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12 votes
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The case of the disappearing ink—a US tax court mystery
4 votes -
Rogers CEO says service back online for most Canadian customers, blames outage on 'network system failure'
17 votes -
Letters from the loneliest post office in the world
4 votes -
A day in the life of a music festival medic
5 votes -
When Harry met Santa – Christmas commercial (long version) for Posten Norway
5 votes -
The mystery of the "same sky" postcards
4 votes -
Bad software sent postal workers to jail, because no one wanted to admit it could be wrong
20 votes -
Norwegian skier fails in bid to slalom 40km around Covid quarantine rules – bad weather foils attempt to cross over mountains from Sweden
5 votes -
Greta Thunberg features on Swedish postage stamp – illustration of activist is part of a series highlighting government's environmental quality goals
6 votes -
Redesigning the intubation box to better protect first responders
4 votes -
Private firefighting crews in California spark conflict after alleged illegal backfires in Glass Fire
4 votes -
Washington emergency responders first to use SpaceX’s Starlink internet in the field
8 votes -
Postcards from St Kilda arrive ten years later after washing up in Norway – archaeologist Ian McHardy built a waterproof replica of the mail boats a decade ago
5 votes -
Airbnb asks its US hosts to provide 100,000 free rentals to first responders
6 votes -
USPS needs 1,000 workers in the San Francisco Bay Area to keep up with delivery demands
10 votes -
The forgotten story of America's first EMT services
5 votes -
Two German tourists killed in Arctic avalanche – part of a guided snowmobile tour of the island of Spitsbergen in Norway's Svalbard archipelago
6 votes -
Privatizing public services: Does it work?
5 votes -
Portrait of an inessential US government worker
8 votes -
Former public servant Michaela Banerji loses High Court free speech case
7 votes -
Two Czech climbers in their forties lost their lives last week at Norway's well-known Trollveggen rock face in western Norway
7 votes -
It’s not just for first responders anymore. Health experts want regular Coloradans to have Naloxone on hand
7 votes -
Record numbers rescued from Norway's iconic tourist site Preikestolen
5 votes -
EFF launches "TOSsed Out", a new project to highlight ways that Terms of Service and other rules are unevenly and unthinkingly applied to people by online services
12 votes -
I'm a paramedic, please stop asking me about the worst thing I've ever seen
21 votes -
The Apple Card is a perfect example of Apple’s post-iPhone strategy
12 votes -
‘I am dreaming of a way to kill almost every last person on earth’: A self-proclaimed white nationalist planned a mass terrorist attack, the government says
34 votes -
Rescuers search for survivors in deadly Indonesian landslide
4 votes -
Losing Laura - Laura Levis died from an asthma attack just outside a Boston-area ER, after calling 911 from outside its locked doors. Her husband has been piecing together how it happened.
9 votes -
Flash floods and landslides kill at least twenty-seven on Indonesian island of Sumatra
3 votes -
Taken for a ride: MD injured in ATV crash gets $56,603 bill for air ambulance trip
13 votes -
Petty charges, princely profits
5 votes -
Mendocino Complex Fire grows to become largest wildfire in California history
8 votes -
'Damoclean sword': Michaela Banerji is still fighting after five years. The former Immigration Department official said her sacking after a tweet "drove a stake" through her.
3 votes -
Man of letters: What I learned about America, and myself, working as a mail carrier
11 votes -
Emergency medical services in America
This comes from an article in Current Affairs, which to be upfront is an openly leftist publication. I thought it was an interesting anecdote, especially with the news from a few weeks ago about...
This comes from an article in Current Affairs, which to be upfront is an openly leftist publication. I thought it was an interesting anecdote, especially with the news from a few weeks ago about the woman in Boston begging for people not to call an ambulance for her because she wouldn't be able to afford it (which is also mentioned in the article).
I was in a New York City diner two nights ago and something disturbing happened. It was about 2am, and a woman was sitting alone in the next booth. She was disheveled and possibly homeless, and looked unwell. She had been eating a plate of food, but then sprawled herself along the seat and fell asleep. Someone in the restaurant must have called 911, because an ambulance showed up. They parked directly in front of the entrance and left the flashing lights on, and through the large windows the lights filled the restaurant and were overwhelmingly dazzling. The two paramedics approached the woman and told her to sit up. She mumbled a refusal. They insisted. As she finally sat up, bleary, they told her she would need to leave with them and that she should pay her bill. She replied that she had no money. The paramedics became upset, one of them asking her why she would order food if she couldn’t pay for it, and telling her she’d need to pay before they left. While the paramedics stood issuing her instructions as she muttered and fumbled, a young man at the front of the restaurant quietly approached a server and paid her bill. He then told the paramedics he had paid for her. They looked vaguely annoyed, and told her she should be grateful that a stranger just paid for her. The woman did not seem to comprehend, and just made a noise. Then the paramedics took her out to the ambulance. In the hour or so I stayed in the restaurant, the ambulance didn’t leave, and kept its lights on.
Here’s why I was disturbed: the paramedics did not act like health professionals. They acted like cops. At first, I thought they were cops. Their uniform was similar, and the dazzling flashing lights were like police lights, and had the same bewildering effect. They were more concerned with whether the woman had paid her debts than whether she was okay. They had very clear contempt for her, treating her as a nuisance who was bothering restaurant patrons and needed to be removed. She wasn’t actually bothering anyone, of course; I was sitting in the next booth and had barely noticed her, and there were plenty of spare booths in the diner. But the paramedics were aggressive and unsympathetic in the way that many cops are. Incidents like the one I saw must happen constantly all across the country: homeless people and drug addicts (I don’t know whether the woman was intoxicated or on drugs, though it seemed somewhat likely) not being cared for with compassion, but being “policed” even by those who are supposed to be selflessly devoted to the improvement of health. The flashing lights were totally unnecessary, and made the whole diner feel like a police raid. And, of course, how typical of America that the issue of whether you can pay the bill is more important than whether you will live or die.
What do you think of this? If you've had an experience with emergency medical services, how did it compare?
11 votes -
Some heat relief forecast as California fires rage
2 votes -
Almost 200 missing in volcano disaster. Guatemala releases official figures as a fresh eruption disrupts rescue work at the Fuego volcano
5 votes -
Rescuers battle boiling ash to recover Fuego's dead. In San Miguel Los Lotes close to Guatemala’s most active volcano, firefighters are working hard, but hope is slim.
4 votes -
Campaign for postal banking
9 votes -
Ninety-eight years of mail fraud - How the postal letter became a tool for ingenious criminality
4 votes