Nobody Cares: PRS

Noodles

The sequel will probably be better.
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Says the person in the minority party of idiots who wants tonforce hisnreligeous zealot bull shit on everyone like everyone in the MAGA GOP.

Maybe try assimilating to the modern fucking world or GTFO.
 
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Free

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A different, not all that helpful, kind of early warning system.

There’s that old idea: if you see a bunch of people frantically running in one direction, run with them. They’re probably running from something worth running from — a terrorist attack, Godzilla, the Stay Puft Marshmallow Man… you get the point. That same logic has now been adapted for the digital age, courtesy of a project that treats billionaire travel habits like an early warning system for the end of the world.
First noticed by Boing Boing, developer Kyle McDonald’s “Apocalypse Early Warning” site is predicated on the simple, cynical premise that if a catastrophe is looming, the rich will know first and flee immediately, like the cowards they are. They’ll get on their private jets and haul tail to their personal quaint and quiet private islands or whatever.
 
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Innula Zenovka

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Politico

‘No idea it was coming’: Pentagon officials stunned by Hegseth decision on troops in Poland

“The Poles certainly have never criticized President Trump, and they do all the things that good allies are supposed to do,” said Hodges. “And yet, this happens.”
But they're all Catholics in Poland, and we know what both Pete Hegseth’s fundie Calvinist church thinks about Catholics in general and what Trump thinks of the current pope in particular...

Or maybe, like so many things the current regime does, someone must have thought it seemed like a good idea at the time.
 

Bartholomew Gallacher

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Veritable Quandry

Specializing in derails and train wrecks.
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There are several stories about cutting training due to budget shortages caused by a small excursion overseas. This could be a similar issue.
 

Innula Zenovka

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Free to read, I think.

I knew that the US was an outlier among wealthy countries when it comes to health care provision and outcomes but it's quite an eye-opener (at least to me) to see how great is the disparity.

Mirror, Mirror 2024 compared ten countries: Australia, Canada, France, Germany, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Sweden, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and the United States. The top three performers were Australia, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom. The United States ranked tenth. Last.

Not narrowly last. The Commonwealth Fund’s own charts show the US as an outlier — not merely at the bottom of the ranking but separated from the next-lowest performer by a margin that, in any other policy domain, would constitute a crisis demanding immediate national attention. The US ranked last on access to care. Last on health outcomes. Ninth on equity. Second — its sole strong performance — on care process, which measures whether the care that is delivered, when it is delivered, is technically competent. Americans, when they can get care, generally receive good care. The problem is getting it.

The health outcomes finding is the one that should stop every reader cold. According to the Commonwealth Fund, Americans have the shortest life expectancy and the highest rates of preventable deaths among all ten peer nations studied. These are not statistical abstractions. They are the counted bodies of people who died from conditions that, in nine other wealthy countries, would not have killed them — because those countries found and treated the disease earlier, covered the medication that managed the chronic condition, or simply did not allow a billing dispute to delay the procedure long enough for the patient to deteriorate past saving.
 

Dakota Tebaldi

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Irish councillor proposes monument for mosquito that killed Cromwell

The idea came from a conversation on social media. Very often you would have people who are studying Cromwell, primarily from an English perspective, and they would know that he had visited Ireland, that there had been a campaign in Ireland, and then would often come to social media asking questions of Irish people, wondering, "Well, what are your views?" And it can often be a grab-the-popcorn moment and go to the comment section. And that's what I did on this occasion, too. And within the comments was a post saying that the person responding was surprised that the people of Cork had not put up a statue to the midge that had bitten and eventually led to the death of Cromwell. And I said, "Well, hold my beer. That's a great idea for a public monument."
 

Innula Zenovka

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I was reading this entertaining (and sweary, because he's performatively Australian) demolition of the US' Assistant Secretary for Health, Dr Brian Christine, an Alabama expert in erectile dysfunction and a Covid conspiracist, and therefore eminently qualified to supervise efforts to contain outbreaks of Hantavirus and Ebola) when I saw that he's also a four-star Admiral.

Puzzled, I consulted Wikipedia, and apparently the rank goes with the job.

Can anyone explain why some civilian posts in the executive carry with them military ranks, and are these ranks purely honorary or do they somehow fit into the command structure? Is he paid an admiral's salary on top of his salary as Assistant Secretary for Health? And does this curious -- to me, at least -- custom apply to all similar posts in other departments (Treasury, Justice, Agriculture, etc) or only some?

 
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Innula Zenovka

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I suspect it mostly has to do with "chain of command" needs. "This person may need to deal with military personel who may get pissy about rank if they are being ordered by a civilian."

That sort of thing.
I don't think it's necessary in other countries, though.

I asked ChatGPT. Apparently

The reason is rooted in a rather unusual American institution: the United States Public Health Service Commissioned Corps (USPHS Commissioned Corps).
The USPHS is one of the United States’ eight uniformed services, alongside the Army, Navy, Air Force, etc., although it is not an armed force in the normal sense. Its officers are doctors, epidemiologists, pharmacists, nurses, scientists, and public-health specialists who can be deployed during epidemics, disasters, humanitarian crises, and similar emergencies. They wear naval-style uniforms and use naval ranks.

Because the Assistant Secretary for Health is the head of that commissioned corps, Congress authorised the officeholder to hold the rank of four-star admiral (O-10) when serving as a commissioned officer. That authority was specifically created in 1990.
 

Dakota Tebaldi

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Yeah I've never quite understood that either.

There is still another non-military uniformed service in America, the NOAA commissioned officer corps, which does weather, oceanography, and surveying work. They have navy ranks too but, at least they work primarily on ships so it makes a little sense. The public health service? I don't get it.