Re-air: COVID’s Impact on Our Mental Health (2615)
We talk about the rising incidences of suicide, depression, alcohol, and drug abuse, and domestic violence during COVID 19's self-quarantine period.
We talk about the rising incidences of suicide, depression, alcohol, and drug abuse, and domestic violence during COVID 19's self-quarantine period.
Alcohol consumption is up. People are stressed, fearful and anxious. So what can we do to do stay mentally healthy during COVID-19 and afterwards?
Seventy-seven percent of the public says “there should be limits on the amount of money individuals and organizations” can spend on political campaigns with just 20% saying they should be able to spend as much as they want.
Just before COVID closed down the economy we recorded a program on hunger in America, which considering the wealth of our country, is disproportionate. Dallas County ranks among one of the highest food insecure — for children, in the country!
This program focuses on the fifth domain, the Pentagon's term for cyberspace and how to keep the fifth domain a humming engine of economic growth and human progress by not giving in to the dark forces that aim to make it an area of conflict.
Mail-in voting has been a contentious issue during this 2020 presidential election year. Yet because of the pandemic, to date more Americans than ever before are choosing to vote by mail.
Ransomware is one of the biggest security problems on the internet and one of the most challenging forms of cybercrime that organizations face today. Potentially everyone’s organizations’ data is under attack.
This program promises some surprising insights as it looks at the underlying causes of most police violence and offers solutions.
The Electoral College is frequently called into question, most especially in an election year. The arguments for changing or eliminating it grow more heated when the winner of the Electoral College is not the winner of the popular vote.
Our next presidential election takes place in two months. It promises to be a more contentious one than usual. And, it's possible that the candidate with the most popular votes, will not be pronounced the winner. The president is not directly decided on by voters but by the Electoral College. A candidate needs to gain a majority of the college's votes to be declared president.