Water-Related Conflict On The Rise Across The World, Study Finds

Stephan: 

I have been telling you for more than two decades that this trend was coming, and it is only going to get worse in the coming years. Climate change is going to cause enormous migrations both inside countries and between countries, and water violence is going to become a critical aspect of this crisis.

Children line up at a well to get water near a makeshift camp for internally displaced Yemenis in Abs in the northern Hajjah province. Credit: AFP / Getty

The number of violent incidents linked to water resources around the world has increased dramatically in recent years, according to a new study.

The Pacific Institute’s annual Water Conflict Chronology report shows there were 347 instances of water-related armed conflict in 2023, compared to 231 in 2022.

These include attacks on water systems, disputes over access to water, and the use of water as a weapon of war.

Senior fellow and the co-founder of the think tank Peter Gleick said the increase in such incidents around the world last year was “disturbing.”

“It was a very substantial increase, and it’s an indication of the importance of water and the failure of institutions to manage water properly,” he said in an interview.

According to the study, there were conflicts last year involving access to water in every major region around the world.

The institute’s senior researcher Morgan Shimabuku said there have been a […]

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A Trump judge ruled there’s a Second Amendment right to own machine guns

Stephan: 

Felon Trump’s corruption of the U.S. judiciary system is made manifest in this account. You may be sure that the White Nationalist militias will take advantage of this evil decision by a Trump judge. That strongly suggests there is going to be more civil violence, more mass murders by gun fire. We are becoming an ever more dangerous nation.

A Ukrainian fighter practices using the kind of weapon that Trump Judge John Broomes wants to legalize in the United States.
 Credit: Ukrinform / NurPhoto / Getty

On Wednesday, a Trump judge in Kansas ruled that the Second Amendment invalidates criminal charges against a defendant charged with illegally possessing a machine gun. The case is United States v. Morgan.

Judge John Broomes’s decision in Morgan is obviously wrong, even under the Supreme Court’s most aggressively pro-gun opinion, which Broomes relied on heavily.

The Supreme Court’s 2022 decision in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen (2022) cast a cloud of uncertainty over nearly all US gun laws, requiring the government’s lawyers to prove that any gun law challenged in court is consistent with “this Nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation.” Judges across the country have struggled to interpret and apply that vague standard, and many of them have openly complained that Bruen is unworkable in their published opinions.

Read in isolation, Bruen’s vague “historical tradition” test might be read to support Broomes’s decision. But Bruen left in place a previous […]

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America is in the midst of a mental health crisis.

Stephan: 

Millions of Americans are experiencing a mental health crisis for a variety of reasons, from loneliness, to PTSD, depression, paranoia, and schizophrenia. And they are not getting the help they desperately need. Why? The usual reason, greed and profit. The United States as a society, as a government, as a culture, just doesn’t seem to be capable of making fostering wellbeing our first priority. Other countries can and do achieve adequate mental health care for their citizens but we don’t seem able to do it.

Woman therapist. Credit: Tony Luong,

They studied, honed their skills and opened practices, joining health insurance networks that put them within reach of people who couldn’t afford to pay for sessions out of pocket.

So did more than 500 other psychologists, psychiatrists and therapists who shared their experiences with ProPublica.

But one after another, they confronted a system set up to squeeze them out.

Although federal law requires insurers to provide the same access to mental and physical health care, these companies have been caught, time and again, shortchanging customers with mental illness — restricting coverage and delaying or denying treatment.

These patients — whose disorders can be chronic and costly — are bad for business, industry insiders told ProPublica.

“The way to look at mental health care from an insurance perspective is: I don’t want to attract those people. I am never going to make money on them,” said Ron Howrigon, a consultant who used to manage contracts with providers for major insurers. “One way to get rid of those people or not get them is to not have a great network.”

There are nowhere near enough available therapists in insurance networks to serve all of the people 

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Teenagers at more risk online than Interrailing in Europe, say experts

Stephan: 

European countries are beginning to recognize that children face more danger online with social media than they do travelling alone on the railroad, particularly young girls. My question is: why is the United States doing virtually nothing about the danger faced by American children as a result of social media interactions.

One psychologist said Kirstie Allsopp had given her son the ‘gift’ of a fun, exciting and at times risky childhood. 
Credit: Maskot/Alamy

Safeguarding experts and child psychologists have said the risks to teenagers are increasingly “far greater” online at home than when travelling independently following the row about the television presenter Kirstie Allsopp allowing her teenage son to go Interrailing.

A debate on the protection of teenagers was prompted by Allsopp, who revealed that social services had interviewed her after she posted online about her son, then 15, taking a rail trip around Europe after his GCSEs.

A child safeguarding consultant, Simon Bailey, told the Guardian: “The risk is far greater with a child up in their bedroom with access to a smart device than it is travelling to Berlin, Munich and seeing some of the wonderful sights that Europe provides.”

Bailey, a former chief constable who was the National Police Chiefs’ Council (NPCC) lead for child protection before becoming a consultant on the issue, said teenagers were at greater risk at home on their smartphones than many parents realise.

“There is a greater risk to […]

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During a year of extremes, carbon dioxide levels surge faster than ever

Stephan: 

The warnings keep coming, as this report from NOAA illustrates, but do you hear this earth transforming crisis, which is going to have a major effect on your life and the lives of everyone of your family and friends, indeed humanity as a whole, being discussed by politicians in the upcoming election? I doubt it. So ask yourself, why isn’t this a major story? Could it be because of the corruption of our politicians who are paid hundreds of millions of dollars by the industries responsible for producing all this CO2 not to talk about this crisis?

Carbon dioxide is accumulating in the atmosphere faster than ever — accelerating on a steep rise to levels far above any experienced during human existence, scientists from NOAA and the Scripps Institution of Oceanographyoffsite link at the University of California San Diego announced today.

Levels of carbon dioxide (CO2) measured at NOAA’s Mauna Loa Atmospheric Baseline Observatory by NOAA’s Global Monitoring Laboratory surged to a seasonal peak of just under 427 parts per million (426.90 ppm) in May, when CO2 reaches its highest level in the Northern Hemisphere. That’s an increase of 2.9 ppm over May 2023 and the 5th-largest annual growth in NOAA’s 50-year record. When combined with 2023’s increase of 3.0 ppm, the period from 2022 to 2024 has seen the largest two-year jump in the May peak in the NOAA record.

CO2 measurements sending ominous signs

Scientists at Scripps, the organization that initiated CO2 monitoring at Mauna Loa in 1958 and maintains an independent record, calculated a May monthly average of 426.7 ppm for 2024, an increase of 2.92 ppm over May 2023’s measurement of 423.78 ppm. For Scripps, the two-year […]

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