Larry Dossey, MD, Executive Editor - Explore: The Journal of Science and Healing - Explore
Stephan: Larry Dossey is one of the founders of modern holistic medicine, and someone who thinks and writes about wellbeing and makes profoundly sound observations and recommendations. Here he addresses what I think is one of the most important social implications of the Covid-19 pandemic. Isolation. You may have experienced this yourself.
Isolation: aloneness, privacy, seclusion, separateness, solitariness….1 solitude: the quality or state of being alone or remote from society.2 We humans are gregarious creatures. It is our nature to gather in groups. So, it’s not surprising that isolation and solitude have long been associated with those who don’t fit in — cranks, misfits, hermits, religious zealots. However, in our pandemic era, isolation and solitude have taken on global importance as a means of avoiding or spreading the lethal Covid-19 virus. As a consequence, it is likely that more people are isolated now than ever before.
Isolation is a concept that has long been connected with healthcare. When a patient with an infectious disease is separated from others, he or she is less likely to spread the illness to others. Solitude, a related term, describes those who choose aloneness in order to facilitate some personal pursuit — e.g., writers, poets, thinkers, philosophers, and scientists who need to shut out interference from the outside world in order to focus on their work.
Juliet Eilperin, Dino Grandoni and Darryl Fears, Reporters - The Washington Post
Stephan: This, in my view, is ultimately the most important change Biden and Harris will make. Finally, we have a President, and a Vice President, who grasp the implications of climate change. It will produce a historic redirection, and that is very good news.
Joe Biden, the projected winner of the presidency, will move to restore dozens of environmental safeguards President Trump abolished and launch the boldest climate change plan of any president in history. While some of Biden’s most sweeping programs will encounter stiff resistance from Senate Republicans and conservative attorneys general, the United States is poised to make a 180-degree turn on climate change and conservation policy.Follow the latest on Election 2020
Biden’s team already has plans on how it will restrict oil and gas drilling on public lands and waters; ratchet up federal mileage standards for cars and SUVs; block pipelines that transport fossil fuels across the country; provide federal incentives to develop renewable power; and mobilize other nations to make deeper cuts in their own carbon emissions.
“Joe Biden ran on climate. How great is this?” said Gina McCarthy, who headed the Environmental Protection Agency during President Barack Obama’s second term and […]
Stephan: Here is some very good news. One of the things I have noticed and applaud is the number of civically engaged groups that have come forward with a deep commitment to support democracy. Here is one of the few articles I have seen that has taken note of this.
Four years ago, after Hillary Clinton lost the 2016 election to Donald Trump, one of the most brutal conversations I had was with my then-11-year-old son, who had grown up imagining that the world looked a certain way and discovered overnight that it did not. He was worried that he might someday have to defend children at his school from racists and bigots in the schoolyard, and he feared he wasn’t up to the task. His words at the time broke my heart. He said something like, “I know myself. I’m never gonna be the No. 1 guy to step in. If someone else steps up, I could be the No. 2 guy. But I don’t think I could stop it myself.” We talked a lot in the weeks after about bystander intervention, about being the chip guy on the subway (he just ate chips until a violent situation was defused), and about the beautiful words Mary Beth Tinker once shared with me, about how terrified she was when she wore a black armband to school to […]
Stephan: The Republican Party, knowing that they are becoming a permanent minority party, are not interested in democracy. Democracy does not serve their interests. What they care about is how, as a minority party, they can stay in power. They make this clear almost every day by act and statement.
The story started with little more than a vague rumor. “They found six ballots in an office yesterday in a garbage can,” President Donald Trump told a Fox News radio show on Sept. 24. “They were Trump ballots. Eight ballots in an office yesterday in a certain state.” Four hours later, the White House hinted to reporters that state was Pennsylvania. And by that afternoon, the rumor had become official in the form of an announcement by the U.S. Justice Department. In a press release, federal prosecutors declared that nine discarded ballots had been found in Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, and that seven of them were votes for Trump.
It is exceedingly rare for federal prosecutors to publicize an investigation that has barely started and rarer still for them to reveal politically sensitive details in the process. The case exploded on national news and social media, with Republicans touting it as evidence of a plot to rig the election and Trump arguing the same thing during a national debate watched by 73 million viewers. By the time […]
Stephan: Because of the difference between the down ballet and presidential ballot results, that is a repudiation of Trump, but continued support for Trumpian orcs like Lyndsey Graham, Ted Cruz, and Mitch McConnell in the Senate and House, I conclude that the Democrats must make major changes in their party.
It is obvious that Mitch McConnell and his fellow Republican Senators are going to do everything in their power from day 1 to sabotage everything Biden and Harris try to do. So what is the response? I strongly suggest that what Biden needs to do is reproduce the approach of Franklin Roosevelt who inherited a nation in collapse and, instead of talking partisan politics he came out and said, in my terms, my administration is going to focus on fostering wellbeing, and began immediately to set in motion by Executive order programs to do just that.
Joe Biden just won more votes than anyone else in American history, but the next four years may go down in history as the stymied presidency. That’s because it looks highly unlikely that the Democrats will get a majority in the Senate, leaving the chamber under the ironfisted control of Mitch McConnell, patron saint of polluters and profiteers.
Even before noon on January 20, 2021, Donald Trump will be in a position to do enormous harm that will complicate the Biden presidency. Indeed, we should expect Trump is already looking for ways to use his last eight weeks in office to punish our nation — or at least the states that voted for Biden.
That assessment comes not from me, but from Trump himself. His life philosophy is a single word: revenge.
Trump wrote that in his book Think Big. Then he went on for 16 pages about how what gives him pleasure is ruining the lives of anyone who does not do as he asks. His long diatribe was intermingled with observations about his […]