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react_burger38

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Many Silicon Valley Employees juggling two jobs

vanityfair.com
4 points·by react_burger38·4년 전·2 comments

The rise and fall of history as a major

scholars-stage.org
8 points·by react_burger38·4년 전·1 comments

Ask HN: Can you buy your own airship / dirigible / zeppelin?

2 points·by react_burger38·4년 전·2 comments

Ask HN: uBlock Origin Filters for WSJ?

2 points·by react_burger38·4년 전·3 comments

China’s Killer Doctors: Donors Killed by Organ Removal

tabletmag.com
21 points·by react_burger38·4년 전·0 comments

Chinese Surgeons killed prisoners by taking their organs – while still alive

wsj.com
28 points·by react_burger38·4년 전·2 comments

US States with lowest property taxes (housing)

wallethub.com
2 points·by react_burger38·4년 전·1 comments

BYU student attempts to make rocket fuel in dorm, causes fire

ksl.com
3 points·by react_burger38·4년 전·0 comments

Why Does the US make it so hard to be a doctor?

theatlantic.com
48 points·by react_burger38·4년 전·46 comments

Crumbl Cookies, Viral Tik Tok Cookie Bakery

cnbc.com
2 points·by react_burger38·5년 전·0 comments

Aurochs, super-size oxen that used to roam the Earth

thoughtco.com
1 points·by react_burger38·5년 전·0 comments

El Corte Inglés, Europe’s Biggest Department Store

en.wikipedia.org
13 points·by react_burger38·5년 전·2 comments

Spain's travel entry form is full of anti-patterns

spth.gob.es
4 points·by react_burger38·5년 전·0 comments

Jaime Escalante, Los Angeles Math Teacher

en.wikipedia.org
3 points·by react_burger38·5년 전·0 comments

comments

react_burger38
·3년 전·discuss
Comparing the whole of the United States to England isn't as informative as one would think, given the wide variety of racial and cultural groups in the United States.

Comparing health outcomes of white Americans of Anglo descent to health outcomes in England would be much more informative. Even more informative would be data that look at white people (and other groups such as Chinese, Indians, etc.) in the US on a county-by-county basis.

The truth is that there are certain groups in the United States whose outcomes are much worse on many statistical bases, and those groups skew the data dramatically downwards. Black people in the US, for example, commit a majority of murders every year [1], despite being only about 13% of the population - almost 4x what the rate would be, if they committed murder at the same rate as white people.

Other disparities are present as well, which mean that there are many communities in the United States where you will live a life just as long and healthy, or even longer and healthier, than in European countries. For example, this article [2] shows a county-by-county breakdown, and many counties in America where life expectancy is over 80.

[1] https://www.wsj.com/articles/jason-riley-the-other-ferguson-... [2] https://www.deseret.com/utah/2020/3/13/21177268/utah-citizen...
react_burger38
·4년 전·discuss
Thank you, I could not have stated it better myself. When there are many real-life examples that contradict an idea, and only theories and logic that stem from certain questionable assumptions to support that idea, then at very least it is a very poor idea on which to base public policy
react_burger38
·4년 전·discuss
"at some point growing population is unsustainable"

This is a logical fallacy that has been bounced around, in catastrophic terms, for centuries. (see Thomas Malthus [1], "The Population Bomb" by Ehrlich [2], etc.) Ehrlich went as far to say that in the 1970s, HUNDREDS of millions of people would starve. Did that happen? No. These ideas about some theoretical limit on food or resources of the Earth are alarmist and do not benefit the public discourse.

Sure, maybe the Earth has a limit to how much population it can support, but it could easily be 100 billion. Who knows? Do you know that the entire population of the Earth can fit in an area the size of the state of Texas, in single family homes? [3]

In contrast to the disproven "unsustainable growing population" idea, depopulation and the aging of the population will have severe consequences within the next few decades, and already has had negative consequences in places like Japan [4], Italy [5], and many others.

We definitely need to deploy policies to increase the number of births to address these issues.

[1] https://www.britannica.com/biography/Thomas-Malthus [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Population_Bomb [3] https://theblogmocracy.com/can-you-fit-the-entire-world-popu... [4] https://www.bloomberg.com/graphics/2019-japan-economy-aging-... [5] https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-02-12/italy-is-...
react_burger38
·4년 전·discuss
This idea - fixing systems that amplify mistakes into large, irreversible impacts-- is why I am against alcohol, marijuana and other mental-state altering drugs for recreational purposes. (I'm not talking about people who really need pain relief from cancer, amphetamines for ADHD, etc.)

If no one in the world drank, smoked pot, or did drugs, how much better off would we all be? 100,000 deaths come from alcohol use every year in the United States alone[1]. That doesn't even account for countless cases of abuse, broken families, crime, and other negative effects of alcohol and drugs.

So many people say "oh well it's fine if I do it, I'm responsible" but then at some point someone isn't fine and isn't as responsible as they think they are.

[1] https://www.cdc.gov/alcohol/features/excessive-alcohol-death....
react_burger38
·4년 전·discuss
react_burger38
·4년 전·discuss
I think this is an interesting point to add to the discussion about tax rates by state. For example, Hawaii has high income taxes - but very low property taxes. Something else to consider when deciding which state is the best to live in.

Also worth considering that $200k in income in California with a couple kids probably doesn't pay the full 10% income tax, because the rates are progressive; but will pay the full 1.2-1.7% property tax on a new 750k-1 million dollar home.
react_burger38
·4년 전·discuss
A better comparison would be median single family home size in US, which is around 2,300 sq ft [1]. Over 60% of housing units in US are single family homes [2].

[1]: https://www.statista.com/statistics/456925/median-size-of-si... [2]: https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/ahs/data/interactive...
react_burger38
·4년 전·discuss
Another thing the US could do to reduce prices is to give people the option for certain expensive procedures (hip transplants, knee replacements, etc.) to be done outside the US by qualified doctors. Then the patient could get a discount on their insurance every month or get an incentive from medicare that splits the savings with the patient.
react_burger38
·4년 전·discuss
One interesting thing to note is that Medicare (US gov't paid healthcare for the elderly) pays hospitals DOUBLE the price for the same procedures that an MD can do in her own clinic. They pay this supposedly so that hospitals can take in patients who can't afford to pay in the emergency room, etc.

But to me this is another one of those cases where poor government policy boosts prices. Hospitals already have an incentive to buy up small practices to reduce competition, but if hospitals are paid double the price for the same procedure compared to an ambulatory clinic, the government is just incentivizing concentration in the market.
react_burger38
·5년 전·discuss
I feel you. Father of 3 here. My two year old always just runs as far as fast as he can pretty much whenever he gets a chance. Won't stay in the stroller either. Putting him in a carseat is much easier. Just went on a flight the other day with the kids and chasing him around the airport wasn't easy, although in the end it was somewhat manageable.

Car travel with kids is way easier compared to other methods.

We took the kids to Paris a while back and carting the stroller up and down the stairs to the metro was a huge pain.
react_burger38
·5년 전·discuss
You should read "Atomic Habits", by James Clear. Basically if you want to build new habits, you need to set realistic goals that you will actually do (and also have self-love, that if you don't get it done, you aren't a failure, every day and even every hour is a new hour you can do better) and then do those goals; then after you meet those goals and establish those habits, then you can move on and make that goal a little harder; or you can set goals in a different area.

Another element of this is that you need to establish when the habit will happen, and where. If you pick the same place every day, with time it becomes automatic.

Also important here is the aggregation of marginal gains - each little thing you improve in your life adds up over time to make a big difference. See this article from James Clear about this concept: https://jamesclear.com/marginal-gains.

Remember as well - as Atomic Habits mentions - the goal isn't just to do whatever your goal is; the goal isn't just the outcome; the goal is to change your very identity. A person who wants to read every day, the goal isn't just the reading itself, it is to BECOME a reader. For the person who wants to eat well and exercise, the goal isn't just to lose weight; it is to BECOME a fit, healthy person. As you form new habits every day, what you do on a daily basis becomes part of you, and those actions you take are the evidence of your new identity.