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> There are a lot of things wrong with the American health care system, but a lack of care for white males is not actually one of them.

A lack of care for those who can't afford it is, though.


I almost want to disagree with you here but I’m not fully apprised of the greater situation.

My dad is poor and neglectful of himself. He had a stroke. He got ambulanced to the emergency room and spent a good deal of time there.

The hospital discussed billing which was several hundreds of thousands of dollars. Well he can’t afford that. The hospital had us talk to some advisers and they got him on a state Medicaid (?) plan. The plan retroactively paid for it all.

He then got checked out for a variety of other issues including a severe spinal issue and a hip replacement for 0 out of pocket.

It’s great. He’s a changed man who is active and takes care of himself now.

I also had a major medical event and I have since paid tens of thousands out of pocket after insurance. At one point we were investigating if I could essentially quit work for a bit, go on the Medicaid plan, get better, and then go back to my job. That is madness!


It's dependent on state and local hospitals.

States that opted into the ACA Medicaid Expansion and generally fund hospitals have great emergency care for poor people. There's a kind of missing middle where once you're above the income threshold for Medicaid but aren't working for a job that's willing to fund an extremely good health plan you have to deal with all sorts of deductibles and prior authorizations and stuff. Plus, non-emergency care, especially from specialists, has gotten longer and longer wait times unless you're lucky enough to live in a region with mostly healthy people that also aren't the "worried well."

Tl;dr, it's incredibly patchwork, and everyone's experience is going to vary depending on their state's individual social safety net, the overall health of their local population, the particular insurance network and hospital network they have access to, and their individual income.

Also, the US has a federal law that no hospital that accepts Medicare patients is allowed to deny care in the case of an emergency based on someone's ability to pay. That means that a lot of very poor people will get incredibly expensive emergency care for free, while not being able to afford the basic preventative care that would keep them out of a state of medical emergency. That isn't really the hallmark of a particularly functional system.


US hospital waiting rooms are filled with poor people btw.

https://www.cms.gov/priorities/your-patient-rights/emergency...

You have rights in an emergency room under EMTALA Doctor talking to a patient

You have these protections:

1. An appropriate medical screening exam to check for an emergency medical condition, and if you have one,

2. Treatment until your emergency medical condition is stabilized, or

3. An appropriate transfer to another hospital if you need it The law that gives everyone in the U.S. these protections is the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act, also known as "EMTALA." This law helps prevent any hospital emergency department that receives Medicare funds (which includes most U.S. hospitals) from refusing to treat patients.


Celestia had been operating for years. I was using it 20 years ago.


He's had a couple of misleading videos over the last few years that finally made me unsubscribe. Specifically the lightbulb with a 1 light second wire and the more recent video about light taking infinite paths.

There was also the Waymo ad and the Rods from the Gods video where he couldn't bother to use a guide wire to aim.


What was wrong with the 1 light second wire and the light taking infinite paths videos?


The first one was portrayed in a clickbait "everything you know about electricity is wrong" way. There have been several response videos to it that lay out why it's misleading that explain it better than I can, but suffice to say that the lightbulb does not turn on immediately like he claims.

There second one takes a mathematical model for the path integral for light and portrays it like that's actually what is happening, with plenty of phrases like light "chooses" the path of least action that imply something more going on. Also, the experiment at the end with the laser pointer is awful. The light we are seeing is scattering from the laser pointer's aperture, not some evidence that light is taking alternate paths.


> suffice to say that the lightbulb does not turn on immediately like he claims

Many people said this, but he set up an experiment to test it and the light does turn on instantly as claimed: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oI_X2cMHNe0

> There second one takes a mathematical model for the path integral for light and portrays it like that's actually what is happening

I know nothing about this. Is there a more accurate mathematical model available than the one he uses? Otherwise, I think it seems sensible to portray our best mathematical model as "what's really going on". And I didn't get the sense that light was "choosing" anything when watching the video, I got the sense that the amplitudes of all possible paths were cancelling out except for the shortest path (or something along those lines)


There are many equivalent formulations of quantum mechanics, the one the above post takes issue with is the path integral formulation. But because you can show an exact mathematical equivalence it makes all the same predictions as, for example, Hamiltonian evolution.

The words people like to use for the path integral is a sum over histories---that corresponds tightly with the ingredients in the path integral. So in this formulation it's what's "actually happening". But in other mathematical formulations other words are more appealing and what someone claims is "actually happening" sounds different.


+1 I would like to know too. Especially the experimental demo of infinite paths -- I'm a complete noob in quantum physics, and the video made sense of so many topics I "learned" in college but never managed to grok. It'd be good to know what the alternative explanation is.


Private equity baby! not just for shitting up your dentists and toy stores anymore


The 1 light second wire video is kinda set up to bamboozle you. But it's still correct and taught me about EM.


Especially the way he (or the team) responded to the criticism they got for doing those «sponsored content» pieces put me off hard enough to unsubscribe.


Yeah, the light propagation videos are just high on misleading theories.


You would direct the user to submit a bug to Firefox if the latest version doesn't fix the issue. That's how they learn if this change causes issues.


You should first investigate the cause of the bug before spamming Firefox developers with potentially invalid reports. And it is difficult to investigate when your browser and user's browser behave different.


It is, and they give them special phones for that reason. Obama had a special Blackberry limited to 10 people.

https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2013/dec/05/barack-ob...


Your comment's interpretation is ambiguous. I interpreted as there are/were 10 people that had these special Blackberry phones, when the article says Obama's Blackberry was just limited to contacting 10 people.


I would guess, three for family, three for end-of-civilisation emergencies, two for politics, that leaves two for miscellaneous.


Not if they pass it via reconciliation.


Doesn't this require foresight that your mouse may fail? It isn't enabled by default.

Any other OS, you'll be able to at least tab around without the mouse.


It wasn't on the page linked above but on this page [1] at the bottom it reads:

> To quickly turn Full Keyboard Access, Sticky Keys, Slow Keys, or the Accessibility Keyboard on or off using the Accessibility Shortcuts panel, press Option-Command-F5 (or if your Mac or Magic Keyboard has Touch ID, quickly press Touch ID three times).

[1] https://support.apple.com/en-ca/guide/mac-help/mchlae61a6de/...


How does an 11-year solar cycle explain decades of observed global warming?


Decades?

There's been 11,000+ years of warming since the end of the last glacial period.


They were referring to the unprecedented rise in temperature over the last hundred or so years.


If you reuse the same plastic multiple times, doesn't that reduce the total amount of plastic needed to produce the same number of goods, thus reducing plastic pollution?


Recycling is complicated, because only certain polymers can be recycled, then it has to be separated from contaminants, transported, sorted and re-shipped to re-use facilities (often in China). A lot of improvements are needed for this to be both lucrative and effective [0]. Then there's the microplastics that still spread across the globe.

[0] https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2022/gc/d2gc0...


Framework came across to me as more about easy repairs. How many other laptops on the market can you replace a GPU when it goes bad? Swapping out modules on the fly is something above and beyond what Framework is going for.


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