The EPA Is Closing An Office That Helps Keep Arsenic Out Of Baby Food And Much More

One of the main functions of NCER was to hand out grants and fellowships to scientists investigating the effects of chemical exposure on human health.

…The obvious and intrinsic value of NCER’s programs is not particularly controversial. A detailed review of the Science to Achieve Results Research Program (a primary NCER grant program, referred to as STAR grants) by the National Academies of Sciences lauded its results:

“STAR has had numerous successes, such as in research on human health implications of air pollution, on environmental effects on children’s health and well-being, on interactions between climate change and air quality, and on the human health implications of nanoparticles. Those are just a few examples; many more could be cited.”

The EPA Is Closing An Office That Helps Keep Arsenic Out Of Baby Food And Much More

Hey if you want a government that looks out for children’s health you might want to consider voting for people who believe in (and understand) basic science.

Jailed Russian ‘sex coaches’ offer to trade election info for US asylum

From behind bars in a sweltering immigration detention center in Bangkok, a self-styled “sex coach” who claims to have detailed insider knowledge of Russian meddling in the US election says she wants to cooperate with US investigators.

The catch? She says the US government needs to grant her political asylum.

Belarus-born Anastasia Vashukevich claims she has proof of Russian interference in the 2016 US election in the form of more than an hour of audio recordings and photos of meetings.

Jailed Russian ‘sex coaches’ offer to trade election info for US asylum – CNN

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Baltimore children feel health impact of neighborhood violence

The kids were growing up in Upton/Druid Heights, where backyard police chases are common and sirens wake up kids like unwelcome alarm clocks at night. Almost every day, in some way, the kids were exposed to violence.

…For every child who is shot, provoking public outrage, there are hundreds of others who hear gunshots or see fights and stabbings in neighborhoods across the city. After the ambulances drive off and the crime scenes are cleared, many of these children are left with deep psychological wounds that can trigger physical ailments.

Studies have piled up showing that in the tangle of tough, intractable issues like poverty and drug addiction, exposure to violence is a major factor damaging children’s health. The stress that fills their little bodies breeds anxiety and depression, making it hard for them to concentrate in school. In fact, research has found that such experiences hurt the development of crucial areas of their brains — those involving attention, memory and behavior control. In the worst cases, children walk around with symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder no different from those plaguing soldiers who have fought on the front lines.

According to one researcher who has long studied these children, nearly a third of children exposed to violence will develop PTSD. As the children age, researchers believe, the impact of violence can translate into serious health problems, including hypertension and diabetes. Some early research shows that stress may even alter their DNA.

…“The science has caught up. You cannot raise a kid with high levels of trauma and violence and expect they can just bounce back,” said Martha Davis, senior program officer at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, which has funded projects in high-crime areas to address the problem. “Now the hard work is: How do we take this information and make systems that work?”

…A man her family knew, 23-year-old Brandon Simms, had been eating crabs in the courtyard about 8 p.m., when another man walked up to him, pulled out a gun and shot him in the leg. As the girl and other neighbors watched from yards away, Simms tried to crawl away. The shooter fired again — this time into Simms’ head.

The girl’s mother, awakened from a nap by the firecracker-like sounds, ran outside. She found her daughter in tears, crouching in the doorway and holding tightly to a younger neighbor. A teenage daughter, who was also outside, ran to a nearby playground and hid in a play tunnel. Terrified, she didn’t move until she heard her mother’s voice calling her.

Bullet holes remain in the sidewalk today — and the impact on the family lingered as well.

…Three years ago, when Promise Heights social workers began their work at Furman L. Templeton and the Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, they found classic symptoms of children stressed by violence.

Students were hypervigilant and suffering from anxiety and depression. Small conflicts blew up into huge fights, and many children had a hard time concentrating. Mundane acts triggered bad memories in kids and sparked tantrums — for example, a child would flinch at a teacher’s gesturing with her hands because it looked like hitting.

…health problems related to societal issues.

The stressed children have worsened asthma. Some need stitches from being beaten up on the way to school. Many have Vitamin D deficiencies because they don’t get enough sunlight — there are few playgrounds, and children are either afraid to be outside, or their parents think it’s safer for them to stay indoors.

Some children are so angry and emotionally numb, Fulton noted, that they never feel afraid. And it’s not surprising, experts say, that in school, many of the children can’t focus for more than 10 minutes.

Some efforts to improve educational outcomes for these kids may have overlooked this crucial factor, noted the University of Maryland’s Mayden. For years, public schools have tried many strategies — new curricula, more professional development for teachers, or changing a principal — without seeing a big improvement in achievement, she said.

…The human body is designed to adapt to stressful situations. In dangerous moments, energy levels rise, the heart pumps faster, and the hormones adrenaline and cortisol kick in. Those changes allow people to run faster and defend themselves. When the situation calms down, the body goes back to normal. Scientists call this the “fight or flight” response.

But for kids in Upton/Druid Heights, where crime and violence are common, this system gets overloaded, because things never really calm down. A distant gunshot. A fight in the courtyard. A memorial of flowers and balloons for a homicide victim. Kids who live in these communities stay in a continuous state of alertness, always prepared for something dangerous to happen — even if they don’t realize it.

Elevated levels of stress hormones can reach toxic levels that have a lifetime effect on health, derailing development of the brain and leading to physical problems, according to research from Harvard University, the Stanford University School of Medicine and other institutions.

…Researchers like Carrion believe that — in a child who can’t sit still in school, or is so agitated that he or she throws a chair — the brain is so busy fending off stress that other key areas don’t develop properly. Carrion’s scans of stressed children found a smaller prefrontal cortex, the part of the brain responsible for executive functions such as attention span, planning and organizing, goal-setting and behavior control. Carrion also gave the stressed children attention and memory tests — and the prefrontal cortex was not as active.

Other brain scan studies showed stunted growth of the hippocampus, which may inhibit a child’s ability to form new memories, learn or control emotions. The symptoms were worse for kids who experienced trauma more directly, Carrion said.

“The more interpersonal it is in terms of family or someone close to you, the more it affects you,” Carrion said. “It’s like being close to the epicenter of the earthquake [rather than] miles away.”

…His research team interviewed more than 700 children at Baltimore Polytechnic Institute and Western, Patterson and Walbrook high schools, all in neighborhoods with violence and other social stressors that he found put some kids on constant alert and caused their blood pressure to rise.

The flight-or-fight response that elevated stress hormones also elevated heart rates in these children, said Ewart, who found the same symptoms in students in Syracuse. Being constantly vigilant to possible dangers for long periods can cause wear and tear on the heart and the blood vessels, Ewart said. He compared it to a badly tuned car engine that runs too fast, burns too much gas, overheats, and requires constant braking. Everything wears out early. In adolescents, the wear and tear of constant stress can lead to hypertension and early heart disease when they are older.

…In the Little Flowers day care, for example, teachers are dimming the lights at different times to help calm the kids, or conducting some activities outside, where sunshine and fresh air may help them focus.

…“While there is enormous potential for traumatized children and families to get help to recover through evidence-based treatments and program strategies, the funding to support their proliferation needs to be far greater than it currently is, given the public health crisis we face,” said Dr. Steven Marans, the director of Yale’s center and the Harris Professor of Child Psychiatry.

But many programs in the Promise Heights initiative have ripple effects. As adults are supported in various ways, they can support the kids. And research has shown that having a bond with an adult is a powerful way for children to overcome the consequences of violence, poverty and other social ills. Even an adult who is not a relative can offer stability.

“Attachment is critical for the child to develop self-regulation of their emotions,” said Belcher, of Kennedy Krieger. “So when you get a little frustrated, you’re resilient, you come back.”

…Amanda Malone-Diel, a University of Maryland graduate student in social work who counseled students at Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, remembers following a kindergartner who ran all over the school — to the first floor, second floor, gym, bathroom and cafeteria. Then one day, the social worker stopped chasing her and simply waited in one spot.

Gradually, the girl started to run back to her counselor. And sometimes, she wouldn’t run at all. Instead, they’d sit together, one hand on chest, one hand on tummy, and breathe. There, amid all the neighborhood troubles, Malone-Diel created an oasis of quiet, a chance to take the student to a more peaceful place, if only for a few minutes.

“One, two, three, breathe,” Malone-Diel said slowly. “One, two, three, breathe.

Baltimore children feel health impact of neighborhood violence – Baltimore Sun

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Children’s Exposure to Violence

Specific brain structures (amygdala, hippocampus, prefrontal cortex) are adversely affected by stress. Executive functions (such as planning, memory, focusing attention, impulse control, and using new information to make decisions) can become impaired. Moreover, children who have had chronic exposure to real or perceived threats may become conditioned to react with fear and anxiety to a broad range of circumstances. Their diminished capacity to differentiate between genuine threats and objectively safe or neutral situations can impair their ability to learn and interact with others, and may lead to serious anxiety disorders.

Children’s Exposure to Violence – Child Trends

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Violent Events Have Long-Term Effects on Children

Everyone responds differently to terror. Like adults, some children are naturally resilient. Others can suffer scars that, untreated, last well into adulthood. Among the repercussions most commonly endured by children exposed to violence are: post-traumatic stress disorder, depression, attachment issues, difficulty concentrating, sleep disorders, suicidal thoughts, alcohol and substance abuse and delinquent behavior.

…Low-income, inner-city youth, like the 300,000 living in Los Angeles’ gang “hot zones,” are at the greatest risk. According to research, 90 percent of these children and teens have been victims or witnesses of felony-level violence. Their scars run deep. A fifth of youth living in these areas suffer from clinical depression and one third have PTSD. In addition, chronic stress from growing up in a violent neighborhood, home or both produces elevated levels of certain chemicals and hormones that are believed to impair brain development in children. Specifically, the areas of the brain impacted are those responsible for learning, memory, concentration and regulating emotions and actions.

… A study conducted in Chicago found that children and teens who lived within 10 blocks of a murder — regardless of whether they witnessed it or knew the victim — had reduced scores on vocabulary and reading tests, when a test was taken within a week of the crime.

…Though violence is substantially more prevalent in low-income neighborhoods, children from all zip codes may be exposed. In fact, nationwide, more than two million young people are estimated to have PTSD. Most people feel fearful, anxious or disorganized after witnessing violence. Individuals with PTSD continue to feel that way for extended periods of time, ranging from months to years. Their symptoms are debilitating and include emotional numbing and detachment, increased arousal, trouble sleeping and nightmares.

…In very young children, PTSD can cause regressive behavior like bedwetting and thumb sucking. These children also may stop speaking and become excessively clingy to a parent. They don’t necessarily experience flashbacks like adults, but often act out the violent event during play.

Violent Events Have Long-Term Effects on Children | HuffPost

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Youth Radio: How Does Gun Violence Affect You and Your Community?

Gun violence poses a serious threat to U.S. teens and their communities. Many young people are surrounded by constant reminders of that threat– from hearing the pop-pop-pop of gunshots at night to losing friends and family members to shootings.

Being exposed to gun violence can have a deep impact on kids, including aggression, insomnia, depression, anxiety and post-traumatic stress. Some researchers say that schools should do more to proactively equip young people with ways to cope, especially in neighborhoods with high rates of violence.

…Maya’s story is a reminder that gun violence doesn’t only affect direct victims and perpetrators. Bystanders, loved ones, and friends who witness shootings–even when no one gets physically hurt–can carry that experience with them, and can benefit from programs designed to help young people feel, and actually be, safe in their homes and communities.

DISCUSSION: How Does Gun Violence Affect You and Your Community? – Youth Radio

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Understanding How Community Violence and Trauma Impact Teens

Adolescence is a critical period for brain development and trauma experienced during those years can be particularly harmful to an adolescent’s future development. When a child or adolescent experiences a traumaic event, such as witnessing violence, the brain initiates a stress response—a response originally developed for survival needs that triggers changes in behaviors. A student who has experienced trauma may display “fight or flight” behaviors, such as bullying other students or rushing out of class when confronted by a teacher, or detachment behaviors, such as isolating himself or herself from adults and peers or being disengaged during class.

As individuals become more physically able to protect themselves or run away, their predominant stress response changes to maximize their chances of surviving a threat. Consequently, adolescents exposed to trauma are more likely to respond with “fight or flight” behaviors than younger children. Furthermore, youth who have experienced trauma may distrust authority figures such as teachers and parents because they perceive the traumatic event as a failure of authority figures to keep them safe. However, including a trauma-exposed adolescent in a secure relationship with adults can buffer the effects of the traumatic event and allow the teen to cope and return to a sense of safety and well-being.

…Depending on the degree of trauma a student has experienced, it may take considerable time before that student returns to his or her normal behavior.

Understanding How Community Violence and Trauma Impact Teens | Alliance For Excellent Education

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The Consequences of Exposure to Violence during Early Childhood

We also show that exposure to violence has a strong relationship with a host of undesirable later outcomes, and that relationship tends to be the same regardless of race, household income, mother’s educational attainment, or family structure.

…Perhaps the most basic feature of anyone’s environment, but especially a child’s, is personal security. When exposed to violence, all other concerns take a back seat to ensuring personal security—whether in terms of economic development or personal development. …Elijah Anderson’s urban ethnography documented that the state’s provision of personal security can break down in many poor, segregated, African American neighborhoods, and he showed how this breakdown creates especially difficult environments for young males to navigate (Anderson, 1999).

…Regressions on the data show that black males are much more likely to carry a gun, attack someone, or belong to a gang at age 16 when they have been exposed to violence during early childhood (table 2). This difference changes very little when controlling for household income, mother’s educational attainment, and family structure. The association for white males is very similar, and for some risky behaviors is even stronger than for black young males.

…We can think of at least two obvious ways that exposure to violence could negatively affect a child’s development. First is the direct effect: The stress caused by exposure to violence has major negative consequences on children’s development through the physiological reaction our bodies have to such stress (See the discussion in chapter 1 of Tough, 2012).

Second is the indirect effect operating through expectations. One set of expectations pertains to children’s beliefs about how they will interact with other people and the type of society in which they live. Another set of expectations is defined by how children perceive their own futures. Consider that adults entering retirement can accurately forecast their survival probabilities (Hurd and McGarry 1995) and make choices reflecting those forecasts (Hurd, Smith, and Zissimopoulos, 2004). A young male might make very different decisions when facing a 1 in 20 chance of dying by age 30 rather than a 1 in 50 chance.

The Consequences of Exposure to Violence during Early Childhood

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Experts Describe Long-Term Impacts of Exposure to Gun Violence on the Young Brain

The possible long-term impacts of high levels of stress in early life are emerging in large-scale correlational studies, and the biological mechanisms that may be at work are being studied in animal models such as mice, rats and macaque monkeys.

…Cameron has studied how the stress of growing up in unsettled, sometimes violent circumstances affects the development of young brains and increases the risk for destructive behavior and long-term health problems in adult life. Cameron and Earls emphasized that early intervention, both at the community and the personal levels, can make an important difference in a child’s life prospects.

…Childhood experiences, both good and bad, can affect the developing architecture of the brain. …Experiences and environment also determine whether neural circuits involved with motor skills, behavior control, memory and other functions form robustly. Experiences also can influence gene expression in the developing brain by affecting the production of proteins that bind to DNA in the neurons, Cameron said. Scientists are just starting to understand such “epigenetic” factors in brain development.

When the body’s response to stress — the rush of adrenaline, the increase in heart rate, the elevation of certain hormone levels — is constantly active, Cameron said, the result is “toxic stress” that can reduce the number of neural connections in the cognitive areas of the brain at a time when they should be proliferating.

…Communities were being described by race and class, Earls said, but his team wanted to know how they functioned: Are children exposed to good supervision? Would neighbors intervene if they saw children skipping school or spray-painting graffiti on a wall? Or showing disrespect to an adult?

The most important influence on a neighborhood’s crime rate, the researchers found, was the neighbors’ sense of “agency” or willingness to intervene on behalf of the common good. Based on detailed interviews with 8,782 residents representing each of the 343 neighborhoods in the study, the researchers were able to assign a “collective efficacy” value for each neighborhood. That combined measure of informal social control, cohesion and trust proved to be a robust predictor of lower violence rates in a neighborhood.

…”We found that collective efficacy was, indeed, operating as a protective factor,” he said.

The researchers also found that the benefits of collective efficacy go beyond easing violence. It also seems to be associated with more use of parks and recreational spaces in neighborhoods, initiation of sexual activity at later ages among youths, and even less obesity and fewer admissions to hospitals for asthma attacks. While such findings are based on correlations rather than cause-and-effect, the study does suggest that the general welfare of a neighborhood improves when people have a greater sense of social control.

…”When given an opportunity which is structured and self-guided and responsible and dignifies and respects children, there is a tremendous opportunity to curb the bad influences and produce more positive outcomes,” [Earls said.]

Experts Describe Long-Term Impacts of Stress on the Young Brain | AAAS – The World’s Largest General Scientific Society

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Emotional and Behavioral Impact of Exposure to Community Violence in Inner-City Adolescents: Journal of Clinical Child & Adolescent Psychology: Vol 30, No 2

Youth with high levels of community violence exposure reported more fears, anxiety, internalizing behavior, and negative life experiences than those with low exposure. No depression or externalizing behavior differences were observed. In a psychophysiological assessment in which adolescents watched a montage of media violence, youth exposed to high levels of community violence had lower baseline heart rates than those with low exposure. There were no between-group differences in physiologic reactivity. Regression analyses revealed that community violence exposure predicted post-traumatic stress and separation anxiety symptoms. The results suggest a significant link between community violence exposure and anxiety symptomatology.

Emotional and Behavioral Impact of Exposure to Community Violence in Inner-City Adolescents: Journal of Clinical Child & Adolescent Psychology: Vol 30, No 2

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The Impact of Gun Violence on Children, Families, & Communities

Victims of these tragedies are not limited to those men, women, and children killed, injured, or present during these horrific events. The consequences of gun violence are more pervasive and affect entire communities, families, and children. With more than 25% of children witnessing an act of violence in their homes, schools, or community over the past year, and more than 5% witnessing a shooting, it becomes not just an issue of gun regulation, but also of addressing the impact on those who have been traumatized by such violence (Finkelhor et al., 2009).

…The consequences of exposure to violence on child development are very real. Youth exposed to chronic trauma can experience inhibited brain development, producing a lasting impact on life outcomes. Likely a result of such exposure, participants noted numerous skill deficits among the children and youth they serve who live in neighborhoods that have high rates of poverty and crime. …Much of this violence and aggression is further exacerbated by emotional overload from exposure to violence. Children and youth exposed to violence experience significant stress, and often struggle to identify and regulate their emotions, as a result of developmental impacts from their frequent exposure to trauma.

The Impact of Gun Violence on Children, Families, & Communities – CWLA

In terms of the impact of gun violence on children, families, and communities…

Focusing on the few who might reproduce the violence is akin to missing the forest for the trees here.

Gun Violence Facts and Statistics

– In a November 2017 review of mass shootings in the U.S., 95 mass shootings have occurred since 1982, from which approximately 76 semi-automatic handguns and 85 assault weapons and weapons with high magazine capacity were recovered.

– In 2017 alone, 11 mass shootings in the US caused 117 fatalities and 587 injuries occuring in concert, religious, workplace, airport, and shopping venues and in community.

– States that restrict assault weapons also have the lowest per capita homicide rates.

– Researchers from Harvard School of Public Health demonstrated that from 1982 to 2011, mass shootings occurred every 200 days on average. Since late 2011, they found, mass shootings have occurred at triple that rate—every 64 days on average.

– Federal legislation passed in 1997 stated that “none of the funds made available for injury prevention and control at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) may be used to advocate or promote gun control.” The vague nature of this law, and its 2011 extension to the National Institutes of Health, has effectively prevented federal funding for firearms-related research.

– In 2013, following the Sandy Hook shooting, former President Barack Obama issued an executive order calling for the CDC to “conduct or sponsor research into the causes of gun violence and the ways to prevent it”. Despite this and without specific appropriations from U.S. Congress, new research proposals remain unfunded.

Gun Violence: Facts and Statistics | Violence Prevention Initiative

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How does exposure to gun violence affect kids and teens?

On average, 17,499 children and teens are shot per year in murders, assaults, suicides and suicide attempts, unintentional shootings, or by police intervention; 2,677 of these children die.

– 1,671 children and teens are murdered.
– 827 children and teens kill themselves.
– 124 children and teens are killed unintentionally.
– 24 are killed [via] police [involvement.]
– 30 die but the intent was unknown.

…Exposure to gun violence leaves scars. Research has shown that exposure to gun violence can traumatize children and youth both physically and emotionally by causing:

– Psychological problems including intrusive thoughts, sleep disturbances, anger, withdrawal and aggression; in some cases, post-traumatic stress disorder
– Difficulty concentrating in the classroom, decline in academic performance, and lower educational and career goals
– Increased delinquency, substance abuse, and risky sexual behaviors
– Desensitization to violence
– “Protective behaviors,” such as joining a gang or arming themselves with guns or knives

How does exposure to gun violence affect kids and teens? – Philly

Oh for the love of Pete! Enough with the attempting to make spurious correlation between gun violence and exposure to violent media already….

Wouldn’t a more direct correlation to exposure to gun violence itself be more obvious?! Or perhaps take a look at socio-economic and cultural patterns surrounding high rates of gun violence?

Nope,  blame popular media. If this was a hundred years ago they would be blaming sordid literature. …And they still wouldn’t be anywhere closer to seeing the big picture. Such an obnoxiously lazy impulse on the part of pop-literati .

Gun Violence Studies, etc.

In some communities, gun violence is a rare and alarming occurrence. In others, it’s just a fact of life.

…In one study of urban youth, 42 percent reported having seen someone shot or knifed and 22 percent reported having seen someone killed. Indirect exposure through the sound of gunfire is only now being explored.

…What kind of damage does this do to young people? Exposure to gun violence has been linked to a variety of psychological challenges like anger and dissociation, anxiety and depression, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). It can also affect youth in the classroom, making it difficult for them to concentrate in class and damaging their academic performance and educational or career aspirations. [emphasis: mine]

… Crime encourages urban flight, which can impose a wide range of social costs on families who leave the city, from longer commutes to distance from family and friends. For those who stay, violent crime can impose tangible costs by reducing housing values and community investment, making it difficult to build wealth.

Raising the Voices of Gun Violence

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Gun violence and American kids

Government data and academic research on children and gun violence show that the young people of the United States are at disturbing risk of getting shot — by other children, by their parents, by themselves, by strangers.

…Nineteen kids a day killed or hurt by guns that were too easy to access; 135,000 students studying in schools where shots have rung out; hundreds of millions of dollars spent on medical treatment to save young lives.

…On average, 1,300 children die and nearly 5,800 are treated for gunshot wounds each year, according to a July 2017 study from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. As The Trace’s Elizabeth Van Brocklin put it, that’s “at least two Little League lineups worth of children” shot every 24 hours.

…Among wealthy, industrialized countries, 91 percent of children under 15 killed by guns die in the United States. The same report found that young Americans (ages 15 to 24) are 49 times more likely to die by gun than their peers in other high-income countries.

…For African-American boys between the ages of 10 and 14, homicide is the second-leading cause of death, at 11 percent. That proportion more than quadruples as this cohort ages: 49 percent of deaths of African-American males between 15 and 19 are homicides — more than the next nine leading causes of death combined. Their white counterparts die from homicides in less than 8 percent of deaths.

Nearly 70 percent of all homicides in 2014 were “firearm homicides,” which means that roughly 34 percent of African-American males who die between the ages of 15 and 19 are killed by a gun.

14 stunning facts that show how gun violence hurts American kids – Business Insider

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How Gun Violence Literally Infects Communities

More than 11,000 Americans are killed in assaults involving guns annually, and at least 50,000 more are injured. Among people between the ages of 15 and 24, nine of every 100,000 lives end due to a gun homicide. About 65 of every 100,000 people in this age group are injured by gun assaults every year.

…Diseases that spread through social connections follow a different pattern from airborne colds or food-borne illnesses, in which contagion among strangers is more common. Papachristos postulated that subjecting gun violence to a traditional epidemiologic study would reveal whether it indeed behaves like a blood-borne pathogen.

…Having identified a network of gun violence, the researchers used a mathematical model to examine whether the spread adhered to known patterns of social contagion. …The model assumed that closeness mattered—“You’re more likely to influence a friend than a friend of a friend,” says Green—and that exposure risk, meaning a gun violence victim infecting someone else, diminished over time.

…The Chicago shootings included in the study occurred, on average, every 85 days, lending further support to the notion of gun violence as an infectious disease. Those 85 days suggest an incubation period, the time between a host becoming infected and a symptom appearing. Repeat gunshot events often occur within hours, says Gary Slutkin, infectious disease physician at the University of Illinois and adviser to the World Health Organization, who was among the first public health experts to see violence as a pathogen. But the short time frame in which people moved from being a friend of a new victim to a victim themselves—just a few months—was surprising.

How Gun Violence Literally Infects Communities

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Mississippi’s Thad Cochran to resign from Senate

First elected to the Senate in 1978 after a stint in the House, Cochran is one of the longest-serving members of Congress in history. He is the chairman of the Appropriations Committee, a powerful panel with jurisdiction over government spending. When he steps down, the chairmanship is expected to pass to Sen. Richard C. Shelby (R-Ala.), who is next in the line of seniority.

…Republicans hold a 51-to-49 advantage over Democrats, who are facing a tough map on which they are defending 10 seats in states President Trump won. But Trump’s unpopularity and controversies, combined with headwinds that any president’s party historically faces in a first midterm, have given Democrats hope of seizing back control of the upper chamber.

…Cochran’s resignation marks another step in the passing from a more genteel, bipartisan climate in the Senate, especially on the Appropriations Committee, to an era of partisan frenzy.

…“He’s the old school,” said Sen. Patrick J. Leahy (Vt.), the ranking Democrat on the committee, who frequently traveled the globe with Cochran on congressional delegations. “He has always, always, always kept his word, and I wish to heck some other senators around here would learn to do that.”

Mississippi’s Thad Cochran to resign from Senate after four-decade congressional career – The Washington Post

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The Trump Administration’s Fish and Wildlife Service Reverses Ban On Endangered Game Trophies

In a formal memorandum issued on Thursday, FWS said it will withdraw its 2017 Endangered Species Act (ESA) findings for trophies of African elephants from Zimbabwe and Zambia, “effective immediately.”

…The service also announced it is withdrawing a number of previous ESA findings, which date back to 1995, related to trophies of African elephants, bontebok and lions from multiple African countries.

…Nine days before FWS added the reversal to the Federal Register, the Interior Department announced that it was establishing an International Wildlife Conservation Council to “advise the Secretary of the Interior on the benefits that international recreational hunting has on foreign wildlife and habitat conservation.”

Trump to consider elephant trophy imports on ‘case-by-case’ basis | TheHill

Because assholes.

Sam Nunberg Talks a Lot of Shit and Changes His Mind About Whether or Not He Has To Release His Emails

Near the end of the wide-ranging interview, Burnett again referenced speculation about Nunberg’s mental state and said she noticed the smell of alcohol on his breath. Nunberg denied he had had anything to drink.

“My answer is no, I have not,” Nunberg said.

Nunberg denied being on anything else either.

“Besides my meds, antidepressants, is that OK?” Nunberg said.

Sam Nunberg: ‘I’m not going to get sent to prison’ – CNNPolitics

But his emails!

Police evict Trump staff from Panama hotel amid ongoing dispute

More than a dozen police wearing bulletproof vests entered the lobby of the Trump International Hotel in Panama on Monday morning and evicted the Trump Organization’s staff, a move that comes after weeks of simmering tensions over control of the property.

…Trump employees …allegedly took some of the building’s computer equipment with them.

…“I am the owner,” said Orestes Fintiklis, who last year obtained control over more than 200 units in the tower, as police and Trump employees pushed and shoved one another. “Love and peace!”

…Fintiklis has argued in documents filed in a U.S. court in Florida that the Trump Organization had mismanaged the property, causing occupancy levels “to collapse” and expenses to “bloat.”

“Operators gross incompetence and deficient sales organization stands in the way of [the] owner making any profit on its investment, all the while lining the [Trump Organization’s] pockets,” he alleged in a court filing.

…Fintiklis gained access to the tower’s main office late Monday morning. The colorful property owner told reporters he would not be commenting about the morning’s actions at this point. He then played a song on the piano for the gathered onlookers with lyrics that, when translated, said, “Fascism will not prevail.”

The Trump name was removed from the outside of the building shortly thereafter.

Police evict Trump staff from Panama hotel amid ongoing dispute – ABC News

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