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Politics
American Politics
Police officer hiring in US increases in 2023 after years of decline, survey shows
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<blockquote data-quote="rambot" data-source="post: 77659905" data-attributes="member: 145797"><p>Yeah. The chicken and egg thing is definitely a part of it...and it's tricky because every single situation is different. For some tremendous anxiety (or, say, schizophrenia) makes it impossible to keep a job (leading to poverty) and that can lead to other health issues. </p><p></p><p>But some people may just lose a great job and then have health issues too. I was talking to a homeless dude I decided to help while doing grocery shopping. He told me he was a lawyer (and judging by his diction and vocabulary, I DO NOT doubt it) and then he got into a bad, bad accident and had health issues. Then he got addicted to his painkillers and boom; out on the street. And surprise, now he has tonnes of mental health issues though he's completely cleaned himself up because living on the street is terribly dangerous.</p><p></p><p></p><p>You had wonderful parents who should be congratulated. One of my student has a parent that is a chronic oversharer (which feeds into his anxiety too). It bugs me when poor parents saddle their kids with their own worries.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Honestly, have loving, caring, attentive parents is THE most important part of the equation. But poverty often affects parents' ability to do those things well.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Certain things yes. But epigenetics is only part of the question: "Predisposition" is a common word to be associated. The environment has a HUUUUUUUUGE effect on whether specific genes may get expressed or not (like my student with the schizophrenic mother).</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>Out of curiousity, when you were dirty, ditty dirt dirt poor, did you family have books in the house and did yo uread those books (or did you read them with your folks?) OR did your wife?</p><p>I KNOW I have at least 3 or 6 kids in my class who do not have a SINGLE book in their home (please....do NOT get me started)....and I find that one of the most depressing thoughts. NOt a single book.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="rambot, post: 77659905, member: 145797"] Yeah. The chicken and egg thing is definitely a part of it...and it's tricky because every single situation is different. For some tremendous anxiety (or, say, schizophrenia) makes it impossible to keep a job (leading to poverty) and that can lead to other health issues. But some people may just lose a great job and then have health issues too. I was talking to a homeless dude I decided to help while doing grocery shopping. He told me he was a lawyer (and judging by his diction and vocabulary, I DO NOT doubt it) and then he got into a bad, bad accident and had health issues. Then he got addicted to his painkillers and boom; out on the street. And surprise, now he has tonnes of mental health issues though he's completely cleaned himself up because living on the street is terribly dangerous. You had wonderful parents who should be congratulated. One of my student has a parent that is a chronic oversharer (which feeds into his anxiety too). It bugs me when poor parents saddle their kids with their own worries. Honestly, have loving, caring, attentive parents is THE most important part of the equation. But poverty often affects parents' ability to do those things well. Certain things yes. But epigenetics is only part of the question: "Predisposition" is a common word to be associated. The environment has a HUUUUUUUUGE effect on whether specific genes may get expressed or not (like my student with the schizophrenic mother). Out of curiousity, when you were dirty, ditty dirt dirt poor, did you family have books in the house and did yo uread those books (or did you read them with your folks?) OR did your wife? I KNOW I have at least 3 or 6 kids in my class who do not have a SINGLE book in their home (please....do NOT get me started)....and I find that one of the most depressing thoughts. NOt a single book. [/QUOTE]
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Police officer hiring in US increases in 2023 after years of decline, survey shows
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