healthcare policy
What is the US healthcare system actually optimizing for?: Market defenders
The innovation trade The US produced 55 percent of all new molecular entities approved worldwide between 2011 and 2020. More than half. The next closest country was Switzerland at 8 percent.... American Military Bases are basically socialist woke dream . I was talking to a former military brat just yesterday about her life growing up in US military bases around the world with a Colonel father.
https://www.thedailybeast.com/troops-of-the-uniform-unite-the-military-is-a-socialist-paradise/
She mentioned that food, housing, health care and education is all provided and equal. The 4 star general's kid goes to the same school as the private's kid. So the school has to be damm good to make sure they can get into the Ivy Leagues. She never knew anything about health insurance, when anyone was sick, they just went to the clinic and got care. Everything was equal and fair without money involved. She was surprised to learn what health insurance even was when she came to the US as a teenager. "You mean you don't just get taken care of when you're sick?"
Given the recent Prez/SecWar gathering the US military generals to say we're ending the "woke" era. Maybe they should also stop this socialist wet dream happening in hundreds of military bases worldwide.
Of course, there're downsides to the military and growing up in that system. Not to mention the difference of volunteering to risk sacrificing your life and getting benefits in return. Nonetheless, it does seem to validate that if you're doing a great social good then you deserve a strong social safety net.Thanks, never knew this. I also laughed out loud at “socialist wet dream” what do you think makes this possible on military bases? Some things that come to mind are plenty of funding, strict hierarchy, military command and control culture, and size limits.... What if Tariffs Are a Good Thing? I was surprised to find that this podcast made me wonder whether tariffs would actually be really good for the US economy and, more importantly, for midd-class American people.
With all the raging about how awful Trump is, it's been very hard to find any thoughtful analysis about which parts of his policies might actually be beneficial for Americans.
In this podcast, Ross Douthat (NYT) interviews Oren Cass, the Founder and Chief Economist at American Compass, a conservative think tank. Oren makes a really good case for the following:
- we've been living through a period of mostly-unchecked globalization
- because GDP has been rising, economists generally argue that globalization is good
- HOWEVER, Oren provides compelling reasons why GDP growth is not a sufficient indicator of the health of the economy. He cites things like increasing income inequality and the overall reduction in purchasing power when you factor things like households now having to have two full-time incomes to buy the same basket of things
The opportunity that tariffs provide is to buffer globalization and proactively re-shape the American economy to be more self-reliant, more inclusive and more balanced (geographically, industry-wise, etc). For example, Oren notes that globalization has been driving wealth toward tech & financial hubs, like NYC, Austin, San Francisco, while middle America has been largely stagnant. With more manufacturing, job distribution could be more equitably spread across the country.
What I liked most about this podcast were a few things:
- it provides a thoughtful challenge to the mainstream chatter that "tariffs are bad!" and "Trump is ruining our economy!"
- the basis for tariffs is actually to improve the well-being of middle Americans who are not participating in the white collar tech and financial services boom
- that it challenges the assumptions that an unfettered globalized world economy is what works best. Maybe it isn't?
The price of my favorite ice cream has nearly doubled. I like the idea of inclusiveness but don't see how making it harder for people to get medicaid is going to do that. And it is already too hard for people to qualify if you ask me.... Timeline of Events in Brian Thompson Assassination. On December 4, 2024, UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson was assassinated outside the New York Hilton Midtown. The suspect, later identified as Luigi Mangione, 26, shot Thompson multiple times before fleeing on an e-bike. Thompson was pronounced dead shortly after. Mangione, who stayed in NYC for 10 days prior, was arrested on December 9 in Pennsylvania and charged with second-degree murder. The attack is believed to be a symbolic act targeting the healthcare industry.
November 24, 2024
- 10:11 p.m.: Suspect arrives in New York City on a Greyhound bus from Atlanta, Georgia.
November 24 – December 3, 2024
- Suspect checks into the HI New York City Hostel on the Upper West Side using a falsified New Jersey ID and pays in cash.
- He stays at the hostel for ten days, checking out on December 3.
December 4, 2024
- 5:30 a.m.: Suspect leaves the hostel, likely by bike.
- 6:15 a.m.: Suspect exits the 57th Street F Train subway station.
- 6:17 a.m.: Suspect purchases coffee, water, and granola bars at a Starbucks near the New York Hilton Midtown hotel.
- 6:30 a.m.: Surveillance footage captures the suspect walking while talking on the phone.
- 6:39 a.m.: Suspect arrives in front of the New York Hilton Midtown hotel and waits.
- 6:44 a.m.: Brian Thompson leaves his hotel. The assailant shoots him multiple times, then flees northbound via a pedestrian walkway.
- 6:46 a.m.: Police respond to a 911 call reporting the shooting.
- 6:48 a.m.: Officers find Thompson with multiple gunshot wounds. He is taken to Mount Sinai West hospital. The assailant is seen riding an e-bike into Central Park.
- 6:59 a.m.: Suspect is seen riding a bike on West 85th Street.
- 7:04 a.m.: Suspect enters a northbound taxi at 86th Street and Amsterdam Avenue.
- 7:12 a.m.: Thompson is pronounced dead at Mount Sinai West hospital.
December 9, 2024
- Morning: Luigi Mangione, 26, is arrested in Altoona, Pennsylvania, in connection with the assassination.
- Afternoon: Mangione is charged with second-degree murder and other related offenses.
December 11, 2024
- Mangione appears in court, contests extradition to New York, and is held without bail pending a governor’s warrant.
A powerful modern archetype for this is the first Black Panther Marvel movie, where Spoilers below—don’t keep reading if you don’t want the movie spoiled: Killmonger the villain is truly a villain whose methods of achieving his goals are deplorable (giving guns and weapons to... More People Should Die. Elderly people should be able to legally choose to end their life when they’re ready. In fact, any adult should be legally allowed to choose to die. They should be able to invite people, be present for their memorial service, and have a medical professional end their life.
And we should be more present with death in society. People should be able to attend their loved ones’ cremations. Embalming should be illegal.
I gave this whole convo to ChatGPT and asked for a perspective that synthesizes all of it. Here’s what I got: Integrative Perspective An integrally informed perspective would consider the multiple dimensions (or quadrants) involved in this debate, as suggested by Ken Wilber’s... More People Should Die. Elderly people should be able to legally choose to end their life when they’re ready. In fact, any adult should be legally allowed to choose to die. They should be able to invite people, be present for their memorial service, and have a medical professional end their life.
And we should be more present with death in society. People should be able to attend their loved ones’ cremations. Embalming should be illegal.
I think this argument misses the current cultural context which is wildly afraid and avoidant of death. At least in the USA. The legal system doesn’t just reflect this, it keeps it in place, and keeps us from even looking at quality of life over quantity, and stuff like that.... More People Should Die. Elderly people should be able to legally choose to end their life when they’re ready. In fact, any adult should be legally allowed to choose to die. They should be able to invite people, be present for their memorial service, and have a medical professional end their life.
And we should be more present with death in society. People should be able to attend their loved ones’ cremations. Embalming should be illegal.
Yes, but i think the current trends are more concerning-people suffering incredibly who are ready to go but stay on life support or lonely old folks home type situations for years, draining the money they were hoping to leave to their children, etc; im not even saying it’s some...