Weizhen Xie, Stephen Campbell, and Weiwei Zhang, - PsyPost
Stephan: It is usually taboo to talk about, but psychophysiology has become a major factor in American politics. I have been telling my readers this for years, and have written several papers on this subject (go to Academia.edu and search on The psychophysiology of Politics, or Social values, Social Outcomes) as well as a book The 8 Laws of Change all describing that fact that the core of the Trump base is lower IQ, lower education Whites, who are terrified by the social changes that are occurring as America becomes a majority-minority nation. These are facts not political partisan polemics. Now here is yet another study making this point. For the primary research publication upon which this report is based go to: Working memory capacity predicts individual differences in social-distancing compliance during the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States.
New research provides evidence that working memory and fluid intelligence are associated with engaging in social distancing in the early stages of the coronavirus pandemic. The new study has been published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
On March 11th, 2020, the World Health Organization declared the outbreak of the novel coronavirus SARS‐CoV‐2 to be a global pandemic. Governments around the world urged people to follow preventive health measures such as frequent hand washing and physical distancing. But not everyone abided by the safety guidelines.
“At the moment, successful containment of the COVID-19 outbreak critically relies on people’s voluntary compliance with social distancing guidelines. However, there is widespread non-compliance in our society, especially during the early stage of this pandemic (and more recently after reopening),” said study author Weiwei Zhang, a postdoctoral research fellow at the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke.
The researcher noted that there have been numerous media reports about Americans failing to physically distance themselves from one another in public spaces.
Stephan: Trump loves the death penalty and is doing what he can to bring it back; he has a real need for vengeance. There just doesn't seem to be any level of vileness or perfidy to which Trump and his familiar Barr will not sink.
An explosive Reutersinvestigation revealed Friday that a series of executions the Trump administration has planned for next week “will mark the culmination of a three-year campaign to line up a secret supply chain to make and test lethal injection drugs.”
The U.S. Supreme Court on June 29 cleared the way for federal executions to resume when it denied to hear an appeal from death row prisoners challenging the Trump administration’s lethal injection protocol. Inmates Daniel Lewis Lee, Wesley Ira Purkey, and Dustin Lee Honken are set to be killed at a federal facility in Indiana just days apart beginning on July 13, followed by Keith Dwayne Nelson on August 28.
Although it wasn’t until July 2019 when U.S. Attorney General William Barr publicly directed the Bureau of Prisons to resume capital punishment using only the drug pentobarbital—in lieu of a three-drug protocol that had been hampered by supply issues—Reuters reported that “President Donald Trump’s Department of Justice had […]
Stephan: The absolute failure of both parties to get the American public to understand what is coming with climate change, and how dramatic it is going to be I find very depressing. And the same is true in many other countries. Humans just can't seem to comprehend what they have done to the earth and what is coming as a result of that stupidity and greed. Nor to understand that there are no quick fixes. This piece discusses that issue.
It could take decades before cuts to greenhouse gases actually affect global temperatures, according to a new study. 2035 is probably the earliest that scientists could see a statistically significant change in temperature — and that’s only if humans take dramatic action to combat climate change.
BE READY FOR THE LONG HAUL
Specifically, 2035 is the year we might expect to see results if we switch from business-as-usual pollution to an ambitious path that limits global warming to under 2 degrees Celsius — the target laid out in the Paris climate agreement. The world isn’t on track to meet that goal, so we might not see the fruits of our labor until even later. That means policymakers need to be ready for the long haul, and we’re all going to need to be patient while we wait for the changes we make now to take effect.
“I foresee this kind of train wreck coming where we make all this effort, and we have nothing to show for it,” says lead author of the study, Bjørn Samset. “This will […]
Brynne Keith-Jennings, Staff - Center on Budget and Policy Priorities - truthout
Stephan: How is it possible that the richest nation in the world has 25% of its children facing food shortages and insecurity? The answer of course is that our entire economy is based on neoliberal policies in which profit is the only priority, human suffering and wellbeing are not even factors to consider. We have a desperate need to restructure our economy, on principles that make fostering wellbeing the first priority. Have we the courage, the intelligence to do it? I don't know, but we will learn something from the November election.
As policymakers consider what could be the last COVID-19 relief package this year, they should respond to the alarming rise in the number of children who aren’t getting enough to eat by increasing SNAP (food stamp) benefits, which would minimize COVID-19’s lasting impact on a generation of children.
Policymakers, including Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and Senate Democrats, have called for policies that support children in the next package. That’s wise, because many families with children, particularly low-income families, already struggled with food insecurity and other hardship before the pandemic, and they’ve been hit especially hard by the crisis. With schools closed, many children, particularly low-income children, have missed out on educational instruction and other supports with potentially lasting consequences; many families of low-income children who normally eat free- or reduced-price meals at school also suddenly had to provide those meals just as they were losing jobs and other income.
Compared to childless families, families with children were likelier to lose employment income — over half of families with children report such losses — and likelier to be behind on rent or mortgage payments. Rising food
Stephan: This is the best inside the game commentary I have read about current Republican thinking. It is my profound wish that in November the entire Republican Party is flushed down the toilet like the toxic turd it has become, and something new arises, just as the Republicans themselves arose as an anti-slavery conscience party in 1854 after the Kansas-Nebraska Act of that same year replacing the Whig Party which had been torn apart over slavery and race.
Shooting rubber bullet grenades at protesting priests. Catastrophically botching the pandemic response, resulting in a public health and economic calamity. Tweeting “white power” memes. Ranting in front of empty arenas about how he navigated a “slippery ramp.” Being MIA while his Russian benefactors put out a hit on American soldiers in Afghanistan.
The last three months have been a political dumpster fire for President Trump, and the flames have engulfed Republicans up and down the ballot. But while pockets of Republican resistance have roasted Dear Leader, elected officials in D.C. and their Svengalis in the consultant class have remained steadfast.
These swamp creatures were never the biggest Trumpers in the first place — his initial campaign team was an assortment of D-listers and golf course grunts rather than traditional GOP ad men. So why, as Trump’s numbers plummet, are these establishment RINOs continuing to debase […]