Every story like this I view as a societal failure
We (society) fail them
Identification and lack of treatments for brain health and behavioral issues
Child development
Lack of education
Lack of focus on mental health
The stress our profit motive society puts people under
The biological and environmental effects on our DNA and neural development is hardly discussed in media.
Never society's fault just another "bad" guy or "crazy" never what led to this.
Every one of these "losers" or "psychos" were a result of the influence of society (behavioral or environmental) or biological DNA that had errors from contaminants along they way or a combination of both.
We should have systems in place to identify and treat people early
And provide the resources to their parents to help them develop their children to be the best adults they can be.
Parents by themselves can not do everything and cannot overcome an unhealthy society's influence or unhealthy unbalanced brain chemistry.
The effects of an economic system that is one-dimensional (profit) cannot be overstated on the health and well-being of the people living under it.
Brain health
DNA health
Are an afterthought
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Have you ever thought what your life would be like if all your basic needs were taken care of.
What would you do with your time in that hypothetical world?
Just take a few minutes to imagine a different world.
Not a utopia just a balanced sustainable society where we lived cooperatively not competitively.
Health in all forms was a priority
Living in a healthy balance with nature was always a top priority
Education was redesigned to promote imagination and creativity.
Education cost was built into society with no cost to students.
Research was funded collectively not based on what research could be monetized
You know what else kills birds a destroyed and polluted ecosystem from non-renewable energy.
One day Fusion hopefully energy can solve all the energy production issues if we do not destroy ourselves by then.
Yet neither viewpoint captures the full picture, because the debate is complicated by a looming factor: If climate change continues apace, hundreds of North American bird species' ranges will shrink by at least half by 2100, according to Audubon's models.