
Article:
Two more GOP senators defect on healthcare bill
“GOP Sens. Jerry Moran (Kansas) and Mike Lee (Utah) announced on Monday night they will not support taking up a bill repealing and replacing ObamaCare, effectively blocking the legislation. “

Article:
Two more GOP senators defect on healthcare bill
“GOP Sens. Jerry Moran (Kansas) and Mike Lee (Utah) announced on Monday night they will not support taking up a bill repealing and replacing ObamaCare, effectively blocking the legislation. “
Would you advise someone to flap towels in a burning house? To bring a flyswatter to a gunfight? Yet the counsel we hear on climate change could scarcely be more out of sync with the nature of the crisis.
The email in my inbox last week offered thirty suggestions to green my office space: use reusable pens, redecorate with light colours, stop using the elevator.
Back at home, done huffing stairs, I could get on with other options: change my lightbulbs, buy local veggies, purchase eco-appliances, put a solar panel on my roof.
And a study released on Thursday claimed it had figured out the single best way to fight climate change: I could swear off ever having a child.
These pervasive exhortations to individual action — in corporate ads, school textbooks, and the campaigns of mainstream environmental groups, especially in the west — seem as natural as the air we breath. But we could hardly be worse-served.
While we busy ourselves greening our personal lives, fossil fuel corporations are rendering these efforts irrelevant. The breakdown of carbon emissions since 1988? A hundred companies alone are responsible for an astonishing 71 percent. You tinker with those pens or that panel; they go on torching the planet.
Neoliberalism has conned us into fighting climate change as individuals | Martin Lukacs
I am from the USA.
I have one of the most top-teir private insurance plans available.
I live in a city with four, count ‘em, FOUR hospitals.
I have been a patient of my pulmonologist for 2 years.
I scheduled my next appointment today. The first available appointment?
In three and a half months.
Please stop with this “you can see a specialist in a week!” Nonsense. No you can’t. Not with elite insurance and not as an existing patient. I’ve had to make specialist appointments as far as 8 months out.
Yesterday I made an appointment with my primary for a somewhat urgent matter. His next available? In 3 weeks.
I hate going to the emergency room because the average wait time is 4-10 hours. I ended up in a coma once because of complications caused by the wait time.
I am in the most medically privileged position a chronically ill person in the US can be, and the wait times to see my doctor are still very very long.
There are people in my country who can’t even afford to go to the doctor and people justify it by saying “but in Canada, they have to ~*wait*~.
We wait here too. We wait JUST AS LONG, and sometimes even LONGER.
But not everyone gets to wait, and they die because of it.
That disgusts me.
Universal health care now, please. And yes, my full time working, disabled, chronically ill self is more than happy to fork over taxes so that nobody goes without healthcare-even the people I don’t like!
I waited 22 months to see the top geneticist on EDS here in the US. I waited at least 6 months to see one of the few neurosurgeons who is qualified to do surgery for my condition. Once I had to wait seven months not even to see a doctor, but just to get a sleep study, because the facility is that backed up (though that’s more of a supply failing to catch up with demand problem than just general Ways Things Are. They could build more rooms or facilities and make a profit with the demand… why Tucson doesn’t do this is beyond me and the bane of my existence.) Making a new patient appointment with an actual DOCTOR at a PCP office here ranges anywhere from 4-8 months. You can usually see a NP or an MA sooner, but sometimes it’s still 1-2 weeks for urgent, acute issues for existing patients and 1-3 months for new patients.
But even as sick as my chronically ill disabled self is I wouldn’t care if all those times DOUBLED, if that meant everyone had access to healthcare and people didn’t have to ACTUALLY FUCKING DIE because they can’t get simple things treated.
I get most of my care from the big hospitals in Boston and the first time visits for specialists have AVERAGED 3-6 months. AVERAGE, as in if I get in faster I am usually shocked.
Also, this is assuming you can even get to see the doctor. Insurance sometimes mandates you see a doctor at another hospital they own before one that is in network but not owned by them. So then you have to wait to see that doctor, and usually have that doctor be like ???? I can’t help you, then have to wait for the appointment with the other one.
Soap in Europe has nothing to do with Arabs or Islam. The earliest hard evidence for it is ~8th century CE, but it is likely older. Contact with the Arabic world brought *hard soap* to Europe, a different tech than the soft, squishy soap native to Europe. It took off like wildfire because bar soap stores better, is transportable, and generally is an aesthetically more elegant texture. Also it signals a greater wealth as bar soap was first imported, than a more involved, expensive process to make. But by the 12th-13th century, hard soap was being made in Europe on near-industrial levels. There were soap guilds and soap factories and towns known for their soap and soap everywhere. Soap soap soap.
Water bathing was brought to/written about in Europe by the Romans, but you have to take their accounts as heavily influenced by the mindset that everything Roman was better and everything not-Roman was Uncivilized. It could be that water bathing in Europe is a lot older; we just don’t have written accounts or really obvious “this is a Bath Thing”. But the Romans didn’t used soap so any native soap use could have been stomped out.
Then there’s a gap in my hygiene/soap history knowledge because not many people tend to research that kind of nitty gritty detail between the fall of the Roman Empire and Medieval Europe. Not a lot of primary sources or extant goods.
Medieval Europe, people bathed. They bathed communally, with hot water and with soap.
Then water bathing fell out of style. It becomes medically shunned, for reasons whose foundations are erroneous, but make very clear, understandable sense. That’s a different topic and post, but the ideas aren’t out of nowhere. In a twist, Western people in the 21st century still believe some of them. 😀
But this doesn’t mean people were filthy, stank, or didn’t care about personal hygiene. They care a lot. I mean, duh, people generally dislike stinking and lack of hygiene has a really obvious connection to disease, social outcasting, and poverty. It’s just they had slightly different standards and often radically different practices.
You don’t need to water bathe or use soap to be clean. Really. Honest.
You can use the old technique of dry scrubbing with linen cloths, regular (linen) undergarment changing, and hair combing and be clean, smell-free, and no one in modern society will be able to tell. You might even see an improvement in body skin health as soap is kinda not-good for skin. You can dry scrub and wash your clothes and look clean, neat, and be unsmelly. You can shower and soap and not change/wash your clothes regularly and look filthy and utterly stink. Have done both, can attest. Also know a reenactor who did linen scrubbing for months and bish, no one could tell she hadn’t showered in half a year.
I mean, yeah, you’re not going to smell like nothing or flowers, but you’re not going to be rank con-goer stanky. You’re going to be person-smelling. Like, whatever your skin/body naturally smells of without stripping it away with detergents. Past people generally smelt slightly of woodsmoke anyway, so it’s not like it was that obvious.
Early-mid 19th century, water bathing comes back into (Western) style and that’s when things get funky. Soap use takes on moralistic and class connotations. This is where “the great unwashed masses” comes from. Those poor people living in industrial areas who couldn’t afford regular soap bathing. The new carbolic soap doesn’t do its soap thing in cold water. It just…becomes slime. You have to heat water on a stove (expensive), using coal (expensive), to make the soap (expensive) do its thing. But carbolic soap also has a distinctive smell so you can tell if someone has washed using it because they have this lingering aroma of it around them. So even if a poor person was dry scrubbing, you could tell they weren’t soap bathing, with all the moral, class, conscious Othering that went with it.
So the Arabic world may have brought certain hygiene tech, but the exchange went both ways (French soap quickly surpassed their original and they exported it back to the Levant) and it’s not that they were filthy before or after. We’re primates. We like grooming ourselves. We quickly make the really obvious connection between hygiene and disease. No person needed the Islamic world to teach them how to be clean. Soap and water bathing has just gone in and out of fashion through the centuries.
Pre-modern European cities were filthy, but not out of choice or because they didn’t know better. They grew and population exploded faster than first the idea of public works and then faster than any civic projects could keep up with. You can read 13th and 14th century London petitions to the king to “please increase waste disposal systems because this is gross and unhealthy and we don’t like it.” They knew that dumping it in the Thames would come back to haunt them, but the options were “dump in the river” or “let the shit sit in the road under the sun”. These were people who believed that disease came from bad-smelling air; they really wanted clean towns. They just didn’t have a civic system to make the projects and societies and governments that prioritized money for war over money for sewers.
Also even if you didn’t have solid soap you could make a pretty decent liquid soap with soapwort. And the Vikings were known to be very into bathing and cleanliness, especially hair care. Shockingly, even people in the past liked being clean. Wow!

The whole crew is there. These are all Trump’s people. These are not Don Jr’s contacts.
Remember, Trump fired US Attorney Preet Bharara who was investigating Veselnitskaya’s clients for money laundering.
Corruption rules ok; it’s the new normal 😡
Are we all not going to observe the corrupted version of The Last Supper going on there?
Interesting seeing all the vague blogging from people who refuse to believe my comments about Moffat’s importance to having a woman Doctor.
Like, I know what I’m about. I’ve done my research. I can pinpoint the exact 90s novel where Steven Moffat added a passage about Time Lord gender change into another writer’s book. I can point to Neil Gaiman’s discussion about the Corsair line and how Moffat added to it. I have stats from a fan poll to credit the statistically significant change in support for a woman Doctor from stuff Moffat wrote. (Seriously, ask me if you like, I can pull that all up. It’s all documented.) I wouldn’t say stuff like this unless I had verified it.
Of course Moffat isn’t the main player in casting Whittaker. Of course that’s Chibnall. But he’s continuing on a history that Moffat has spent many years contributing to, and bringing it to fruition. And I think that’s really neat.
😎
These are really nicely animated, and hey, they’re useful too! Little details someone might not consider.
Gaits are the same for horses (though i don’t think i’ve heard ‘amble’ used in that context) and probably most quadrupeds i’d imagine …But yeah, it’s always been interesting and cool imo that that the back and forth of the legs switches from being one side versus the other to diagonal and then front versus back at full speed. And cantering at one point in its cycle has just one front foot on the ground.