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10 votes
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Bergen is a city on the West coast fjords of Norway, surrounded by mountains. And they just built the best bicycle tunnel in the world.
13 votes -
From Tuberculosis to HIV/AIDS to cancer, disease tracking has always had a political dimension, but it’s the foundation of US public health
9 votes -
What really happened on the deadly Jetline roller coaster accident at Gröna Lund in Stockholm?
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Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.: Texas measles outbreak is call to action for all of us. MMR vaccine is crucial to avoiding potentially deadly disease.
34 votes -
Of trains and tanks. Or does the German political class actually know how bad things are?
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Measles outbreak mounts among children in one of Texas’ least vaccinated counties
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What experts say about safely cooking and eating eggs while bird flu continues to spread
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In the US, multi-level barrage of book bans is ‘unprecedented’, says PEN America
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Measles case reported in Atlanta; Department of Public health seeks those who may have been exposed
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Helsinki landmark Finlandia Hall reopens – architectural icon, designed by Alvar Aalto, is now more accessible than ever to the public after an extensive renovation
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‘Worst-case scenario’: when needed most, New Orleans bollards were missing in action
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Amazon One Medical telehealth provider sued for US patient death
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(PDF) Living happily ever after? The hidden health risks of Disney princesses.
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The world's northernmost metro system | Helsingin Metro
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Louisiana forbids public health workers from promoting COVID, flu and mpox shots
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Kansas City receives new streetcars for Main Street extension
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More riders than expected have used Oklahoma City's RAPID NW bus line
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Medicare for all would save 68,000 US lives per year and reduce costs by $450 billion
78 votes -
It's time to break up Big Medicine in the US
33 votes -
Amtrak sets all-time ridership record in fiscal year 2024 (and other accomplishments)
23 votes -
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36 votes -
How Madrid built its metro cheaply
27 votes -
How to judge relative dangers of chemicals for someone too busy (or lazy) to keep up with the science?
I do hope one of you thinks of a better title or a more coherent structure for the overall post. This question was inspired by a comment chain about PFAS in Gore-Tex jackets under a different post...
I do hope one of you thinks of a better title or a more coherent structure for the overall post.
This question was inspired by a comment chain about PFAS in Gore-Tex jackets under a different post here, but it's been a bit of a simmering question for me.
When reading through that thread, my immediate reaction was something along the lines of the following.
Unless you're directing traffic in Seattle or Scotland, wouldn't the amount of time you'd wear the jacket be too little to have meaningful exposure? It's not like you're walking into an oven where the polymers would break down from heat. Further, if it's GoreTex-appropriate weather, you'll near-certainly have additional clothing between your skin and the GoreTex.
I was bored at work today, so I had plenty of time for rumination and introspection. What I found so far is that my instinctive skepticism toward health-conscious rhetoric has these primary sources:
- I listened to Stronger by Science's six-hour deep dive on aspartame. Their eventual conclusion is that aspartame does cause bladder cancer in rats & mice, but the equivalent doses for humans make fears over its use into a major nothingburger. A human would need to spend a year chugging down five gallons of Diet Coke each day for the elevated cancer risk to be statistically meaningful.
- When I catch someone trying to be convincing in an area where I lack domain expertise, I judge them by their overall demeanor and (if I can catch on) general rhetorical logic [in that order] long before I consider the truth of their specific claims. The IRL people I've met who are most stridently into wholesome natural living have fervency and lack of appreciation that it's the dose that makes the poison to the degree that it makes RFK discussing vaccine policy sound grounded in reality by comparison. Perhaps if they were born in a different society, they'd make excellent temple priests who ensure no lazy shortcuts or "it's all we have available" excuses are made when it's time to ensure a full harvest. Instead, they're the kinds who play 50 million questions and have genuine concerns that the radio waves that connect my wireless headphones are giving me brain damage or control. [To be fair, there is some large selection effects here. My hobbies have a habit of attracting those who are so open-minded that their brains fell out. Since online interactions strip the majority of demeanor and previous interactions, I judge online strangers with strange opinions way less harshly than IRL contacts unless they've gone out of their way to be obnoxious. IRL, I'm exposed to a lot more generic chemicals bad rhetoric than in my usual online bubbles. ]
- Based on 1, unless I have preexisting trust with a particular journalist, layman's science journalism—when it's performed by journalists dabbling in science rather than scientists trying their hands at public communication—is far too likely to overblow a headline or misrepresent the research conclusions. "Here are 30 links to news articles" doesn't appeal to me because 25 of them are probably copying each other (that's just how internet journalism works). It's highly unlikely that all 5 of the remaining links misread the original paper, but I'm not reading through all those (perhaps AI summarization could help here—at the very least it could identify commonalities and outliers for manual examination later).
- Related to 2, two additional SMBC comics that share my attitude: Vitamin Water v. Butter and Pronounceable Ingredients Only
That said, sometimes the health nuts are correct. As it turns out, all the coughing smokers do is a strong sign that smoking is bad for your lungs.
What are some heuristics to sort health tips that get passed around without citation into one of the following buckets?
- You'll notice the improvement
within a weekonce you've finished withdrawal. Smoking, boozing, eating meat or alliums at dinnertime, and heroin are in this bucket. - The effect is real and significant, but you may not notice the impact until at least a year has gone by, if ever. Seatbelts and bike/horse helmets are the two examples that immediately pop to mind.
- Technically non-zero, but ultimately trivial. The opening aspartame example would fit. In a similar line to doctors who recommend against treating prostate cancer because the treatments would shorten your lifespan by more than letting that cancer run its course and waiting for a heart attack or totally unrelated cancer to do you in, these interventions are meaningless to anyone who uses motor vehicles regularly.
- Playground rumors or outright disinformation. Vaccines causing autism and yellow 5 as an HRT supplement b/c it shrinks your testicles belong in this wastebin.
Circling back to the impact of PFAS in Gore-Tex that inspired today's thinking, my layman's estimate that the effects on the factory workers who make a career out of working with the stuff is a low 2 when following proper safety procedures. Without them, a definite 1. For wearers of the stuff, a solid 3.
One final reason I may have been so fired up on this topic is that I listened to a highlight reel from a Congressional
hearinground table on food & pharmaceutical safety last week. During the testimony, I had a nagging feeling that at least half of what they said was true, but the truth percent is below 75, and I had no idea which was which because all claims were presented with the same urgency.31 votes -
DuSable Bridge, Chicago: Is this dangerous infrastructure decay? Should I report it and where?
10 votes -
“Solidarity is the only thing that can save us”: an interview with Astra Taylor and Leah Hunt-Hendrix
10 votes -
What happened to passenger hovercraft?
14 votes -
Private school - worthwhile/good idea for not rich people?
Did you or someone you know go to [edit public private, parent paid] school, esp if the students' parents can't easily afford it? Did their parents actually move to be closer to a prestigious...
Did you or someone you know go to [edit
publicprivate, parent paid] school, esp if the students' parents can't easily afford it? Did their parents actually move to be closer to a prestigious school? Is it worth it for folks who aren't old boys/old girls and in general are neither new nor old money? Does it ever make sense to use the college fund to pay for secondary education?28 votes -
US awards $1.5 billion in grants to improve passenger rail along Northeast Corridor
18 votes -
We've got a lot of ways to go: Thoughts on World Toilet Day
9 votes -
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32 votes -
2024 update on Los Angeles Metro projects
8 votes -
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15 votes -
US voters greenlight over $25 billion in public transportation ballot measures in 2024
47 votes -
Norwegian study shows microplastics in wastewater are shielding pathogens from being destroyed by treatment
13 votes -
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4 votes -
Amtrak Wolverine (MI), Southwest Chief (AZ) services to see design advancements, right-of-way acquisition with $126 million in grants
12 votes -
The world's most feminist city – how Umeå in Sweden became an idyll for women
7 votes -
Joe Biden- Kamala Harris administration announces $2.4 billion in new US railroad projects to improve safety and grow the passenger and freight networks
45 votes -
Police in Norway say four people were injured when a tram jumped the rails and crashed into an electronic device store in central Oslo
7 votes -
Groundbreaking exhibition on Tove Jansson's public art opens in Helsinki – focuses on the artist and writer's lesser-known mural work
12 votes -
Local US health departments struggle to track human cases of bird flu
7 votes -
Sweden's libraries caught in a political row about drag story hour – far right have tried to block events from taking place, with varied levels of success
16 votes -
Egypt declared malaria-free after 100-year effort
24 votes -
Never missing the train again, thanks to Rust
21 votes -
Mass transit on orbital boulevards
6 votes -
The rapidly growing tram system of Helsinki – taking a look at the network's history, lines, technical details, tram fleet, ridership, and the future
12 votes