“Not one life,” right flu hoaxers?
Helen Buyniski writes for RT:
After two months of devastating lockdown, doctors at one California clinic say they’ve seen more suicides than Covid-19 deaths – and they’re not alone. But warning signs were there since day one. Why have they been ignored?
“We’ve seen a year’s worth of suicide attempts in the last four weeks,” Dr Mike deBoisblanc, lead trauma surgeon at the John Muir Medical Center in Walnut Creek, California, told local media on Thursday, confirming the center had seen more deaths from suicide over the two-month lockdown period than deaths from coronavirus.
Not only are the numbers of attempts “unprecedented” but so is their seriousness, according to a trauma nurse at the clinic. “I have never seen so much intentional injury,” nurse Kacey Hansen attested, adding the deaths are mostly young adults who are clearly not making “cry for help” suicidal gestures. “They intend to die.”
That’s just one clinic, of course, and it might be dismissed as an anomaly if not for the fact that doctors across the country are sounding the alarms, warning Americans’ health – mental and physical – is deteriorating rapidly under lockdown, and not because of Covid-19. Over 500 physicians signed a letter to President Donald Trump earlier this week pleading with him to end the economic shutdown, which they called a “mass casualty incident.”
The signatories warned that as every last medical resource is devoted to the pandemic, not only are cancerous tumors going undetected and risk factors for heart disease and stroke multiplying, but suicide hotline call volume is up a shocking 600 percent. With these factors plus economic depression and stress feeding on each other, hundreds of millions of Americans are in very real danger of losing their lives over the next several months. This secondary pandemic unfolding in the long shadow of the Covid-19 shutdowns will be significantly more deadly than the virus itself.
This shouldn’t be news for the public health officials who crafted the lockdown policy. The warning signs were there from the very beginning. Suicide hotlines were already being flooded with calls just two weeks into the shutdown. In one 48-hour span in March, Knox County, Tennessee, saw nine suicides – more than the entire number of virus deaths in the entire state at that point. Portland, Oregon police said suicide threats and attempts had jumped 41 percent from the previous year, while one national suicide hotline reported a 300 percent increase in calls – again, in the first two weeks of lockdown. Trump himself warned back in March that the lockdown would cause “suicide by the thousands,” only to be pooh-poohed by his own CDC and mocked by the media. And even the World Economic Forum was sounding the alarm back in early April about a coming mental health epidemic, deeming the massive global lockdowns the “world’s biggest psychological experiment.”
Instead of heeding these red flags, public health officials pushed along with their draconian plans, doing their best to maintain toxic levels of fear and stress. While they predicted millions (and later hundreds of thousands) of deaths, tens of millions of Americans lost their jobs and livelihoods, while being told – in a turn of phrase that seemed almost designed to encourage suicidal thoughts – that they were “non-essential.” Kept from their friends and families by the same policies that robbed them of their income, it’s no surprise that so many turned to self-destructive behaviors.
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Prolonged isolation is profoundly unhealthy in and of itself. A study published on Thursday found isolation increases all-cause mortality by 50 percent, with an additional cardiovascular risk caused by lack of financial support – and that’s saying nothing of the mental health risk, which has long been known to scientists. Many countries have banned solitary confinement as too cruel and inhumane even for their worst prisoners. Interviewing inmates in solitary confinement at Pelican Bay Prison in 2018, Dr Craig Haney found they were 50 percent more likely to suffer from chronic depression than maximum-security prisoners. Suicides among solitary inmates in Texas are five times as common as in general population. Imposing the civilian equivalent of such a mentally and physically destructive punishment on an entire country as a protective measure is like setting one’s house on fire to protect it from termites.
For the architects of the US’ lockdown policy to ignore their own data showing the country was already up to its waist in a suicide epidemic killing 48,000 annually even before coronavirus and the accompanying shutdowns was negligent at best. For them to compound that suffering by discounting decades of solid scientific data warning of the dangers posed to mental and physical health by prolonged isolation is, quite frankly, criminal.
Social media cheered on Friday when, after a tense hour or two, New York City police rescued a man who’d climbed to the top of the Brooklyn Bridge with the intention of jumping off. They may have saved his life that day, but his problems haven’t gone anywhere, and the city remains under lockdown with no end in sight. More importantly, there are millions more where he came from.
It’s extremely cruel and abusive to people to take away their livelihoods and not even tell them what they are supposed to do. Productive work and an ability to provide is fundamental to a man’s sense of self, and if you deny a man his work, you are denying him his selfhood.
Right now, you need to be thinking yourself about where you’re going to work, given that even if you haven’t been fired yet, you almost certainly will have been by this time next year (remember, we’ve got another lockdown coming up in the fall).
The best thing anyone can do, if they are smart, disciplined and still capable of learning, is to learn to code or learn to do some other specialized technical labor.
But, not everyone can do that. If you can’t, your remaining options are to get some government job or figure out how to make money off the books.
There might also be various service jobs that involve catering to the ultra-wealthy. I don’t know what they are, or how many of these jobs there are, or how to get these jobs, but in order to find a place to work you need to think about what is still going to exist after everything comes crashing down. Basically, there is going to be a massive government and there are going to be a small group of ultra-wealthy and a large group in poverty. So do your best to picture that, then try to figure out where you can fit into it.
Whatever happens, you’ll need good relationships, and if you have nothing to do right now, you should take the opportunity to get together with friends and family. As public spaces get shut down, social gatherings and economic activity will have to move into private spaces.
Maybe this isn’t how you envisioned your future – but this is how it’s going to be, unless you want to try getting government soup in the projects, or squatting in the quickly growing number of abandoned properties. It’s better not to do that. So take it all with a grain of salt, find some humor in it, and do what you have to do.