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9 votes
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As economics improve, solar shines in rural America
8 votes -
US Congress demands Jeff Bezos explain Amazon’s face recognition software
15 votes -
New York moves to kick Charter Spectrum cable out of the state
11 votes -
Catalog of Fania Records, the Motown of latin music, is sold
5 votes -
Big Data - The Business of Emotion (feat. White Sea) (2015)
1 vote -
Man of letters: What I learned about America, and myself, working as a mail carrier
11 votes -
As Carr fire kills two in California, firefighters reflect on a job now ‘twice as violent’
1 vote -
Basil Banghart, an incredibly interesting American criminal, burglar and prison escape artist
4 votes -
US veterans speak out against the militarization of sports
13 votes -
Canada prides itself on being safer than the US, but shootings are on the rise
5 votes -
Project Code Rush - The beginnings of Netscape/Mozilla
6 votes -
SpaceX’s secret weapon is Gwynne Shotwell
4 votes -
Facebook suspends US conspiracy theorist Alex Jones
7 votes -
Target’s CBGB tribute draws backlash, followed by an apology
3 votes -
Fit For a King - Backbreaker (2018)
1 vote -
Americans who expatriated from the US to Canada--or Canadians who know them--how are you/they faring?
I'm interested in all responses, but if the answer is "well" or better and the following are factors that contributed to that sense of well-being, could you divulge your job industry, if...
I'm interested in all responses, but if the answer is "well" or better and the following are factors that contributed to that sense of well-being, could you divulge your job industry, if applicable, and/or the Canadian city where you currently reside? (If privacy-minded or jealously guarding a secret utopia, province would suffice. Thank you.)
About me: besides the current political and lazy-to-anti-intellectual climate of the US, I'm pressingly concerned about global warming; after a dozen years of living in and around refreshing Seattle (compared to southern California), I had to give in and buy an air conditioner this summer. Anecdotally, it seems to be a trend.
11 votes -
Sacha Baron Cohen puts Dick Cheney-signed waterboard kit on eBay
7 votes -
Amazon's face recognition falsely matched twenty-eight members of Congress with mugshots
15 votes -
Kansas is flatter than a pancake
11 votes -
House Republicans move to impeach deputy attorney general
30 votes -
Facebook stock drops more than 20% after warning that revenue growth will take a hit
9 votes -
Edwin Jackson's MLB odyssey: From 'Young Doc Gooden' to thirteen teams in sixteen years
2 votes -
The free speech panic: How the right concocted a crisis
8 votes -
Audio expert examines Trump-Cohen tape
4 votes -
Tyler, The Creator (Tiny Desk Concert) (2017)
3 votes -
The spy who drove me
7 votes -
How football coaches became the vanguard of American conservatism
3 votes -
Stanford sex attack: Brock Turner's lawyer launches appeal
5 votes -
Khruangbin — NPR Tiny Desk Concert (2018)
3 votes -
No arrest in fatal shooting during argument over handicap parking space (Due to “stand your ground law”)
22 votes -
How tech's richest plan to save themselves after the apocalypse
3 votes -
The water wars of Arizona - Attracted by lax regulations, industrial agriculture has descended on a remote valley, depleting its aquifer — leaving many residents with no water at all
22 votes -
Tronc slashes 'New York Daily News' staff by half
8 votes -
Minor league baseball team Myrtle Beach Pelicans to host Deaf Awareness Night on August 19
3 votes -
The family of an Australian woman shot dead by a police officer outside her home in Minneapolis is suing the city and several officers for violating her civil rights.
3 votes -
U.S. Breaks Up Fake I.R.S. Phone Scam Operation
6 votes -
Ask a music critic: Will Phish ever make the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame?
5 votes -
Bob Dylan - Bob Dylan's 115th Dream (1965)
4 votes -
Lawsuit says migrants were subjected to dirty detention facilities, bad food and water
15 votes -
The new gilded age–Income inequality in the U.S. by state, metropolitan area, and county
14 votes -
(The Danger of) Obama Nostalgia - "The Enemy Within"
13 votes -
Here are the 285,000 Manafort text messages that WikiLeaks wouldn't publish
32 votes -
James Gunn fired as director of 'Guardians of the Galaxy' franchise over offensive tweets
19 votes -
Looking inside a used voting machine from the 2016 election
12 votes -
New Vermont legalization law sparks 'gift' delivery service
4 votes -
Anti Trump protests outside the White House continue into fifth day
8 votes -
How do you guys feel about medical marijuana in the states being legalized?
I've been researching into the topic recently, and I wanted to see how other people felt about it.
20 votes -
The last days of Blockbuster Video - The stories of three closing Blockbuster locations in Alaska, some of the last ones in the country
7 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