s total population has or will have a mental health condition at some point in life that could be helped with professional care. Also, for every suicide that we know of, it is suggested that there… Read more »

George
George
Jun 14, 2018 11:04 PM
Reply to  Gordon Meyer

What exactly is your point? That “the loss of a home, legal troubles and physical health issues” COULD place someone in a mental health state? Well yes, obviously. And if that is the case then what the sufferers need is not “professional care” but help with their homes, finances and physical health.

john2o2o
john2o2o
Jun 15, 2018 10:21 PM
Reply to  George

And I don’t see your point either. They may need both kinds of help. Kurt Cobain for example wasn’t poor.

Jen
Jen
Jun 15, 2018 5:24 AM
Reply to  Gordon Meyer

Dear Gordon: Please stick to the topic which is that most suicides occur because of the particular monetary, legal and physical health circumstances victims find themselves in, and these circumstances arise because of the political and economic structures and belief systems imposed on people. To divert the conversation into a discussion of people’s mental states is a way of deflecting the focus away from the cause and onto proposing solutions that not only don’t address the cause of the problem but could worsen the problem and put the burden of blame or responsibility onto the victim.

manfromatlan
manfromatlan
Jun 15, 2018 10:48 PM
Reply to  Jen

Dear Jen, please try not to restrict the debate. Durkheim found otherwise: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89mile_Durkheim#Suicide Durkheim believed there was more to suicide than extremely personal individual life circumstances: for example, a loss of a job, divorce, or bankruptcy. Instead, he took suicide and explained it as a social fact instead of a result of one’s circumstances. Durkheim believed that suicide was an instance of social deviance. Social deviance being any transgression of socially established norms. He created a normative theory of suicide focusing on the conditions of group life. The four different types of suicide that he proposed are egoistic, altruistic, anomic, and fatalistic. He began by plotting social regulation on the x-axis of his chart, and social integration on the y-axis. Egoistic suicide corresponds to a low level of social integration. When one is not well integrated into a social group it can lead to a feeling that he or she… Read more »

Jen
Jen
Jun 16, 2018 6:23 AM
Reply to  manfromatlan

No I wasn’t restricting the debate, I was trying not to let it go into a narrow discussion about mental health. Durkheim’s position on the other hand is restrictive, and an example of the direction into a framework that I was warning against earlier: he sees the same problem as the Grit Post writer does but from the viewpoint of the isolated individual. If we were to follow Durkheim’s approach and recommend solutions within that approach, we’d probably say that the individual must fall back into the social group or distance himself/herself from the social group, depending on that individual’s background and context. But suppose the social cohesion allowed in capitalist society is itself dysfunctional – because it depends on people valuing themselves according to a monetary or materialist standard? In which case Durkheim’s theory of four suicide types is neither here nor there. If the context itself constitutes the… Read more »

manfromatlan
manfromatlan
Jun 16, 2018 7:43 AM
Reply to  Jen

Despite its limitations, Durkheim’s work on suicide has influenced proponents of control theory, and is often mentioned as a classic sociological study. The book pioneered modern social research and served to distinguish social science from psychology and political philosophy

Which might be why I object to you imposing your political philosophy as the only worthwhile scope of this debate, it only creates narrow emotional constructs which limits human understanding. Not that you or I are acting as debate monitors, of course 😉

Jen
Jen
Jun 16, 2018 11:04 PM
Reply to  manfromatlan

The issue that the Grid Post article was pursuing is that capitalist society (and the belief systems and values it promotes as worthy: values such as competition, material consumption and a particular interpretation of “freedom” as in freedom from restraint and responsibility) is already a dysfunctional and sick entity. Normal people in such a society cannot thrive; it seems only sociopaths who can access power and wealth faster (by resorting to tactics and strategies that include breaking social rules and conventions, that in turn include violence and murder) can thrive in that type of society. You can say that Durkheim’s work on suicide and crime is valuable but if it rests on assuming that Western capitalist society is not dysfunctional and does not encourage or promote beliefs and values that lead to the very social fragmentation and breakdown that in turn push people towards crime and anti-social behaviours, then it… Read more »

manfromatlan
manfromatlan
Jun 17, 2018 5:25 AM
Reply to  Jen

The article suggests but doesn’t prove that capitalism is the cause of the rise of suicide amongst Americans and asserts that mental health may not be a major factor -“54 percent of Americans who committed suicide in 27 states in 2015 had no known mental health condition”.(That leaves the other 46% as having a “mental health condition”?) So thanks, but we’re not going to keep discussion of the vital subject of increasing suicide rates within a narrow, flawed parameter, with all due respect. Also, when you look at the study instead of the magazine article https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/67/wr/mm6722a1.htm?s_cid=mm6722a1_w Vital Signs: Trends in State Suicide Rates — United States, 1999–2016 and Circumstances Contributing to Suicide — 27 States, 2015 “Mental health conditions are one of several factors contributing to suicide. Examining state-level trends in suicide and the multiple circumstances contributing to it can inform comprehensive state suicide prevention planning.” Not only is ‘capitalism’… Read more »

Dan
Dan
Jun 24, 2018 6:48 PM
Reply to  manfromatlan

The situation really is not as complicated as you try to make it out to be. It only takes half a brain cell and a little critical thinking to realise capitalism IS the problem. You’re just another idiot who is willfully ignorant of the big red, white and blue dick being shoved up your asshole every day.

manfromatlan
manfromatlan
Jun 24, 2018 6:53 PM
Reply to  Dan

So, no rebuttal to the scholarly argument then? Have a good day.

BlueDolphin
BlueDolphin
Oct 3, 2018 12:39 AM
Reply to  manfromatlan

Your scholarly argument reads like a person who cannot accept that capitalism, the way it is running today, puts people into bad situations that can then lead to mental health problems, financial problems, personal problems. If the system were not so overwhelming and unfair for people, they would not be driven to such extremes. People function within the contexts of their society. We are not external to it. Current mental help professionals give advise on how the person can help themselves, but can do nothing to change the horrible contexts with which we live, which is the very system that often has brought about people feelings of helplessness…brought to each of us via rapacious capitalism. Your scholarly argument reads like one sorry excuse for capitalism after another. There is a better way. What we have is not working. People like you hold the conversation back from progressing on to new… Read more »

manfromatlan
manfromatlan
Jun 15, 2018 10:57 PM
Reply to  Jen

And to add https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4482518/ Results Nine studies that altogether evaluated 2339 suicide cases and 5252 comparison participants met all selection criteria and were included in the meta-analysis. The meta-analysis suggested an overall protective effect of religiosity from completed suicide with a pooled OR of 0.38 (95% CI: 0.21–0.71) and I2 of 91%. Sub-analyses similarly revealed significant protective effects for studies performed in western cultures (OR = 0.29, 95% CI: 0.18–0.46), areas with religious homogeneity (OR = 0.18, 95% CI: 0.13–0.26), and among older populations (OR = 0.42, 95% CI: 0.21–0.84). High heterogeneity of our meta-analysis was attributed to three studies in which the methods varied from the other six. Conclusion Religion plays a protective role against suicide in a majority of settings where suicide research is conducted. However, this effect varies based on the cultural and religious context. Therefore, public health professionals need to strongly consider the current social and… Read more »

Harry Stotle
Harry Stotle
Jun 13, 2018 9:20 PM

The biggest threat to US combat soldiers is not enemy bullets but their own hands – fact.
Veterans commit suicide at the rate of 1 per hour (approx) or 7,400 per annum – that’s 21% above the national average.

Gary Weglarz
Gary Weglarz
Jun 13, 2018 6:57 PM

Before my retirement several years ago I worked for almost 40 years as a social worker in the U.S. in every realm from mental health, to child abuse & neglect, to hospice care and to drug and alcohol counseling. What was abundantly clear from personal experience (as well as the research) is that poverty and childhood trauma combine in the U.S. with racism, sexism, a woefully insufficient social safety net, and a total disintegration of the social fabric in general to create almost unimaginable suffering for a huge segment of the U.S. population. For the most part the lives of the poor are invisible to the rest of U.S. society (those with jobs, with some healthcare, with some hope). The film “The Florida Project” actually does an admirable job of exploring the lives of one segment of poor Americans. It’s worth watching for its depiction of how the deck is… Read more »

Mulga Mumblebrain
Mulga Mumblebrain
Jun 13, 2018 11:32 PM
Reply to  Gary Weglarz

This reality, of a putatively ‘Christian’ country treating its people with such undisguised hatred and sadism (and the cancer is spreading deep into the supposed ‘middle’ class)makes all the hissing and spitting by the fakestream media presstitutes, that Trump failed to bring up ‘North Korea’s human rights record’, in his little tete-a-tete, more than usually hypocritical and odious. It is the DPRK that ought to be bemoaning the USA’s hideous record of human rights abuse-and that is not even to contemplate its record of aggression, genocide, torture and destruction outside the USA.

balkydj
balkydj
Jun 17, 2018 8:42 AM

Astute comment , MM .. Personally, imo, I think Vaska is being perhaps a little naive on this one (untimely suicide pick) , in some senses: specifically speaking, falling into the ZioNazi trappings of short attention spans & mind control techniques of old. After all Christine Lagarde M.D. (IMF) stated clearly in late May 2014 in Mansion House to her fellow Elites that “Capitalism has Failed”, but still the debate just gets down and even dirtier .. & comical still, in the abstract ! >> https://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/economics/10989528/Inclusive-capitalism-conference-ends-in-High-Court-battle-between-organisers.html Better watch this, to lighten up 🙂 ‘USA world leaders’ >> The sheer number of US citizens per capita incarcerated is stunning: so stunning that it even floors & flaws Human Rights NGO’s, their activists & Gary Kasparov simultaneously – lmso, check the link: at least Jimmy Dore dares to give you the chance to laugh at the Western NGO brainwash & Kasparov, simultaneously… Read more »

balkydj
balkydj
Jun 20, 2018 1:07 PM
Reply to  balkydj

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_incarceration_rate#United_States
Uncle Sam leading the way, by incarcerating more than any other sovereign nation, per 100,000 citizens: proving the USA to have a scant hypocritical regard for Human Rights, along with colonies of the USA running closely behind: atrocious figures made doubly ironic, given their withdrawal from the UN Human Rights Commission , absurdly claiming bias &&& like some AshkeNazi Creature of Zion
The Data Speaks louder than Nikki Hayley ever could: in fact , the Data helps to illuminate what an ill informed Biased-Woman Hayley really is, not others ! ; she screeching absurdity, like some stroppy guilty schoolgirl, endeavouring to shift the blame !

Alex
Alex
Mar 21, 2020 1:41 AM
Reply to  balkydj

I actually know of a patent number for something exactly like what you mentioned, Look up “patent No. 4877027 Linked here http://patft.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?Sect1=PTO1&Sect2=HITOFF&d=PALL&p=1&u=%2Fnetahtml%2FPTO%2Fsrchnum.htm&r=1&f=G&l=50&s1=4,877,027.PN.&OS=PN/4,877,027&RS=PN/4,877,027 It’s a “microwave hearing system” The way it operates is by irradiating a persons head with high frequency microwaves in the 100-10,000 MHz range. (Interesting enough that’s the same range of frequencies that all of the new “5G” devices and antennas use, as well as directly borrowing some of the transmitter circuit designs from this patent) It’s also twice the frequency that your microwave uses to cook food, so imagine what it would do to your body, that’s why to prevent cooking the person alive, they use “frequency modulated bursts” to minimize exposure time. This technology can literally implant sounds inside someone’s head. look at the date on that patent and also consider that usually, a device has to be proved to function as advertised before a patent… Read more »

bevin
bevin
Jun 13, 2018 6:00 PM

The underlying fact is that, since the early 1970s, half a century ago, there has been an inexorable decline in Labour’s share of the national income. This means, inter alia, that there has been a steady reduction in consumer demand in the economy- a long depression, characterised by curiously low unemployment rates, which are not entirely a function of statistical jiggery-pokery. Millions of Americans are working in insecure, ill paid and humiliating jobs an affront to their self respect and an emblem of their impotence. Add to this the fact that most Americans either do not have health care insurance or are highly incentivised not to seek assistance from health professionals. Incentives which include monopoly priced pharmaceuticals. And the, not unrelated and widespread, tendency to self medicate using opioids etc And the only question is when, not ‘if’, the populace breaks free of the subliminal messages from above to wallow… Read more »

Mulga Mumblebrain
Mulga Mumblebrain
Jun 13, 2018 11:46 PM
Reply to  bevin

What’s more, the US plebs have been forced to go into huge indebtedness in order to keep consuming at something like an acceptable rate ie keeping food on the table. The US system is based on totalitarian rule by a psychopathic elite that hates other people, possesses no empathy or compassion, is insatiably greedy and does not care what happens to humanity after they are dead. The very worst are in total control of ‘society’, the most perfect kakistocracy as the Greeks called that situation, imaginable. What is peculiarly loathsome is that these deranged moral monsters and spiritual devils still declare themselves and their hideous Death-worshipping system, to be the most perfected social, economic and political model in existence, and that the rest of humanity MUST copy Thanatopia in EVERY way, or else the Thanatopian military and economic death-machine will be unleashed against them-even civilizations like China, Russia and Iran.… Read more »

Ure Kismet
Ure Kismet
Jun 13, 2018 5:14 PM

It wasn’t that long ago the US was trying to tear the USSR a new one over that nation’s policy of treating many of the citizens who struggled to fit into the socialist system as potentially suffering from an illness. See what freedom and apple pie does? Those who can’t cope are simply ignored in the US until they ‘do the decent thing’ and top themselves. Nice, particularly when the suicide stat is considered in conjunction with the US’ alarming rate of imprisonment, easily twice the rate of anywhere else. Not that the US doesn’t slot up lotsa nutters, they do, as long as the person in need of treatment carries insurance. Generally then the human is held under section, against the human’s will until the insurance is used up which may be quite fast if the ‘hospital’ can bill the insurers for a big swag of pills at rates… Read more »

Brian Davey
Brian Davey
Jun 13, 2018 3:58 PM

this is from my book “Credo” from Chapter 42 – The Psycho-dynamics of the financial market there is a striking correlation between mental ill health and debt – on both sides – lenders as well as borrowers. Among other things, it is now well documented that self-reported anxiety increases with the ratio of credit card debt to personal income; that the onset of mortgage debt has a negative impact on mental health on males; that of people receiving debt advice, a high proportion (62% in a UK study) reported that their debt led to stress, anxiety and depression which they are likely to consult their doctor about; that there is a relationship between debt and post natal depression; that debt is the strongest predictor of depression; that difficulties in repaying debts are strongly connected with suicidal ideation and self-harm; that debt is associated with feelings of shame, social embarrassment, a… Read more »

kevin morris
kevin morris
Jun 13, 2018 1:58 PM

Rather than jumping on that familiar bandwagon of blaming capitalism, I suggest that people at least consider the late Harris Coulter’s goundbreaking study ‘Vaccination, Social Violence and Criminality- The medical assault on the US Brain’. Coulter worked with parents and children who had been damaged by the pertussis vaccine and concluded that the incidence of autism, almost unheard of before the second world war, has grown exponentially through the use of vaccination, particularly with the pertussis vaccine. He notes that when first made available, it was the children of parents wealthy enough to pay for vacicnation who succumbed, and that autism was rare enough to be blamed by the Freudian psychiatrist Bruno Bettelheim on ‘refrigerator mothers’. Nowadays in the US, school attendence is conditional upon vaccination and the incidence of autism is at epidemic levels both in the US, in the UK and elsewhere. The dangers to society of mass… Read more »

bevin
bevin
Jun 13, 2018 2:36 PM
Reply to  kevin morris

“Rather than jumping on that familiar bandwagon of blaming capitalism, I suggest that people at least consider the late Harris Coulter’s groundbreaking study ‘Vaccination, Social Violence and Criminality- The medical assault on the US Brain’…’
The notion that a public health regimen us unrelated to the socio-political characteristics of the society in which it is found is mind boggling.
If this is your view of the relationships between policies and politics I urge you to explain the logic behind your conclusion- as to the crap about vaccines, we’ve heard it all before.

kevin morris
kevin morris
Jun 13, 2018 5:06 PM
Reply to  bevin

And you will carry on hearing about it until something is done about it, for those- and there are many- who have seen their loved ones damaged by vaccination are growing impatient. Please remember that most governments including those of the UK and the US have funds to compensate for vaccine damage. There would be no reason for such funds to exist if vaccine damage didn’t exist. How is it that autism, was such a rare incidence prior to the introduction of the pertussis vaccine in the early forties that psychiatrists could blame the victims’ mothers for being too cold, yet articles in the Grauniad tell us that it has always been at around one in one hundred of the population? It seems that when the Grauniad publishes utter nonsense on many subjects it is uniformly ridiculed here, yet when it states utter nonsense about autism we ignore it? Clearly… Read more »

manfromatlan
manfromatlan
Jun 14, 2018 3:46 AM
Reply to  kevin morris

An article I wrote in 2011: The Criminal Mind https://manfromatlan.blogspot.com/2011/09/criminal-mind.html
which shows the connection with increased levels of mental illness, psychopathy and depression in society.

George
George
Jun 14, 2018 11:13 PM
Reply to  kevin morris

The rise in autism may also have a lot to do with non-stop 24 hour mind-numbing advertisment strewn entertainment and immersion in the virtual worlds of computer games, mobile phones and the internet. Not to mention the compulsively expanding racks of dazzling multi-coloured consumer items – all declaring themselves to be completely different from each other but in fact differing by miniscule amounts.

manfromatlan
manfromatlan
Jun 15, 2018 3:32 AM
Reply to  George

Doesn’t address those children who developed autism symptoms after receiving their shots at the age of 2 though.
https://www.naturalnews.com/047072_MMR_vaccine_autism_government_coverup.html

A Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request filed in the UK has forced the Department of Health to release confidential documents outlining the details of MMR’s initial approval back in the 1980s. These documents reveal that GlaxoSmithKline (GSK), the manufacturer of the MMR vaccine Pluserix, knew that there were problems with the vaccine causing a high rate of adverse events in children. Among these were encephalitis and other conditions associated with autism.
Concerned that the British government was withholding information about MMR’s dangers from the public, the FOIA request was filed in response to the growing number of vaccinated children who were coming down with debilitating gut problems, brain damage and other symptoms believed to be associated with MMR. As it turns out, these suspicions are now validated.

George
George
Jun 15, 2018 8:17 AM
Reply to  manfromatlan

I didn’t put forward my suggestion in the spirit of an absolute Either/Or. I’m just saying that the speeded up, belligerent tsunami of non-stop entertainment, various realms of virtual reality, and – something I didn’t previously mention – the constant pressure from advertisers to instilll a sense of constant self-loathing also contributes. We may be heading to an autistic society. If it’s not already here. Capitalism encourages sociopathic behaviour.

manfromatlan
manfromatlan
Jun 15, 2018 11:08 PM
Reply to  George

We’re good. As a parent of autistic children then a holistic physician (now retired) I had to develop my own views on the subject. See Not Incurable- New research on Autism (2007)https://manfromatlan.blogspot.com/2007/12/not-incurable-new-research-on-autism.html and The Natural Treatment of Mental Illness (2012) https://manfromatlan.blogspot.com/2012/08/the-natural-treatment-of-mental-illness.html

manfromatlan
manfromatlan
Jun 15, 2018 11:10 PM
Reply to  manfromatlan
Mulga Mumblebrain
Mulga Mumblebrain
Jun 15, 2018 10:09 PM
Reply to  George

If humanity survives, a highly doubtful prospect, our future descendants will look back on the psychological and spiritual molestation and manipulation of advertising, let alone its ubiquitous pollution of every available space, as one of the gravest evils that twisted, greed-driven, pathopsychology ever concocted.

Jim Scott
Jim Scott
Jun 14, 2018 3:08 PM
Reply to  bevin

If indeed there is a problem with vaccinations causing autism and with this being forced on parents by authorities, then it could be seen as an example of capitalism via medi-business causing autism and mental illness.

Gary Wilson
Gary Wilson
Jun 13, 2018 10:14 PM
Reply to  kevin morris

Kevin:
I still have my copy of “DPT A SHOT IN THE DARK”. I also still have my copy of “Pottenger’s Cats” and “Nutrition And Physical Degeneration”. If you read the two latter books you may come to same conclusion that I have come to best expressed by William A. Albrecht, PhD: “It’s not the overpowering invader we must fear but the weakened condition of the victim.”

kevin morris
kevin morris
Jun 14, 2018 1:47 AM
Reply to  Gary Wilson

I couldn’t agree more Gary, but being a homoeopath myself, that should hardly come as a surprise. Unlike radicals in the anti-vaccine movement I merely call for openness and debate about the dangers of vaccination so that parents may make an informed choice. Since our supine media merely trumpets health scare propaganda nowadays openness is more needed than ever before.
It is said that towards the end of his life Louis Pasteur, who had always blamed ‘germs’ for disease, recanted and said, ‘The soil is everything’ which is essentially what you say.

Gary Wilson
Gary Wilson
Jun 14, 2018 2:38 AM
Reply to  kevin morris

Kevin: The way I heard it he said, “The microbe is nothing, the terrain is everything.” I think that applies to both us and to the soil. For some time I have been familiar with the evidence left by the late soil soil scientist, William Albrecht, PhD. His evidence shows that nature works, literally, from the ground up. It starts with the ability of the soil to produce protein. My goal in improving soil fertility is to create the microbes that are at the bottom of the food chain. That is my approach to bring back a butterfly that is extirpated in my area. As a homeopath, you may be interested that my approach is not just chemical based but also energy based. IMO the energy is the more important of the two. My attempt is based on my conviction that the butterfly became extirpated in my area because of… Read more »

manfromatlan
manfromatlan
Jun 14, 2018 6:12 AM
Reply to  Gary Wilson

That would be Antoine Bechamp’s Theory of Illness:
Regarding the condition of the organism as a breeding ground of illness as opposed to the Germ Theory, you want to look up Antoine Bechamp, the French biologist who was the contemporary of Pasteur
http://www.metropolisink.com/2014/04/bechamp-or-pasteur.html

BigB
BigB
Jun 14, 2018 9:02 AM
Reply to  manfromatlan

I touched on this in another comment, but essentially I agree with this take: a sick diet is making us sick. The ‘Green Revolution’ in farming is lowering soil fertility (and killing biodiversity); the resultant crops have less and less nutrition; that remaining nutrition is then processed out – essentially as waste; the resultant denatured ‘food’ is lowering intelligence levels, making us sick, and susceptible to physical and mental illness. I would add another dimension to our changing diet: sugar. High fructose corn syrup and invert sugars might just be among the worst of our inventions. Along with the denatured food, they are causal of the obesity endemic. There are other factors; chiefly environmental pollutants, lack of clean air and clean water, VOCs etc …but essentially our immunity (which in itself is predominantly healthy bacterial flora – particularly in the gut) is deficient. Personally, I do think that vaccines are… Read more »

kevin morris
kevin morris
Jun 14, 2018 8:36 PM
Reply to  BigB

AbsolutelY!

Mulga Mumblebrain
Mulga Mumblebrain
Jun 14, 2018 11:10 PM
Reply to  BigB

And then there is glyphosate, most notorious as Roundup. It kills the soil biota, all those arthropods and other beneficials that are central to soil health. Soils are basically being stripped of life and vitality. No-one cares in the capitalist kakistocracy, of course, just so long as profits always grow. When GE ‘crops’ immune to Roundup were introduced and pushed, the blood-suckers claimed, bizarrely, that LESS Roundup would be required, an obvious lie that goes against capitalist religion and commonsense, the fakestream presstitutes circulated it, unquestioningly, as required for their employment. Naturally Roundup use has soared, with crops drenched in the poison, local populations afflicted by disease, and Roundup and metabolites becoming ubiquitous in human blood samples. It has even been found as an adjuvant in vaccines! Perhaps the most bizarre use, testament to greed gone raving mad, is its utilisation to dessicate, ie kill, grain crops, prior to harvest.… Read more »

Big B
Big B
Jun 15, 2018 10:28 AM

Once you start using Roundup (plus ‘Roundup Ready’ biotech mononcrop patented and licensed seeds) you need more and more Roundup …and a lot more water. Hydrological systems collapse; the runoff causes algal blooms and hypoxic dead zones… …This is all too familiar and predictable. One of the first environmental books I (and everyone else) read was Rachel Carson’s ‘Silent Spring’ …replace DDT with Roundup and on we go… 🙁

Mulga Mumblebrain
Mulga Mumblebrain
Jun 15, 2018 10:25 PM
Reply to  Big B

And remember how the psychopathic Right, if you’ll forgive the tautology, attacked Carson, in the vilest manner, as being responsible for ‘millions of deaths’ in the poor world, because DDT was no longer used against malarial mosquitoes. As if those Rightwing vermin gave a stuff over how many millions or billions of ‘useless eaters’ died under any circumstance? You still see that shite from time to time in some Rightwing hate sewer, often in a Murdoch latrine. This, and countless other examples, remind us of a central truth, and one that the human beings refuse to contemplate and accept-to their very great, indeed terminal, detriment. And that is that those who we euphemise as ‘the Right’ represent not just some variant of human behaviour and psychology, but, to vary degrees, and with those at the apex of the capitalist Death-machine the most malignant specimens of the type, they in fact… Read more »

BigB
BigB
Jun 16, 2018 8:44 AM

Whoah, bud, I’m afraid it’s not as easily reductive as that: bad Right – ‘good’ Left? The Right may be paleoconservative and extremised …but it’s the “sordid materialistic calculus” that is killing the planet …and that is ubiquitous. That might seem unnecessarily blaming at first: but also, it is the only liberational praxis we have …to envision an equitable future to replace the mass karmic hallucination of hell on earth. Heaven may or may not be possible, but with a new awareness, we might avoid the Mad Max – Hunger Games – Handmaid’s Tale future we’re heading for! There might even be a few birds left to herald Spring? (If there is a Spring?)

Mulga Mumblebrain
Mulga Mumblebrain
Jun 18, 2018 9:57 AM

What I do, B, is define all shits as ‘Right’. It’s just a silly shorthand, based on the seating arrangements at the French assembly at the end of the 18th century. Generally, if a person is a ‘conservative’, ‘liberal’, ‘Free Marketeer’, etc, they are shits and I’ll call them ‘Rightists’. There are so-called, ‘Leftists’ who are not, of course, but that’s all part of the brainwashing. A true Leftist is simply non-psychopathic, humane, compassionate, and free of insatiable greed- in my opinion at least.

Jen
Jen
Jun 13, 2018 11:13 PM
Reply to  kevin morris

@ Kevin: May I ask who supplies the pertussis vaccine to the federal and/or state governments, or to hospitals (public and private) in the US?
In Australia, GlaxoSmithKline Australia supplies the Boostrix-IPV pertussis vaccine to all federal, state and territory governments that have chosen to use it.
https://au.gsk.com/en-au/media/press-releases/2016/whooping-cough-vaccines-availability-update/
You see, even the health problems arising from vaccines can still fall within a critique of capitalism. GSK, Merck and other pharmaceutical companies don’t supply childhood and other vaccines out of the goodness of their own corporate collective heart.
You yourself have noted that when vaccination first became available, childhood autism rates first rose among children of wealthy families who could afford to pay for vaccination. Does that not tell you that pharmaceutical companies supply childhood vaccines for profit? That they now supply vaccines to governments (so the money now comes from taxpayers) does not mean their business model has changed.

kevin morris
kevin morris
Jun 14, 2018 1:30 AM
Reply to  Jen

Hello Jen. I agree wholeheartedly. In my reply to Bevin I said as much. The problem with simply ‘blaming it on capitalism’ is that this has at least the potential to cloud the issue. In fact, it is at least arguable that the system of economics we have now is no longer capitalism at all, but the socialisation of risk for the wealthy, and capitalism red in tooth and claw for the rest of us. Special pleading on the part of the rich and corruption on the part of our elected representatives has resulted in an economic system that would be seen as alien to past exponents of capitalism. This tendency of course manifests within the pharmaceutical industry, and radicals in the anti vaccine movement are arguing that the massive increase in the number infant vaccinations in the US is explained because legislation has been enacted that allows no litigation… Read more »

Mulga Mumblebrain
Mulga Mumblebrain
Jun 14, 2018 12:00 AM
Reply to  kevin morris

I agree that mass vaccination of the very young, with an increasing burden of vaccines, all full of ‘adjuvants’ many kept secret on spurious ‘commercial’ grounds, almost certainly causes damage to some susceptible individuals, particularly as the human immune system is not yet fully functional at early age, and human neurological development continues into early adulthood. Vaccines are not, of course, the only assault on human health and function. We must also cope with chemical toxicity from thousands of novel poisons created by the chemical industry Moloch, the effects of which in particular individuals, and the synergistic damage done in conjunction with other toxins, are incalculable-if the vested interests involved were even interested in calculating anything but next quarter’s profits. Add in microwave radiation, other forms of radiation from the nuclear industry, heavy metal pollution, spiritual pollution from an odious, insanely intrusive, mass indoctrination system and the metabolic pollution of… Read more »

Jen
Jen
Jun 13, 2018 12:41 PM

Has anyone noticed that the states recording the highest percentage increases in suicide rates in the CDC study from 1999 to 2016 appear to be either Republican-voting states or states with small populations living in small, perhaps mostly rural areas with low levels of investment in infrastructure and social and community institutions and networks? States with small populations are naturally going to record very high jumps in the suicide rate if the initial suicide rate figure in 1999 is very low. So that is a statistical feature to bear in mind. On the other hand, the states recording decreases or slight increases in the suicide rate over the same period are populous states with large urban populations that tend to vote, er, Democrat. Again we must be wary that in these states, the base suicide rate in 1999 could have been fairly high. It would be interesting to know also… Read more »

aallord
aallord
Jun 13, 2018 3:46 PM
Reply to  Jen

Political in red state/blue state? Nevada is red (1% decrease)… Minnesota is blue (38%-58%), Vermont is blue (38%-58%) while New Hampshire is red (38%-58%)…. My only point here is maybe, just maybe we should stop looking at the red state/blue state aspects and dig deeper into the American society as a whole… We can always look at the minuscule and then we miss the obvious..

Jen
Jen
Jun 13, 2018 11:32 PM
Reply to  aallord

I didn’t say or imply that the voting record across the US had anything to do with the increase or decrease in suicide rates in different states. There appears to be some correlation between voting record and + or – changes in the suicide rates which can be put down to sociological factors influencing voting patterns in the various states. Democrat voters tend to be urban dwellers living in cosmopolitan cities on the seaboard and Republican voters are likely to live far inland where the economy is not doing so well. They may also be living in areas where access to guns is easier than in areas where Democrat voters live. As I suspected, firearms access and high suicide rates seem to fit together: http://www.bradycampaign.org/sites/default/files/statewide%20gun%20ownership%20and%20gun%20suicide%20rates%202016.png I also only point out that the huge increase in suicide rates in some states from 1999 onward has to be interpreted carefully because some… Read more »

Fair dinkum
Fair dinkum
Jun 13, 2018 12:25 PM

The most tragic measure of ‘successful’ nation.

rtj1211Rhys Jaggar
rtj1211Rhys Jaggar
Jun 13, 2018 11:51 AM

One tends to suspect that if the suicide decision is logical then many or all of the following will pertain: 1) They have no stake in the future – no children, no hope of children, no access to any children they do have; 2) No stake in the present – no career, no prospect of a career, no prospect of financial prosperity; 3) No emotional bonds – broken family, no emotional support, no community integration; 4) No affiliation to a prevalent value system – dissociation from national values, lack of religious faith, no feeling of belonging; 5) No realistic goals still left to achieve – peaks already reached, future peaks not worth the sacrifice, no affiliation to the achievements of meaningful others; 6) No prospect of good health – body already broken, healthcare unaffordable, chronic conditions present; 7) No affirmation of worth – contempt from others, discrimination by society, preponderance… Read more »

Jen
Jen
Jun 13, 2018 11:50 PM

“… No affiliation to a prevalent value system – dissociation from national values, lack of religious faith, no feeling of belonging …”
When I saw this part of your statement, goaded by the malicious side of my nature, I couldn’t resist looking up Utah’s suicide rate and the rate of increase in that state’s suicide rate from 1999 to 2016: it’s been a whopping 46.5%.
https://www.sltrib.com/news/2018/06/07/suicide-rates-rise-sharply-in-utah-and-across-the-country-new-report-shows/
Yup, that’s Utah, where over half the population belongs to the Church of Latter-Day Saints which lays heavy importance on the family as an institution.

James Graham
James Graham
Jun 14, 2018 2:14 PM
Reply to  Jen

I’m Scottish. I’m not familiar with the US. The Latter-Day Saints are non-Catholic….Protestant. I studied Social Science. I’d expect to find suicide rates are higher for Protestants and lower for Catholics.

Jen
Jen
Jun 16, 2018 11:17 PM
Reply to  James Graham

In Europe, the nations that reported the highest suicide rates in 2012 according to a World Health Orgaisation study were Lithuania, Russia and Hungary. Two of these countries are traditionally majority-Catholic countries. Suicide rates were generally higher for eastern European countries than western European countries: one indication that changing from socialist societies to capitalist societies is not resulting in a better life for many people.
https://jakubmarian.com/suicide-rates-by-country-in-europe/
Curiously the Republic of Ireland reported a higher suicide rate than the UK did that year.

manfromatlan
manfromatlan
Jun 17, 2018 4:10 AM
Reply to  Jen

Here’s a scholarly refutation of your generalized statement about suicide rates in ‘Catholic’ Lithuania, ahem. http://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/9/3/71/pdf D Gailienė Mar 5, 2018 – The Lithuanian case is intriguing because before WWII, along with Catholic Poland, it showed much lower suicide rates than its Protestant neighbours Latvia and Estonia. However, today Lithuania is among the leading countries in terms of the prevalence of suicide. Abstract: Religion as a protective factor against suicide was introduced in Durkheim’s theory of suicide and analysed from various perspectives in multiple studies. The Lithuanian case is intriguing because before WWII, along with Catholic Poland, it showed much lower suicide rates than its Protestant neighbours Latvia and Estonia. However, today Lithuania is among the leading countries in terms of the prevalence of suicide. Interestingly, not much has changed in Lithuania in terms of religious denomination—about 80% of population call themselves Catholic. The aim of this article was to… Read more »

Jen
Jen
Jun 18, 2018 2:47 AM
Reply to  manfromatlan

What part of my comment was Danute Gailiene’s article refuting? And is that question about Russia experiencing “long-term politics of atheisation” – well, Russia used to be part of the Soviet Union – supposed to be a rhetorical question? All that I was showing was that while national or regional suicide rates may correlate with particular religious denominations, the links are not due to cause-and-effect. Possibly the correlations may relate to particular cultural values and institutions that existed in some countries before they became Christian and which ended up being valued by the particular religious denominations that became dominant in those countries. Northern European nations may have always valued individualism and more horizontal family structures more, even before they became Christian (and they were also Roman Catholic before becoming Protestant), and quite possibly this particular cultural orientation may (among other things) have led them to create cradle-2-grave social welfare state… Read more »

manfromatlan
manfromatlan
Jun 18, 2018 4:20 AM
Reply to  Jen

Since you quoted a study then used your own interpretation to back your argument
In Europe, the nations that reported the highest suicide rates in 2012 according to a World Health Organisation study were Lithuania, Russia and Hungary. Two of these countries are traditionally majority-Catholic countries. Suicide rates were generally higher for eastern European countries than western European countries: one indication that changing from socialist societies to capitalist societies is not resulting in a better life for many people.
and seem congenitally incapable of seeing the actual studies and links I provided refute every one of your ill informed cultural views, not really interested in arguing further, sorry.

James Graham
James Graham
Jun 13, 2018 10:26 AM

Sent to the Glasgow Centre For Population Health