The News Is Driving Us into A Dark Hole: A Flashback
This was originally posted on November 8, 2021. As you can see, not much has changed since then, except that they've gotten worse.
Image by Gerd Altmann from Pixabay
I have a daily ritual: I wake up and organize my day. I scan both local and national news sites. My head usually hurts afterward.
These days, it’s always the same: political fights, wars, shootings, COVID denial, culture wars, the GOP this, the Dems that.
And the opinion pages aren’t any better. I have an opinion, and no one cares about it (unless, of course, I agree with them).
It’s all the news that’s bound to drive us into a dark hole.
Image generated by A.I.
This morning, like every morning, I went through my list of sites, starting with the local ones. Long Beach Post.
It’s Monday, so at five a.m., the news isn’t fresh yet. I get it. People need time off.
Headlines like “Community Hospital to close ER, increase mental health services, skirting seismic requirements” and “From migraines to vomiting, residents struggle to live normally through Dominguez Channel odor” compete to get the positivity vibes going.
Over at the Press-Telegram, there’s the mandatory update on the Pandemic (there’s a pandemic?): “LA County reports 1,153 new cases of COVID-19, 10 more deaths.”
Seriously, no one seems to care anymore.
That’s the impression I get from all the sightings of people entering businesses with no masks (it’s okay, they’re vaccinated. Yeah, how do I know that? I’ll leave this for another rant).
“4 weekend shootings in Long Beach leave 2 people hospitalized,” and this is with strict gun control laws.
Wait until the Supreme Court rules that we can all run around with a handgun in our pocket at bars, stadiums, on public transportation, and, hell, maybe even at school.
As my brother, who lives in New York, said, “What could go wrong?”
Over at the Los Angeles Times, the headline that caught my attention was about books in school libraries, “A ‘war on books’: Conservatives push for audits of school libraries.”
Is this like election audits, where we call in people who have no clue how to run elections, then they sort of hack their way through ballots, contaminating the process, and still come up with nothing but more votes for the winner?
So who gets to decide who the expert is this time? Do the neighborhood Ken and Karen, who barely made it out of high school themselves, get sent into school libraries and just go nuts, pulling books from shelves and sniffing them for the odor of subversion and anti-stupid?
No, that wouldn’t be right.
Let’s invite the same people who gave us the conservative majority on the Supreme Court. They’ll know what America needs.
Image generated by A.I.
On the national news sites, the news is scarier.
The New York Times blasts “Retailers Scramble to Attract Workers Ahead of the Holidays.” It seems people don’t think bonuses ranging from $500 to $3000 are enough to put up with “the pandemic’s many challenges, from fights over mask-wearing to high rates of infection among employees.”
Sure, the pay is just great.
All I have to do is bring my boxing gloves to work every day to fight with Ken and Karen or break up fights they start with other customers.
I’ll just stay home and watch the videos.
Image by kalhh from Pixabay
Down in Washington, D.C., I see our elected officials hard at work…arguing with each other instead of doing the people’s work.
The Democrats finally squeezed through an infrastructure bill (you know, the one that creates jobs), with some of their own refusing to sign on and only thirteen Republicans in the House voting for it.
In the Senate in August, only nineteen Republicans voted for it. At the Washington Post, the headline reads “Democrats insist Build Back Better bill will pass, despite divisions.”
They’ve been saying that for months as the amount of money and programs are carved away to satisfy, wait for it, two Democrats in the Senate who will eventually have to vote for whatever passes in the House.
I wonder how many Republicans will vote for the package. I’m not taking that bet.
Thank goodness there’s some good news, but it’s easily crushed by what we see and hear on television, on our phones, and on the radio.
It’s all enough to make us depressed.
The bad news has always been with us, but I do feel this time is different. You cannot absorb all this terrible news without seeing it in the context of the Pandemic.
It’s enough to drive all of us into a dark hole.
Image by Wokandapix from Pixabay
According to Mental Health America’s report, “The State of Mental Health in America,” over half of adults (27 million) in the United States with a mental illness are not receiving treatment.
Thoughts of suicide among adults have increased. “4.58% of adults report having serious thoughts of suicide,” which is 664,000 more people than in last year’s data.
This latest survey brings more bad news.
The Center for Disease Control (CDC) reports that “Symptoms of anxiety disorder and depressive disorder increased considerably in the United States during April–June of 2020.”
During June 24–30, 2020, “U.S. adults reported considerably elevated adverse mental health conditions associated with COVID-19.”
The affected groups include younger adults, racial/ethnic minorities, essential workers, and unpaid adult caregivers, pretty much everyone, as far as I can tell.
I wonder if dealing with all the Ken and Karen debacles involving mask and vaccine resistance has anything to do with it (I’m not laughing).
The solution is not to stop watching the news.
The real solution, as always, is reaching those who feel stigmatized by therapy. Then there are those Americans who don’t have access to the benefits at all.
Suppose elected officials would stop their partisan sniping and stop sending up false flags. Then maybe, just maybe, Democrats and Republicans could deal with the real issues threatening all our futures.
In the meantime, I’ll continue to look for the good news amid the bad and hope for the best.
My life has been a rollercoaster of experiences, from The Bronx to Washington, D.C., to Hartford, Connecticut, and Los Angeles, California—first as a seminarian studying to become a priest, then as a local and national community organizer, a radio host and producer, a journalist and producer across radio and television, a government bureaucrat, a youth mentor, and a small business consultant. Beyond those roles, I’ve also tried my hand at being a jewelry vendor, a motorcycle courier, an airport shuttle driver, and a bartender at a German alpine-themed bar.
I recently suffered a mild stroke that upended my life and derailed my writing goals. However, anyone who knows me will tell you that life will have to come at me even harder if it thinks it can stop me.
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