As a parent of two children, aged nine and 12, I read with deep concern, though not surprise, your article on the rise of climate anxiety among young people Take action to reduce anxiety, psychologists advise, 10 February .I remember vividly the Guardians coverage of the Earth Summit in 1992 and the prof ound impact that had on me at the age of 2 <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.es>stanley vaso</a> 6. Many climate marches and lifestyle changes later, I find myself also at a point of near despair when I look around at the abundance of poorly equipped, scientifically and socially illiterate leaders we have around the globe. They are not fit for the enormous task of beginning to fix our world 鈥?they are certainly not looking out for the next generation 鈥?and yet people my age seem to be voting for them in ever greater numbers.The legacy that Trump, Morrison, Bolsonaro <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.co.uk>stanley flask</a> , Johnson and their ilk are leaving our kids is a loss of hope. And when people lose hope, they often give up. Without a mass awakening by the voters and non-voters who are perpetuating this situation, I believe that the status quo theyre all so desperate to maintain will be abandoned en masse by those who will never benefit from it, long before the full ravages of climate change hit us.David SummersBristol Readers may be interested to know that the Climate Psychology Allia <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.es>stanley vaso</a> nce has for the last 10 years been providing support, conducting research and running workshops on all aspects of the climate crisis and our emotional responses. The CPA runs a nationwide network Kpjw The case for legalising all drugs is unanswerable
A five-year-old sat shyly in her metal hospital bed as her mother described what had brought her to Panzi hospital in t <a href=https://www.stanleycups.pl>stanley polska</a> he city of Bukavu, in the far east of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. A couple of beds down lay a tiny six-year-old girl, and further along sat a speck of a three-year-old in a fuchsia hoodie. This smallest girl had been brought in the previous night and had a painful fistula from gang rape.Revealed: how the world turned its back on rape victims of CongoRead moreIn each case, what had been done to the girls is remarkably similar. Each was abducted at night from a wooden shack in their impoverished village, called Kavumu, about an hour-and-a-half drive from the hospital over the mudscape that is DRC in the rainy season. Each was then gang-raped and left in a nearby government-owned field overgrown with stalks of corn, sorghum and dried-out cassava; the area is used as a kind of subsistence farm by former rebel soldiers. A walk through the meadow is a tour of one spot after another in which little girls have been found bleeding and unable to move in the dead of night.How this place became a repository of children destroyed has been <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.ro>stanley termos</a> a mystery for three years 鈥?since June 2013, when the rapes began. Girls began disappearing from their houses during the night while, mysteriously, their families remained asleep.Parents assert t <a href=https://www.cup-stanley-cup.de>stanley trinkflaschen</a> hat theyve been drugged by a kind of magic powder sprinkled over their houses during the attacks. Men in groups of two, three or fou