a | b

May 19

(Source: tastefullyoffensive, via marco)

Jun 14

Best Movie Closing Songs, In Order

May 30

http://niemann.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/12/16/let-it-dough/

May 17

cheatsheet:

braiker:

Peanut Zombies (via reddit)

LOVE this.

cheatsheet:

braiker:

Peanut Zombies (via reddit)

LOVE this.

May 12

“It is sometimes difficult to know what some Republican candidates stand for, as they pander to the far right without alienating the center. It is not difficult to know what Newt Gingrich stands for, and to find it repellent.” — Mr. Gingrich’s Intolerant History, NY Times 5/12/11

Apr 26

Patients Are Not Consumers

But the fact that Republicans are demanding that we literally stake our health, even our lives, on an already failed approach is only part of what’s wrong here. As I said earlier, there’s something terribly wrong with the whole notion of patients as “consumers” and health care as simply a financial transaction.

Medical care, after all, is an area in which crucial decisions — life and death decisions — must be made. Yet making such decisions intelligently requires a vast amount of specialized knowledge. Furthermore, those decisions often must be made under conditions in which the patient is incapacitated, under severe stress, or needs action immediately, with no time for discussion, let alone comparison shopping.

That’s why we have medical ethics. That’s why doctors have traditionally both been viewed as something special and been expected to behave according to higher standards than the average professional. There’s a reason we have TV series about heroic doctors, while we don’t have TV series about heroic middle managers.

The idea that all this can be reduced to money — that doctors are just “providers” selling services to health care “consumers” — is, well, sickening. And the prevalence of this kind of language is a sign that something has gone very wrong not just with this discussion, but with our society’s values.

-Paul Krugman

Apr 19

[video]

Apr 17

From Andrew Sullivan.

From Andrew Sullivan.

Mar 26

[video]

Mar 11

The Modesty Manifesto

… Perhaps the enlargement of the self has also attenuated the links between the generations. Every generation has an incentive to push costs of current spending onto future generations. But no generation has done it as freely as this one. Maybe people in the past had a visceral sense of themselves as a small piece of a larger chain across the centuries. As a result, it felt viscerally wrong to privilege the current generation over the future ones, in a way it no longer does… .

- David Brooks