A thought provoking article on suicide by Graham Peebles, Director
of The Create Trust, with a conclusion many socialists would relate positively
to.
According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), 1.5% of
worldwide deaths were caused by suicide in 2012, making it the third highest
cause of death in the world. And this is just those deaths confirmed as
suicide. In the last 45 years, WHO states that suicide rates have increased by
60%, and unless something marvellous happens that drastically changes the
environment in which we are living, they predict that by 2020 the rate of death
will have doubled – from one suicide every 40 seconds, to someone, somewhere in
the world taking his/her life every 20 seconds!
WHO admits that the availability and quality of data is
poor, with only 60 Member States providing statistics “that can be used
directly to estimate suicide rates.” Many suicides, they say, are hidden among
other causes of death. These are just some of the many factors that make
accurately assessing the numbers who take their own lives problematic. In
countries where social attitudes, or religious dogma, shroud suicide in a
stigma of guilt (Sub-Saharan Africa, where suicide is rarely if ever discussed
or admitted, for instance), suicide may be hidden and go un-reported; so too in
countries where suicide is still regarded as a criminal act: Hungary for
example, where attempted suicide carries a prison sentence of five years, or
Japan where it is illegal to commit suicide. North Korea, where relatives of a
person committing suicide are penalised; Ireland, where self-harm is not
generally regarded as a form of attempted suicide; Singapore, where suicide
remains illegal and attempted suicide can result in imprisonment; or Russia,
where the rate of teenage suicides is three times the world average and where
those attempting suicide can be committed to a psychiatric hospital. All of
which are pretty strong reasons for hiding suicide attempts and concealing
suicide as the cause of death, as well as deterring people from discussing
suicidal thoughts.
Suicide occurs everywhere in the world to people of all age
groups, from 15 to 70 years. WHO says that almost one million people commit
suicide every year, with 20 times that number attempting it, and the numbers
are rising. Methods vary from country to country: in the USA, where firearms
litter the streets, 60% of people shoot themselves; in India and other Asian
countries, as well as South Africa, taking poison, particularly drinking
pesticides, is the most popular choice. Drowning, jumping from a height,
slashing wrists and hanging (the most popular form in Britain, the Balkans and
Eastern European countries) are some of the other ways desperate human beings
decide to end their lives.
Rates of suicide and gender ratios vary from country to
country and region to region, but overwhelmingly men are more at risk than
women. WHO found that 75% of global suicides occurred in low- and middle-income
countries, with 30% of all suicides occurring in China and India where suicide
was only de-criminalised in 2014. Eastern European countries, such as Lithuania
and the Russian Federation, recorded the highest numbers of suicides, the
Eastern Mediterranean Region, Central and South America (Peru, Mexico, Brazil
and Colombia) the lowest. And although suicide rates worldwide have
traditionally been highest amongst elderly men, young people – that’s 15-29
year olds – are now the group at the greatest risk in a third of all countries.
Suicide, WHO states, is the “leading cause of death in this age group after
transport and other accidents and assault for males,” with very little gender
difference – “9.5% in males and 8.2% in females.” Throughout western societies
around three times the number of men die by suicide than women, and over 50s
are particularly vulnerable. In Britain men account for 80% of all suicide
cases (with an average of 13 men a day killing themselves), 40-44 year olds are
particularly at risk here. In “low- and middle-income countries”, WHO records,
“the male-to-female ratio is much lower [than more developed countries] at 1.5
men to each woman.” Surprisingly, in the USA, where four times the number of
men die from suicide than women, according to The Centre of Disease Control and
Prevention, women are more likely to attempt it.
According to researchers at Glasgow University 90% of
suicide cases suffer from some form of mental illness. It is an ambiguous
phrase though, that explains little, and comforts the bereaved less. It would
seem obvious that if someone kills themselves, they are not feeling mentally or
emotionally ‘intact’, or ‘good’. ‘I struggled for so long’, ‘I couldn’t cope
anymore’, ‘life seemed meaningless’, ‘I felt tremendous anxiety’, and so on,
are phrases common to many of us, including those people contemplating,
attempting or committing suicide. Perhaps understandably depression is usually
mentioned as a cause, but this, of course, does not mean everyone suffering
from depression is at risk of suicide! The WHO makes clear that whilst suicide
rates vary enormously from country to country, differences, “influenced by the
cultural, social, religious and economic environments in which people live and
sometimes want to stop living..…the pressures of life, that cause extreme
emotional distress” and sometimes lead to suicide, “are similar everywhere.”
It is these ‘pressures of life’, that need to be properly
understood, what they are, where they come from, the impact they have, and how
we can change the structure of society to free humanity from them. Why do we
have such damaging ‘pressures of life’?
We should not be living in a world that produces such detrimental
forces. Something in our world society is terribly wrong when a million or so
people kill themselves every year, and where suicide is the second highest
cause of death amongst under 20 year olds…
…Everyone is expected to want the same things, to wear the
same clothes, believe the same propaganda, aspire to the same ideals and behave
the same. Every country, city, town and village is seen as a marketplace, every
person a consumer to be exploited fully, sucked dry and discarded.
Competition and conformity have infiltrated every area of
worldwide society, from education to health care. Everything and everyone is
seen as a commodity, to be bought at the lowest price and sold at the
highest. Financial profit is the
overwhelming motive that drives and distorts action. Materialistic values
promoting individual success, greed and selfishness saturate the world; ‘values’
that divide and separate humanity, leading to social tension, conflict and
illness. Ideals, which are not values in any real sense of the word, which have
both fashioned the divisive political-economic landscape in which we live
(which has failed the masses and poisoned the planet), and been strengthened by
it. Together with the economic system of market fundamentalism which so
ardently promotes them, these ‘values’ form, I believe, the basic ingredients
in the interwoven set of social factors that cause a great deal of the ‘mental
health issues’, which lead those most vulnerable members of our society to
commit suicide. Men, women and children who simply cannot cope with the
‘pressures of life’ anymore, who feel the collective and individual pain of
life acutely, are disposed towards introspection and find the world too noisy,
its values too crude, its demands of ‘strength’ not weakness, ‘success’ not
failure, ‘confidence’ not doubt, impossible to meet. And why should they have
to meet them? Why do these ‘pressures of life’ exist at all?
It is time to build an altogether different, healthier
model, a new way of living in which true perennial values of goodness shape the
systems that govern the societies in which we live, and not the corrosive,
ideologically reductive corporate weapons of ubiquitous living which are
sucking the beauty, diversity and joy out of life. Values of compassion,
selflessness, cooperation, tolerance and understanding; we need, as Arundhati
Roy puts it, “to redefine the meaning of modernity, to redefine the meaning of
happiness,” for we have exchanged happiness for pleasure, replaced love with
desire, unity with division, cooperation with competition, and have created a
divided society where conflict rages, internationally, regionally, communally
and individually.
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