Aging process hasn’t slowed down for humans — we’re just not dying younger

Stephan:  This is one of the best articles I have read on the issues of aging and life expectancy. It is based on a paper in a peer-reviewed journal, grounded on objectively verifiable data not theory. Citation: The study discussed in the article appears in the journal Nature Communications.
Aged Hands Credit: Sabine van Erp from Pixabay

ODENSE, DENMARK — Aging and death can be uncomfortable topics for many people to talk about, especially as they grow older. While scientists have developed several ways to slow the aging process, a new study finds immortality is (not surprisingly) out of reach. An international team says, no matter how hard we try, every species on Earth has a generally fixed rate of aging that science can’t stop.

“Human death is inevitable. No matter how many vitamins we take, how healthy our environment is or how much we exercise, we will eventually age and die,” says Fernando Colchero from the University of Southern Denmark in a release.

Aging vs. life expectancy

Colchero and his team applied statistics and mathematics to information on populations and life expectancy throughout history. Their findings reveal, although people live longer today than they did in the distant past, the rate of aging among humans really isn’t changing all that much. Simply put, researchers believe today’s life expectancy has less to do with people growing older and more to […]

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French wine disaster points to climate change

Stephan:  Climate change is going to alter human culture and the economy radically. Exhibit A.
Illustration: Shoshana Gordon/Axios

new study finds a strong chance that climate change helped trigger the recent catastrophe that hit France’s wine industry.

Driving the news: An extraordinary cold snap that gripped France in early April, just after a record-warm early spring, devastated grapes and other fruit crops.

  • New analysis by the research consortium World Weather Attribution shows that climate change made that disaster — a textbook example of a “false spring” event — up to 60% more likely.

Why it matters: As the world warms, growing seasons are shifting their timing, and frosts are changing their frequency and severity, too. The interaction between the two is making prized crops more vulnerable to large temperature swings.

How it works: Researchers focused on central France, in a region known for its Champagne.

  • They ran computer model simulations of the weather patterns that led to that event.
  • Some simulations included the current amount of human-caused greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, while others omitted these concentrations.
  • The models showed that climate change made April’s cold snap less likely as the lowest temperatures have risen […]
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Scientist Who Spent Year at ‘Epicenter’ of Climate Crisis Warns World May Already Have Hit Arctic ‘Tipping Point’

Stephan:  I don't know how much clearer it can get that climate change is about to radically alter the earth's environment. And yet 139 Republican Congress members do not think human-mediated climate change is real and, although most Americans do agree that climate change is affected by human activity. But even then, most don't talk about it or contact their Congress members requiring them to do something about climate change. The good news is that Biden seems to understand the reality of climate change and the role humans are playing in bringing it on. But can he get the Republican morons in Congress to get behind him and act? We are going to see, and we are going to have to live with what happens.
Credit: Climate

The atmospheric scientist that led a major year-long Arctic research expedition said Tuesday that the world may have already hit one of the so-called climate “tipping points.”

“The disappearance of summer sea ice in the Arctic is one of the first landmines in this minefield, one of the tipping points that we set off first when we push warming too far,” said Markus Rex of the Alfred Wegener Institute, reports Agence France-Presse.

“And one can essentially ask if we haven’t already stepped on this mine and already set off the beginning of the explosion,” he added.

“If we keep going as we are then the Arctic will be ice-free in summer within a few decades and the world I just described will no longer exist.”

“During the Mosaic expedition, the ice in the spring of 2020 receded more quickly than ever before on record,” Rex said. “The expansion of the ice was only about half as large in the summer than decades ago and only about half as thick as during the times of [Norwegian explorer Fridtjof] Nansen and his expedition with Fram, a […]

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U.S. workers are among the most stressed in the world, new Gallup report finds

Stephan:  If you look at the social outcome data, and put aside your emotions and loyalties, the United States is a dangerous, expensive, stressful place to live. For some reason we cannot tell ourselves the truth about ourselves, and therefore we seem unable to make fostering wellbeing the basis for all our social policies.
Working class family Credit: Masko/Getty

U.S. workers are some of the most stressed employees in the world, according to Gallup’s latest State of the Global Workplace report, which captures how people are feeling about work and life in the past year.

U.S. and Canadian workers, whose survey data are combined in Gallup’s research, ranked highest for daily stress levels of all groups surveyed. Some 57% of U.S. and Canadian workers reported feeling stress on a daily basis, up by eight percentage points from the year prior and compared with 43% of people who feel that way globally, according to Gallup’s 2021 report.

This spike isn’t surprising to Jim Harter, Gallup’s chief workplace scientist, who tells CNBC Make It that rates of daily stress, worry, sadness and anger have been trending upward for American workers since 2009. Concerns over the virus, sickness, financial insecurity and racial trauma all contributed to added stress during the pandemic.

But stress spikes were especially acute for women in the last year: 62% of working women in the U.S. and Canada reported daily feelings of stress compared […]

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Biden: How Europeans have reacted to president’s visit

Stephan:  I watched various news outlets in both the U.S. and abroad today and took aboard the good news from Biden's overseas meetings. In place of the childish incompetence of Trump, a statesman represented our country, and it has changed the way America is perceived. Here is how the BBC saw it.
President Biden with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen Credit: Reuters

What lessons have Europeans learned from Biden’s trip?

President Biden has reaffirmed America’s traditional support for the European Union as an important partner in global affairs.

Tuesday’s EU-US summit declaration announces a series of joint actions, ranging from the response to the pandemic and action in the fight against climate change to strengthened co-operation on trade, investment and technology. There’s also a firm commitment to defend democracy and human rights.

There is even a breakthrough agreement on greater joint work and co-operation in the area of security and defence, previously an almost taboo subject.

A series of working groups and a new Trade and Technology Council will ensure that, in the coming months, the co-ordination is intensified across the full range of these issues. Europe, and specifically the EU, is back at the centre of US global policy.ADVERTISEMENT

Has Biden’s visit improved security in Europe?

President Biden’s very strong reassertion of America’s support for Nato and, in particular, Article 5, represents an important return to the American leadership of the past and […]

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