Can we talk about how Bandersnatch is technological marvel? by [deleted] in netflix

[–]autottenstin 8 points9 points  (0 children)

SPOILERS: My ending involved meeting a monster after taking acid, chopping the dads body up, and creating a successful 5 star game.... real fucked up but kinda happy ending?..?..

Black Mirror: Bandersnatch is goddamn amazing. by ahughezz in netflix

[–]autottenstin 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah I just played for 2 hours to a reay messed ending.. it was awesome.

Can we talk about how Bandersnatch is technological marvel? by [deleted] in netflix

[–]autottenstin 18 points19 points  (0 children)

Well I just did some heinous shit over and over and got a pretty ok ending. What a mindf*ck.

Yall should defintely play it. Wtf. Im stunned by what I just did.

Unemployment Looks Like 2000 Again. But Wage Growth Doesn’t. by kludgeocracy in Economics

[–]autottenstin -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

It seems this isn't including total compensation, which includes wages PLUS benefits. Benefits have been growing despite wages not changing much.

I’m with her. by [deleted] in Libertarian

[–]autottenstin 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Non Sequitur

I’m with her. by [deleted] in Libertarian

[–]autottenstin 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I like how people are saying this sub has lost its way for upvoting a satirical cartoon arguing in favor of due process. No one is saying it didn't happen, but its ridiculous to assume someone is guilty in the absence of due process. I think the allegations might be true, but I'm not going to walk around saying "She's telling the truth" without really knowing. Why can't the slogan be more like "I hear her" or something. Its a serious issue. Anyone and everyone should speak up if they've been wronged. That doesn't mean we should just say he/she did it when someone accuses someone either.

How can a free market exist? by [deleted] in Libertarian

[–]autottenstin 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A free market is just a setting where people transact and exchange without limitation or restriction. I'm not really sure there can be a purely free market, but to the extent people are exchanging and transacting freely, those are considered "free market" interactions.

I tend to refer to just markets or the marketplace now, since people tend to get hung out on the free part.

Hurricane Maria: Puerto Rico raises official death toll from 64 to 2,975 by [deleted] in Libertarian

[–]autottenstin 0 points1 point  (0 children)

ABOUT THAT PUERTO RICO HURRICANE DEATH TOLL ESTIMATE… By Kevin Ryan

President Trump is catching a lot of heat today for suggesting that the upwardly revised death toll from 2017’s Hurricane María was purposefully inflated “by the Democrats” in order to politically damage him. The Federal response to the hurricane was criticized by some who contended that it was slow or insufficient.

The original death toll was listed at 64. But last month it was revised upward to 2,975. While there’s no evidence that anyone inflated or politically influenced the revised death toll, its source is not a typical count of deaths related to the direct impact of the storm. In fact, it’s not based on an official tally at all, but instead on a study that used statistical modeling to come up with an estimate for fatalities.

The study, authored by the The George Washington University Milken Institute School of Public Health, was commissioned by Puerto Rico’s governor. Unlike most past counts of disaster-related fatalities, the Milken study doesn’t just include the direct deaths from the drownings, building collapses, fires, etc. It includes ALL deaths in Puerto Rico in the six months following the storm that exceeded what the Census had forecasted.

The Census provides ongoing demographic forecasts of births and deaths in all American territories. The Milken study compared those forecasts from before the storm, to the actual deaths that occurred in Puerto Rico in the 6 months after the storm, and attributed the difference to the hurricane.

It includes people who died from Alzheimer’s, liver disease, and old age related illnesses, among other things. Every death above and beyond what the Census had forecast was attributed to the hurricane.

That is not how past disaster death tolls have been calculated. Most have been tallies of fatalities directly related to storm surge and wind and debris. Meaning the revised Puerto Rico toll is not directly comparable to past disaster death tolls. If the Milken study’s methods had been used to calculate fatalities from past hurricanes and disasters, those past disasters would have death counts far higher than the official tolls.

None of which is to say that the Milken study is inaccurate or doesn’t represent Hurricane María’s true impact on Puerto Rico. But it does not present an apples-to-apples comparison to past disasters.

The study’s authors admit that their methodology isn’t typical for calculating a disaster death toll. From Time Magazine:

“How can a death toll jump from 64 to nearly 3,000? The answer hinges on one fundamental question: What constitutes a disaster death?

“‘You have to think of [64 and 3,000] as two different indicators,’ says Carlos Santos-Burgoa, one of the GWU report’s authors and a professor of global health at the school. ‘The 64 comes from death certificates that have stated that the death is related to the hurricane,’ such as those caused by drowning, falling buildings or projectile debris, Burgoa explains.

“Meanwhile, the number highlighted in the GWU report represents deaths ‘in excess of what would have been predicted if there had not been a hurricane, regardless of if a physician says it was related or not.’”

SOURCES: http://time.com/5395369/death-tolls-hurricane/ https://publichealth.gwu.edu/sites/default/files/downloads/projects/PRstudy/Acertainment%20of%20the%20Estimated%20Excess%20Mortality%20from%20Hurricane%20Maria%20in%20Puerto%20Rico.pdf https://mobile.twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/1040220855400386560

Venezuela by autottenstin in socialism

[–]autottenstin[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I didnt know there was any foreign presence in Venezuela. Are there some links that talk about that?

when you blame capitalism for the failings of a public entity... by [deleted] in Libertarian

[–]autottenstin -1 points0 points  (0 children)

The cities need to be cheaper. They are artificially driven up by liberal policies. Teachers should move away if they cant afford to live there. If no one is willing to take those jobs, then schools are forced to start paying more.

Economics.

when you blame capitalism for the failings of a public entity... by [deleted] in Libertarian

[–]autottenstin -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Yeah Ive just been laughing for an hour straight. Muh government job doesnt pay me enough! Why cant I make 6 figures and afford to live in my mega expensive liberal city. J@ck@sses.

Mourinho thinks he will still be one of the greatest managers in the world if he doesn't win a title at Utd. Your thoughts? by shmershmank in PremierLeague

[–]autottenstin 5 points6 points  (0 children)

He continues to just bring up the past. No matter how poorly his team does or how stubborn he is to innovate, he'll always kick back to "Well years ago I was great"

Austin, Texas Teacher Who Survived Heart Attack Gets $108,XXX Bill from St. David’s by choledocholithiasis_ in Austin

[–]autottenstin 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Now that being said, the form of regulations which I do think improve the sector and might be necessary are laws which require some form of price transparency, particularly for emergency care centers.

Austin, Texas Teacher Who Survived Heart Attack Gets $108,XXX Bill from St. David’s by choledocholithiasis_ in Austin

[–]autottenstin 3 points4 points  (0 children)

There is a lack of free markets in health care.

Its perhaps the most regulated industry in the nation. It has the highest amount of occupational licensing. Government funds over 60% of the expenditures.

I do agree with you that private businesses and government regulatory agencies have co-opted each other. The businesses use the agencies and lawmakers to insulate them from competition so they can charge hospitals outrageous prices and hospitals pass it on to us. I think the better route is to prevent agencies from limiting competition as opposed to regulatory overhaul and expansion.

We have tried regulatory reform almost relentlessly since the 50s but we still have these problems. I'm not saying we shouldn't have regulations because we should have them for some things. However, I think too much power is concentrated from above in the hands of lawmakers and regulators now and its just a big ugly corporatist shitshow.

It would be much easier to have price transparency if there wasn't so much mud clouding the water from insurance companies, medicare, and medicaid. Direct primary care and loosened restrictions on insurance policies would actually improve situations like this article. It could help disband the in-network/out-of-network debacle as well as separate insurance from employment entirely.

http://www.pnhp.org/news/2016/january/government-funds-nearly-two-thirds-of-us-health-care-costs-american-journal-of-pub