Guns, Germs, and Drugs Are Largely Responsible for the Decline in U.S. Life Expectancy
The Washington Post hectors Congress to make U.S. life expectancy a "political priority."

"America has a life expectancy crisis," asserted a recent headline in The Washington Post. Why a crisis? Because American average life expectancy has been flat and then declining for the past decade or so.
One bit of recent good news: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported in November that average life expectancy at birth in 2022 was 77.5 years. While that is down from its 2014 peak of 78.8 years, the CDC notes that this is a post-pandemic increase of 1.1 years from its nadir of 76.1 years in 2021. The increase from 2021 to 2022, according to the CDC, "primarily resulted from decreases in mortality due to COVID-19, heart disease, unintentional injuries, cancer, and homicide. Declines in COVID-19 mortality accounted for approximately 84% of the increase in life expectancy." While the big recent dip in American life expectancy was largely the result of the ravages of the COVID pandemic, the trend over the prior 10 years was basically flat.

The Post article correctly noted that "the United States [was] increasingly falling behind other nations well before the pandemic."

The Post asked numerous members of Congress, including all 100 Senators, what they thought about falling life expectancy. While many replied that it was a serious problem, the article concluded that it "is not a political priority." The Post did acknowledge that "there also is no single strategy to turn it around." Politics being the art of the possible, there is little that politicians can do at this point in biomedical history to significantly increase average life expectancy.
Public health efforts beginning the the late 19th century to provide access to clean water and improved sanitation, improve food safety, and champion widespread vaccination against infectious microbes were chiefly responsible for the increase in average American life expectancy from just 47 years in 1900 to the mid-70s in that late 20th century. "In 1900, one in 40 Americans died annually. By 2013, that rate was roughly one in 140, a cumulative improvement of more than two thirds," reported a 2016 analysis by University of Pennsylvania researchers.
Today the leading causes of the deaths that mainly afflict older Americans are cardiovascular diseases, cancers, unintentional injuries, lower respiratory illnesses, and diabetes. Nostrums prescribed by politicians are not likely to have much effect on them.

Among other policies, the Post reported that many of the public health officials and lawmakers with which it spoke decried, "a health-care payment system that does not reward preventive care." And why not? After all, an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure, right? Not necessarily, according to a comprehensive analysis of preventive care studies published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) in 2021. "General health checks were not associated with reduced mortality or cardiovascular events," noted the researchers. This bolstered the findings of a similar analysis in 2019 by researchers associated with the non-profit medical evidence review collaborative Cochrane that concluded that "health checks have little or no effect on total mortality."
The Post article also suggested that fighting between congressional Democrats and Republicans has stymied "legislation linked to gains in life expectancy, including efforts to expand access to health coverage and curb access to guns." As it turns out, various studies over the past two decades have calculated that lack of health insurance is associated with only a slightly higher risk of death.
A 2009 study in the American Journal of Public Health reported estimates that the lack of health insurance among Americans ages 25 to 65 may have been responsible for between 18,000 and 45,000 (0.8 to 1.8 percent) of deaths annually. At the time, 46 million Americans under the age of 65 were uninsured; by 2023 that had dropped to 23 million. As health insurance coverage increased, U.S. life expectancy stagnated and then fell.
What about guns? Unfortunately, the trends in both the rate and absolute number of firearm deaths—homicides, suicides, and accidents—have been upward over the past decade. The rate of firearm deaths hovered around 15 per 100,000 during the 1970s and 1980s and began to fall in the mid-1990s, reaching its lowest point at 10 per 100,000 in 2004.

The rate of firearm mortality in the U.S. remained slightly over 10 per 100,000 over the next decade when in 2014 it began to rise, hitting in 2021 14.6 per 100,000, a rate last seen in the bad old days of the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s.
Deaths from suicide have consistently been greater than those from homicide. In 2022, for example, the number of people who killed themselves using firearms reached 26,993 whereas those killed by others numbered 19,592. Most gun deaths occur at earlier ages, thus proportionately lowering the U.S. population's overall life expectancy. A 2018 study in BMJ Evidence-Based Medicine calculated that firearm deaths between 2000 and 2016 reduced U.S. average life expectancy by 2.48 years. The researchers argued that other health gains during that period masked this countervailing downward life expectancy trend. And it does coincide with the slow-down in life expectancy increase that began around 2010.
What could politicians do about this? Setting aside constitutional issues, a 2023 comprehensive analysis of various policies aiming to reduce gun violence by researchers at the RAND Corporation think tank found relatively weak evidence that any of them worked all that well. For example, with respect to reducing violent crime, the evidence for the efficacy of policies such as banning assault weapons, imposing firearm safety training requirements, and requiring licenses and permits was inconclusive. Supportive evidence did, however, suggest that child access prevention laws could reduce youth suicides, accidents, and some violent crime deaths; and limits on concealed carry and stand-your-ground laws might reduce violent crime deaths.
The Post reported that some politicians pointed to the rising death toll from "lethal drug overdoses" as a significant factor in declining U.S. life expectancy. The Post did, however, acknowledge that drug deaths "are not solely responsible for the decline in life expectancy." It is worth noting that opioid overdose deaths began truly soaring after 2010 when users turned to illicit heroin and fentanyl after the introduction of Food and Drug Administration–approved abuse-deterrent formulations.

So how much do drug overdose deaths contribute to the recent decline in U.S. life expectancy? A 2021 comprehensive review of factors affecting mortality trends in the U.S. between 1999 and 2018 found that average life expectancy would "have been 0.3 years greater were it not for increases in unintentional drug poisoning." In a 2023 preprint article, two Johns Hopkins University researchers calculated that opioid overdose deaths between 2019 and 2021 reduced U.S. life expectancy by 0.65 years. If politicians and policy makers really want to make increasing life expectancy a priority, one huge step would be to actually end the war on drugs. A cease-fire in the drug war would likely reduce gun deaths too.
The fact that Americans have been getting fatter has also contributed to the recent stalling of and then decline in U.S. life expectancy. A 2022 preprint by researchers associated with Oxford University and the University of Texas Austin calculates that properly accounted mortality from obesity is perhaps cutting U.S. life expectancy by 1.7 years.

In a 2023 working paper, Socio-Behavioral Factors Contributing to Recent Mortality Trends in the United States, a team of demographers observed with considerable understatement that "hundreds of factors affect levels of mortality in every population." They nevertheless gamely sought to identify possible factors for the changes in U.S. adult mortality over the period 1997–2019, using data from the National Health Interview Surveys (NHIS) for years 1997–2018. The variables they examined included alcohol consumption, cigarette smoking, health insurance coverage, educational attainment, mental distress, obesity, and race/ethnicity.
Among other things, the authors, in line with earlier studies, concluded that "changes in health care coverage, as measured here, had a negligible effect" on U.S. life expectancy trends over the past two decades. The two biggest factors they identified as affecting U.S. life expectancy trends were that "mortality falls with rising educational attainment" while "increasing mental distress contributed to the stagnation of mortality improvement." Between 1997 and 2019, the percentage of college graduates rose from 24 percent to 36 percent of the U.S. population age 25 and above. Research consistently shows that college graduates tend to be less obese, smoke less, and eat better. Rising mental distress among NHIS participants as measured using the K-6 scale, especially after 2008, correlated with increasing mortality rates.
The nine-year difference in adult life expectancy between those Americans who are college graduates and those who are not is particularly striking.

However, the U.S. is not alone with respect to differential socioeconomic life expectancy outcomes. Even countries famed for their government-run universal health care systems such as France experience them. For example, the European Commission's 2019 country health profile of France reports that life expectancy for men and women in the top 5 percent of income is 84.4 and 88.3 years compared to those in the bottom 5 percent, which average 71.7 years and 80 years, respectively. This correspondingly results in male and female socioeconomic life expectancy gaps of 13 years and 8 years. The report notes that the gap in longevity can be explained at least partly by differences in education and living standards.
In the Post article, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I–Vt.) says that achieving Norway's average life expectancy of 83 years should be our goal. It is worth noting that the life expectancy of adult American college graduates is 83.3 years, three years higher than the 80.3 years average for the relatively well-off countries that are members of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.
A 2019 report from the Norwegian Institute of Public Health compared the average life expectancies of that country's richest 1 percent with its poorest 1 percent. The report noted that "the differences in life expectancy between the one per cent richest and one per cent poorest in Norway were 14 years for men and 8 years for women." A 2016 study in the JAMA reported essentially the same gap between America's richest and poorest citizens. "The gap in life expectancy between the richest 1% and poorest 1% of individuals was 14.6 years for men and 10.1 years for women," observed the researchers in JAMA.
"It has surprised researchers and policy makers that even with a largely tax-funded public health care system and relatively evenly distributed income, there are substantial differences in life expectancy by income in Norway," said Dr. Jonas Minet Kinge, senior researcher at the Norwegian Institute of Public Health, in a press release about the report.
So why did U.S. life expectancy trends slow and then peak in 2014? And what, if anything, can policy makers and politicians realistically do to make increasing it a priority? As noted above, the big recent dip largely resulted from the COVID-19 pandemic. A 2023 Scientific Reports article "estimated that US life expectancy at birth dropped by 3.08 years due to the million COVID-19 deaths" between February 2020 and May 2022. But let's set aside that steep post-2020 downtick in life expectancy resulting from nearly 1.2 million Americans dying of COVID-19 infections.
A 2020 study in Health Affairs chiefly attributed the 3.3-year increase in U.S. life expectancy between 1990 and 2015 to public health, better pharmaceuticals, and improvements in medical care. By public health, the authors meant such things as campaigns to reduce smoking, increase cancer screenings and seat belt usage, improve auto and traffic safety, and increase awareness of the danger of stomach sleep for infants. With respect to pharmaceuticals, they cited the significant reduction in cardiovascular diseases that resulted from the introduction of effective drugs to lower cholesterol and blood pressure.
So a big part of what propelled increases in U.S. life expectancy is the fact that the percentage of Americans who smoke has fallen from 43 percent in the 1970s to 16 percent now. Smoking is associated with higher risks of cardiovascular diseases and cancers, rates of which have been dropping for decades. In addition, the rising percentage of Americans who are college graduates correlated with increasing life expectancy.
However, since the 2004 peak, countervailing increases in the death rates from drug overdoses, firearms, traffic accidents, and diseases associated with obesity contributed to the flattening of U.S. life expectancy trends.
A 2021 comprehensive analysis of the recent stagnation and decline in U.S. life expectancy in the Annual Review of Public Health (ARPH) largely concurs, finding that "the proximate causes of the decline are increases in opioid overdose deaths, suicide, homicide, and Alzheimer's disease." Interestingly, the U.S. trend in Alzheimer's disease prevalence has been downward since 2011. In addition, the ARPH review noted that "a slowdown in the long-term decline in mortality from cardiovascular diseases has also prevented life expectancy from improving further." So enabling and persuading more properly diagnosed Americans to take blood pressure and cholesterol-lowering medications would likely boost overall life expectancy.
Hectoring members of Congress to make increasing life expectancy a "political priority" does not change the fact that there simply are no "silver bullet" policies available for achieving that goal.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Tranny suicides number four?
Only because fat fucks are a protected class.
Wasn't Tranny Suicides a late 70s artcore band?
Fortunately, this problem seems concentrated in can't-keep-up communities inhabited by bitter clingers -- half-educated, bigots, superstitious, economically inadequate, right-wing culture war casualties.
You’re not even half-educated you malformed homunculus.
I'm making $90 an hour working from home. I never imagined that it was honest to goodness yet my closest companion is earning 16,000 US dollars a month by working on the connection, that was truly astounding for me, she prescribed for me to attempt it simply. Everybody must try this job now by just using this website... http://www.Payathome9.com
Nobody projects little-dick energy as passionately as you do, Reverend. Enjoy your jar of pruno.
Faux libertarian misfits get to whine as much as they like, but this acceleration of the replacement of right-wing slack-jaws is nothing to lament.
Look at Artie touting a racist conspiracy
It's not obesity and heart disease?
All of those people killing themselves with firearms makes guns look much scarier.
Guns don't kill people. Guns kill failures and scumbags.
Bailey is trying to be cute. Heart attack at 45 as a 400 lb jeff has less effect on expectancy than a 24 year old committing suicide.
It was the first and only time the county coroner found a milk dud blocking an artery.
I’m sure allowing millions of illegal immigrants, many who have never been vaccinated against anything, to enter the country will improve things.
Do I have to read this whole post in exacting detail to square the circle of the leading causes of death:
Heart Disease
Cancer
Unintentional Injury
COVID-19 (lol)
Stroke
Chronic lower respiratory diseases
Alzheimer
Diabetes
Kidney Disease
Chronic Liver disease
and... guns being the top 3?
Medical mistakes is number three. Trust the experts.
He said COVID-19.
The thing is, the leading causes of death are not the same things as the leading causes of lower/higher life expectancy, because life expectancy is an average.
If out of ten people, nine live to 80 and die of Alzheimer's, and one lives to 20 and dies of a gunshot wound, the most common cause of death is Alzheimer's, and life expectancy of the group is 74. If you completely eradicate Alzheimer's, such that out of the ten people, nine live to 81 and die of stroke, while that tenth still dies at 20 from a gunshot wound, you'll manage to increase life expectancy to 74.9, +0.9 years.
On the other hand, if you completely eliminate death by gunshot wound, and now that tenth guy also dies of Alzheimer's at age 80, you increase life expectancy to 80, +6.0 years, even though the leading cause of death not only is untouched, but has moved from causing 90% of deaths to 100%.
So, the important thing for life expectancy numbers isn't the leading causes of death for people in the society as a whole, but the leading causes of death among the young. If your policy goal is to raise life expectancy, you should ignore things that only kill the elderly, and concentrate on things that kill those under the age of 30.
So lies, damn lies and statistics.
And of course even if you completely eliminate gunshot wound deaths, the 20 year old might still die at 20 from stabbing, beating, car crash, drug overdose, etc. People who die young of gunshot wounds often live a lifestyle that is strongly correlated to other causes of early death.
A public policy goal of increasing life expectency would do well to look at total lifestyle, not just the immediate cause of death.
A public policy goal of increasing life expectancy is an f'n nightmare and a waste of time, energy and resources. More Power, More Money, More Waste and More Corruption resulting in More Asinine Intervention f'n everything up.
I’m also a little shocked that there’s no mention of the mysterious rise of excess deaths that literally caused a health official in the UK to threaten a major newspaper on a phone call if they didn’t “soften the news”.
I expect the government will start handing out blankets next.
Um, they were spreading misinformation about the vaccine. Why should the press be allowed to spread blatant lies?
No, they were not. The health official was the one trying to spread misinformation.
Here comes lying jeffy to protect the corporate state. Fuck off you nazi faggot.
That comment is not from me, it is from some asshole troll impersonating me.
“It wasn’t me officer, I hardly ever touch children!”
Tulpa, of course.
that checks out... muted the higher one and this one remains...
BUT... Which is Which?
I suggest getting a marker and putting a red dot on your forehead
Because of the freedom of speech thing.
Would never make it into a Bailey piece.
At least they’re trying to curb deaths from assault knives in the UK. What are our protectors waiting for?
https://news.yahoo.com/actor-idris-elba-calls-action-153457061.html?fr=sycsrp_catchall
The UK government in August promised a ban on "intimidating and threatening" Zombie-style knives and machetes…
Not to detract from your point but:
So enabling and persuading more properly diagnosed Americans to take blood pressure and cholesterol-lowering medications would likely boost overall life expectancy.
Baycol/Cerivastatin, the first statin to pass clinical trials and be prescribed to the masses, was pulled off the market in *2001* after it killed 50 people. Since then, statins have been prescribed progressively more and more commonly and, yet, Heart Disease remains king and life expectancies have dropped.
Ron's conclusion? You guessed it: MOAR TESTING!
if only people would smoke more ... they wouldn't be so fat
Excuse me. Who do you think candy cigarettes are for.
Diabetics?
Wait, did L Ron Hubard get the name for his goofy book from that?
Holy shit! 'B' and 'N' are right next to each other on the keyboard.
It was a typo all along but the cult couldn't admit that!
That was a huge article that could have been reduced to, "Wahsington Communist Post floats bullshit story to give excuses for more gun, drug and vaccinaction laws. People with IQ higher than their shoe size are not surprised that Wash ComPost beats the same drum they always beat."
To my absolute shock, the local Denver Dem mouthpiece, the Denver Post, has been running a series lately on the rising number of deaths and social dysfunction from alcohol abuse. Someone at the paper seems to have finally become aware that alcohol causes nearly 3 times as many deaths as firearms do.
Of course, the byline in all of these is "somebody needs to do something to fix this," but I was still amazed they even broached it. Some people in what constitutes the Denver upper class may have lost some of their friends and relatives to alcohol abuse, and now their concerns are being mouthed by the Compost to try and get the morons in the state legislature to come up with some phony baloney funding bill--which won't actually fix anything, because these people are truly stupid and worthless, but it will get them a few Good Boi points from the media.
The Denver ComPost was the paper that inspired me to come up with the Communist Post bit. I lived there in the 90s.
The interesting thing is that both the Rocky Mountain News and the Post were pretty straight-news centrist papers until Sue O’Brien took over as the Post’s editorial page editor right around that time. O'Brien had been in thick with the Lamm and Romer administrations, and her influence turned the Post into a DNC mouthpiece by the end of the 90s.
After the News collapsed during the Great Recession, the Compost hasn’t had any real competition, and what does exist is mostly packed with the usual shitlib puffery.
Didn't the ComPost buy out the Rocky Mountain News around that time? I seem to recall some bullshit happening like that in the late 90s before I moved to Colorado Springs.
Sort of. The Post was starting to win the Newspaper Wars, so the News ended up saying "uncle" and they did a weird Joint Operating Agreement for a while where they published their M-F editions, while the News published on Saturday and the Post published on Sunday.
The massive drop in ad revenue due to the internet absolutely destroyed the business model for both, but the Post has hung on mainly due to hedge fund investment and because they were the primary paper in that JOA. They don't even work downtown anymore, they operate out of some warehouse in Commerce City now, from what I understand. The sad part is that the News shut down just a year before its 150th anniversary.
One might think that blatant, open heroin use at the 16th street mall would be a priority if they’re really worried about health.
Sure, but it's a lot of drunks, too. You used to just see pockets of this shit around the Civic Center or the Platte River bridges, but now it's all over the place thanks to legal weed, which just brought a bunch of hardcore drug addicts to Denver.
"and limits on concealed carry and stand-your-ground laws might reduce violent crime deaths."
This actually brings up a point not really addressed. What is the lifespan of a criminal vs non-criminal?
Pretty sure if you take organized crime caused by the drug war out of the equation, then take out suicides, there isn't much left. Except for those events that make the news that are, while tragic, news because they don't happen all the time.
Organized crime has nothing on the government.
Organized crime doesnt gives their thugs medals. They are all heros shooting unarmed women.
Gangs, as in organized criminals selling drugs, kill more Americans than the American government.
Not all deaths by firearm are a bad thing. Shooting more criminals makes life better for everyone.
It is also a very effective tool if your goal is self destruction. Typically that accounts for at least 80% of all gun deaths when people who hate guns are compiling the data.
I suspect the non college educated group losing a couple years is mostly because criminals likely don't have a college degree and they are more likely to get shot or stabbed. That's probably changing with the large number of liberal arts grads needing cold hard cash to pay off their loans on a Starbucks paycheck.
I would, unironically, love to see some kind of modern CCC-type program for college grads. Go to a lot of these state and national parks, and they could definitely use some upkeep and renovations, as well as trail improvements and maintenance. Not to mention all the BLM and Forest Service land that’s trashed or needs clearance for fire mitigation.
I’d make a deal with them that their student loans would be written down by up to 100% if they spent a certain amount of time breaking their backs doing manual labor in the wilderness. There’d be tiers–do 1 year, get 10% written off, and go up another 10% for every year they’re in the program, which doesn’t go through until your commitment is up. You leave before your commitment is up, you get nothing, but thanks for all the hard work.
And the work/pay conditions would be the exact same–these soft-ass little shits would have to spend winters in tarpaper-walled barracks with nothing more than a cannon stove to keep warm, and no A/C in the summertime. No cell phones, no vidya games, no internet. 70% of your regular pay goes home to your family. And when their time is up, they get the write-down that they worked for, a nice little CCC medal, and our parks get a facelift and maybe even some additional facilities out of the deal.
You might even call it the "Down to the Countryside" Program.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Down_to_the_Countryside_Movement
I might, considering the parallels between Chinese and American Maoism.
news flash: you're the Maoist in this scenario
Newsflash: Prevent the Cultural Revolution from happening in the first place, and you won't have the Down to the Countryside program on the back end.
But as we all know, lamenting the right's reaction to radical leftism is more your forte.
Some might be discouraged by the trannies in the women's barracks.
Nah, for Zoomers it's a fetish.
I would do that, no question.
(He/Her)
Are these violent crime deaths really something we want to curb?
I for one am shocked Bailey isn't promoting drug tests and gun residue tests.
We already know he wants daily covid testing.
Declines in COVID-19 mortality accounted for approximately 84% of the increase in life expectancy."
Was it due to covid 19 or with covid 19? They changed how they counted it finally in 2022.
It’s because people stopped getting the vaccine.
If only they wore the mask....
It would have to have been due to covid, as deaths "with" covid, where covid had no causal link to the death, would not lower overall life expectency.
So what's this I'm hearing about the Sec of Defense being hospitalized for a coincidence for 96 hours and no one knew?
Oh, and the other thing I'm hearing is the President found out on the news, just like the rest of us? The long-running joke (make primarily by me) that Veep is more like the reality of DC, not House of Cards-- Veep now looks like House of Cards compared to the reality of DC.
Obama also learned all his bad acts on the news. Seems to be a pattern for dems.
One phone to launch the nuclear strikes against armed American civilians, one phone to bypass Congress, and one phone to take calls for 10 yr. olds getting abortions in red states is about all the phones Joe can keep track of.
Austin got a note from his mother excusing his absence, so there is no problem with his attendance.
Posted a reference to it over the weekend. It might have been from Slava Z though and not Salon so tread carefully.
(She/Him)
Maybe the fact that nobody knew for 96 hours tells us what we need to know. Then again, I'm not sure why I should care.
Thanks Mr. Bailey, we need more articles like this. Driven by facts and data, with statistics presented fairly and accurately, and not manipulating numbers to try to push a narrative.
The conclusion as always with these types of problems is that "reality is messy". Blaming the decline in life expectancy on typical tribal targets like guns or drugs or crime is simplistic.
The nine-year difference in adult life expectancy between those Americans who are college graduates and those who are not is particularly striking.
That is an interesting data point. Indicates that the real expensive part of the SS/Medicare entitlement is for the college degreed. Who presumably also have higher income. Not really a surprise but it does mean that any entitlement reform to those should also incorporate those differences.
Looking only at the chart by year, it seems the democrat administration is responsible.
Commie-Healthcare is failing ... Time for MORE Commie-Healthcare???
Sounds like leftard reasoning.
@Jesse, do you have a good article about that AZ rancher George Alan Kelly?
Maybe Putin has a story for you to read on the subject.
They posted about the refusal of authorities to post the entirety of that tranny shooter’s tranifesto because…reasons. Tranny shooter protected by apparatchik collective reasoning groupthink arriving at the truth not to share with the public.
Other news there includes France’s PM stepping down, stuff in Ukraine, a pro Palestine rally in Copenhagen, and Lloyd Austin’s debacle.
Salon has in order: Trump, orca misinformation, J6 - election (Trump), Jodie Foster complaining, some Hollywood couple battery court case, more Trump, Trump again, and you guessed it - Trump.
I prefer Biden's story on the subject. You can find it on NYTMSNBCFACEBOOK
TWITTERINSTAGRAMTIKTOKCNNWAPO.com🙂
No. Most of the outlets in southern Arizona are pretty left leaning. Rancher shootings aren't that uncommon. You can find stories in the Tucson Weekly (who is ultra liberal) that even discusses the danger and destruction from illegal aliens crossing ranches. They will steal and assault ranch owners and workers.
There used to be a libertarian/independent called Arizona Independent, but think it stopped a few years ago.
There are known areas in Southern Arizona that are largely cartel owned. You can see spotters on hill tops. Most residents stay away from these areas if camping or hiking.
Huh. Still around.
https://arizonadailyindependent.com
I would check there in a few days. Independent writers and not corporate so usually stories are delayed.
Ahh. This is the rancher from last year. From what I understand he had called the local sheriffs multiple times. I'll have to dig around.
https://arizonadailyindependent.com/2023/03/04/arizona-rancher-seeks-new-probable-cause-hearing-in-shooting-of-cartel-guide/
Thanks. Can’t wait for the Salon article linking Trump to this.
>The Post article also suggested that fighting between congressional Democrats and Republicans has stymied "legislation linked to gains in life expectancy, including efforts to expand access to health coverage and curb access to guns."
You known when life expectancies really drop?
When only the government has the guns.
Because the guns never go away, they just don't want *you* to have them. But when only 'they' have them, well, you get European genocide rates which, over the last century, have out-killed the American 'gun violence' homocide rate.
See my comment above about the UK. They’re trying to ban “intimidating and threatening” knives. *That’s* what happens when you get rid of guns.
They're having serious discussions regarding fucking kitchen knives, for god's sake.
That's banning the very most basic tools any person should own to prepare the dinner they will eat every single night. Take away the most basic rights of every single law abiding citizen for the sake of "If it saves just ONE life" always leads to this.
No one needs a knife to heat up bug paste - - - - - - - - -
I mean, seriously?
Stupid people with bad impulse control make bad decisions. Bad decisions are both an excellent way to limit one's income and an excellent way to wind up on a mortuary slab early. Therefore, anyone who has not severely damaged their ability to think by adopting an utterly moronic ideology should expect a robust and irradicable correlation between income and life expectancy.
Pushing the poors in front of Teslas and electric busses doesn't hurt either.
Who could have predicted that being a half-educated slack-jaw making poor choices while residing in a desolate, backwater community might have negative consequences? Who needs level 1 trauma centers, an adequate education, a prudent diet, good judgment about tobacco and street pills, sound character, etc.?
Sounds like Kensington Avenue, Philadelphia.
(Beem/Boom)
Or Port;and, or Seattle or even Spokane.
You shouldn’t slag on your fellow Democrats you racist fuck.
Get another booster, twat.
The decline of US life expectancy mirrors an imploding carnivore population. The number of Vegan bores has soared from under ten million in 2019 to almost 17 million today.
Would be interesting to poll the commenters here and see who is on blood pressure and/or cholesterol medication due to their own life choices.
Work out and eat a decent diet, and those concerns aren't that serious.
Probably would track the same as whatever the US national average is with the same bullshit excuses why an individual has a given lifestyle related ailment.
Get the most premium online betting Ids exclusively on Jackpot Win999. 100% genuine and secure online betting ids with 24/7 customer support. We are here to provide you Online Betting ID, Online Cricket ID, BBL Betting ID. You will get all kind of IDs At one place must visit at our site: https://jackpotwin999.com/
The wisest words I've heard yet about Universal Healthcare and Life Extension and how they are at odds from Balaji Shrinivasan
https://youtube.com/shorts/aAii1LJ8rLk?si=gJNF-NNXUaLuLTR_
Online cricket id - Get Online Cricket Betting ID, we are India's Best Betting IDs provider for all sports and games, live tips to bet online. Get your online betting id, online cricket id, bbl betting id now. https://badshahexch.com/
To get an online Cricket Betting ID in India, you can apply directly on the Rexchange website or contact support via WhatsApp. We usually offer multiple payments. Visit our website now: https://rexchange.in/
IGOnlineid is the best Sports betting id provider in India. We provide more than 30 exchanges. You can play Cricket, Teen Patti, Roulette and BBL Betting ID, Online Betting ID, Online Cricket ID and many more: https://igonlineid.com/
Dailywin777 - The most leading and secure platform in india. Here you can get various types of betting exchanges like football id, andar bahar, roulette, poker, horse racing and live cricket matches betting id under a single roof. So, don’t waste the and visit the website: https://www.dailywin777.com/
You want to get a Betting ID for live matches then you are at the right place. Dailywin247 provides Betting ID, Cricket ID, Poker Id, Lottery, Amar akbar anthony and many more. We are 100% secure and provide 24*7 customer support service to our users. Visit the website now : https://www.dailywin247.com/
An average life expectancy in the 70s? That's pretty darned good for a first world nation. Leave good enough alone.
The elites seem have gone on a weird bender recently in trying to figure out how to achieve immortality, or at least an extremely long life. Seeing as how they think there isn't anything other than the void when they die, it's not a surprise that they're desperate for some kind of Olympian ambrosia that will prevent them from doing so.
So life expectancy has been flat to down for a decade or more, looks like Obamacare fully implemented is working as intended.
Remember the US was the terrible exception in not having socialized medicine. Converting the US to single-payer is just the unfettered good of globalism at work. Like outsourcing your EV production to the Lithium triangle so you can lecture your peers about how they should use less nitrogen, eat more crickets, and support the Ukraine.
Guns kill 40K a year, and 2/3 of those are suicides, meaning they would happen anyway. The other 1/3 are almost all gang violence. Half of those are blacks killing blacks.
Over 600K die from heart disease, mostly caused by obesity, and that didn’t make it in the title? Hell, you barely talk about the fact we’re the fattest country in the world. Doesn’t matter how good your health care system is if you don’t take care of yourself.
Instead of encouraging people to go to college, talk about the dumbing down of our grade schools. Math is racist now, you know. How is that possible? So are grades, better do away with those, so we don’t know how stupid they are.
If everything is a political priority, then nothing is a political priority. Of course, not everything that has been called a priority is actually achievable by political means. For example, deaths due to guns and deaths due to pandemics cannot be reduced by political means.
deaths due to pandemics cannot be reduced by political means
If only nominally, pandemics of zoonotic origin anyway.
Executive summary: bad choices have led to a decrease in life expectancy. Bad choices by government, bad choices by individuals who can't vet their drug of choice, bad choices by individuals who give no value to human life - theirs and others, and nominally bad choices by individuals who legally choose to self delete.
Commentary: I will say that even gun violence archive shows 2023 "gun violence" deaths decreasing to near 2019 levels, particularly suicide which is down over 12% from 2022 and is now only 0.62% higher than 2019 and that negligent discharges in 2023 are actually down 17% below the 2019 numbers. There's a reason they've shifted their narrative recently from "gun violence deaths" to "mass murder deaths" and it's because the former is dropping but the latter went up in 2023 albeit in gross numbers there were more lives saved by the drop in negligent discharges than were lost to their definition of "mass murder".
This is a very nice Article, I really appreciate your work, Thanks for posting it. Visit https://officio.in for more details