13th
My friend Greg Newburn, one of the funniest people I know, has a really good post on his blog regarding “cosmotarians,” or libertarians who make a big point of being “citizens of the world” detached from base, low-class inclinations like “patriotism,” “country,” or whatnot.
The inciting incident actually took place a couple of weeks ago, after the US lost to Ghana in the world cup, and the somewhat well-known libertarian Gary Leff Tweeted: “Just don’t get tribalism. Why should I get excited about #usa goals?”
The message: You idiots with your patriotic tendencies… it’s so irrational of you to care about what Team USA does.
Here’s Newburn
I simply don’t believe Leff doesn’t “get” why Americans would cheer for the U.S., Ghanaians for Ghana, etc. I’m sure Leff wishes he embodied the mechanical rationality that would completely eschew even the most benign loyalty to one’s country. But he doesn’t, because no one does. Not even Will Wilkinson, and he hates America. There’s a reason our Spanish brothers are gathered in huge squares to watch today’s final, and there’s a reason they’re not rooting for the Netherlands. I can’t explain the visceral loyalty to one’s country, but to pretend you don’t understand that such loyalty exists, or that it’s completely mind-boggling in every context, is simply ridiculous.
This is the key point, and it represents a real failing on the part of most libertarians. In their attempt to embody “homo economicus” or “rational man” to the ultimate degree, they’ll absurdly deny obvious things like: We care more about our countrymates than we do others… we care more about our neighbors than we do people in the neighboring town, etc.
Sure, there’s an elemant of “irrationality” to care about what Landon Danovan is doing thousands of miles away. Technically it doesn’t effect me. But somehow it does, and to deny that, or to try to “logic it away” is silly, and ultimately undermining.
Me and my two best friends (for the most part) [Picture taken in Austin, TX at the wedding of David and Elizabeth] .
In 2006, the system was losing approximately $10 million per month. I don’t know how much bloat they have cut since but I would doubt it would do much to combat their ever expanding finance costs on what the NYT reports is now $700 million in debt. Because of inefficiencies in the design of the hospital both from a layout and operational perspective, about 40% of people who entered their emergency room waiting room left untreated. An enormous share of their revenue came from turning emergency room walk-ins into in-patients. Not only were they seeing a large share of those potential patients walk away but their bed count (total potential in-patients) dropped by almost half in the last couple of decades because they didn’t have the money to support the beds. It was a vicious cycle. Also, because it was a Catholic institution, they could not provide family planning treatments. One of the fastest growing revenue generators at hospitals across the country is in vitro fertilization. The area that surrounds that hospital is just about the perfect demographic for IVF but because of their charter, those rich, older families were sent across town. (I doubt abortions are a big money maker but those were off limits also.)This is the problem with almost all of our healthcare infrastructure in America. Hospitals were designed not around efficiency, but around having a space to treat tuberculosis, diarrhea from dirty water, and a business model that hasn’t progressed out of the fee-for-service structure of the 19th Century.
Our country now has drastically different healthcare needs— 75% of our healthcare costs are from chronic, behavioral-based diseases but our infrastructure is built for acute issues with a glut of hospital beds and white coats that treat behavioral based disease with pills and scalpels.
I did my residency at St. Vincents. It’s now almost closed. And I’m happy.
I truly believe that something better will be created that will eventually meet our vastly different needs. Sometimes society needs to purge. Sometimes we need to move on with total faith that our generation can produce something better, something more meaningful to our current population, and something we, as progressive, modern, ridiculously intelligent Americans can be proud of.
And I’m late to my meeting with the group Bloomberg hired to figure out a way to run NYC healthcare as efficiently as he runs his own company. The future is bright…
Nice! RussiaToday has me identified as Executive Editor.
I knew knifing Carney in the back would result in a title upgrade.
If you actually care to watch my 100% regurgitated nonsense about banking regulation, the video is here.
so it looks like a Michael Moore-esque documentary about the monopoly of privatizing the supernatural sector, and the environmental protection agency that is trying to stop it.