this post was submitted on 27 Dec 2024
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[–] catloaf@lemm.ee 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

Some of both, I think. Plus brain damage from lead poisoning and similar factors (at least in the US, I don't know about leaded gas and paint in the rest of the world). I don't know if it's been studied yet, but I suspect that nonfatal COVID infections also had an impact on brain function. And the whole social aspect of the pandemic surely had an effect on behavior, but then that ties back to your point about media.

But food scarcity isn't exactly a manufactured problem. We do have a surplus of food in places like the US, and a deficit in places like impoverished Africa, but to connect the two is a logistics problem. You can't get the food there before it spoils. What should really happen is that local farmers should be empowered to grow sustainable crops locally... but in most of those places, the bulk of money and resources are stolen by corrupt local governments.

[–] derekabutton@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Ancient people used lead dishware for millenia. I honestly don't think any modern lead poisoning is new or worse than it has been in most of the world. Id buy it if lead poisoning for the common person was more likely now, but there is no chance it is more severe with all of the regulations most of the world has today.

Yes, perhaps global food scarcity is less manufactured than I made it out to be. I agree with that solution, too. But the fact that people in the "richest" country in the world are dying of hunger is downright despicable, and there is no doubt that it is manufactured here in the US. We have the food and the owning class lets it rot so they can have cheaper servants.

From what I've come to understand, local governments are your friend. It's the corporations running a train on them that messes up money allocation! Not to mention investors coming in and buying up swathes of land and using all of the public water for their alfalfa in the desert

[–] phcorcoran@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago

Well, organometallic molecules are famously way more dangerous to us (e.g. mercury vs dimethylmercury), so it's not really controversial to say that pumping tons of tetraethyl lead directly into the air people breathe may have been worse than whatever can leach out of lead pipes or dishware.

Now that leaded gasoline is mostly phased out (except for avgas), I imagine the prevalence of lead poisoning will settle closer to what it may have been a millennia ago