Anonymous ID: 0610cd Aug. 1, 2019, 5:22 p.m. No.7301792   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1844 >>1853 >>1927 >>1942

Addiction Expert Claims: Giving Your Child A Smartphone Is Like Giving Them A Gram Of Cocaine

 

The world is changing at a dramatic pace. It’s shifting so fast, in fact, that the childhood you remember is vastly different than the one your own kids will experience. This is largely due to the development and saturation of technology in modern society.

 

While there are perks to being hyper-connected, allowing children access to their own smartphone could produce detrimental effects long-term. It’s so influential, top addiction therapist Mandy Saligari suggested in 2017 that giving your child a smartphone is like “giving them a gram of cocaine.”

 

Speaking at an education conference in London, the Harley Street rehab clinic specialist explained that Snapchat and Instagram can be just as dangerously addictive for teenagers as drugs and alcohol. As a result, they should be treated and regulated as such. Saligari said screen time is often overlooked as a potential vehicle for addiction in young people.

 

“I always say to people, when you’re giving your kid a tablet or a phone, you’re really giving them a bottle of wine or a gram of coke,” she said.

 

“Are you really going to leave them to knock the whole thing out on their own behind closed doors?” asked Saligari. “Why do we pay so much less attention to those things than we do to drugs and alcohol when they work on the same brain impulses?”

 

Her suggestion may be insulting to some people, but it follows news that children as young as 13 are being treated for digital technology addiction. Furthermore, one-third of British children aged 12-15 admit they do not have a good balance between screen time and other activities. Considering the average American household watches television for nearly 9 hours a day, it seems everyone battles technology addiction to some extent. Perhaps we should be talking about it more.

 

“When people tend to look at addiction, their eyes tend to be on the substance or thing – but really it’s a pattern of behaviour that can manifest itself in a number of different ways,” said Saligari. She named food obsessions, self-harm, and sexting as examples.

 

Saligari, who heads the clinic in London, said around two-thirds of her patients were 16-20 years old and seeking treatment for addiction. She noted a “dramatic increase” from even ten years ago when many of her patients were even younger.

 

“So many of my clients are 13 and 14 year-old-girls who are involved in sexting, and describe sexting as ‘completely normal’,” Saligari noted. The increase in “sexting” is directly linked to the normalization of using a mobile phone to send nudes. It only becomes “wrong” when a parent of an adult finds out, explained Saligari.

 

“If children are taught self-respect they are less likely to exploit themselves in that way,” she said. “It’s an issue of self-respect and it’s an issue of identity.”

 

https://www.naturalblaze.com/2019/08/addiction-expert-claims-giving-your-child-a-smartphone-is-like-giving-them-a-gram-of-cocaine.html

Anonymous ID: 0610cd Aug. 1, 2019, 5:22 p.m. No.7301811   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1853 >>1942

US-Russia Arms Control (INF) Treaty Officially Ends on Friday

 

On Friday, the US will officially be out of the Intermediate-range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty, after a six-month withdrawal period. The INF treaty was signed between the US and Soviet Union in 1987, it prohibits the US and Russia from developing land based and cruise missiles with a range of 310 to 3,410 miles.

 

The US accused Russia of developing a missile that would violate the deal, although Russia denied the accusation and said it was under the distance restricted in the INF. Shortly after Trump announced he would be pulling out of the INF, Russia announced they would be too.

 

The Pentagon has requested $10 million in its fiscal 2020 budget to missiles within the INF range. In March, the Pentagon announced they would be testing a new missile in August, with a potential range of just over 600 miles. It looks like a new medium-range arms race will start between the two countries.

 

As the INF is set to expire, National Security Advisor John Bolton already has his eyes on the next treaty to tear up. The New START treaty between the US and Russia was signed under the Obama administration and limits the number of nuclear warheads each country has deployed at 1,550. The New START treaty is set to expire in February 2021. On Tuesday, Bolton said the deal was “flawed from the beginning” and “unlikely to be extended.” The excuse is that the US wants China to be included in the deal but doubt they will comply. China is believed to have about 290 nuclear warheads, far fewer than the 1,550 cap.

 

A Russian diplomat told a disarmament conference in Geneva this week that the US will exit the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) based on the false pretext that Russia was violating the treaty. The CTBT prohibits tests of nuclear weapons. The US denied the claim and chalked it up to “Crafty, Soviet-like propaganda.” Although the Russian diplomat’s claims are not baseless, the US did recently accuse Russia of not complying with the CTBT, which is how the withdrawal from the INF started.

 

https://21stcenturywire.com/2019/08/01/us-russia-arms-control-inf-treaty-officially-ends-on-friday/