Monday, March 23, 2026

Eight Miles High

Nowhere is there warmth to be foundAmong those afraid of losing their groundRain gray town, known for its soundIn places, small faces unbound
Round the squares, huddled in stormsSome laughing, some just shapeless forms

Released as a single 60 years ago this month by The Byrds.  I'd never heard anything like this on AM radio before.  Composed by band members Roger McGuinn, David Crosby, and Gene Clark.  A very heavy song for its time, featuring the weirdest, chaotic, atonal lead guitar (inspired by Coltrane according to McGuinn) ever heard on a rock recording, peaking on the last part of the second solo.

Beyond that is Chris Hillman's pounding bass, Crosby's strong rhythm guitar, the harmonies of Clark, McGuinn and, above all, Crosby, and the finest drumming of Michael Clark's career with the group.  The song is pulsating and relentless. 

Between 1965 and 1968 The Byrds pioneered folk rock, introducing Dylan to a wider audience (Mr Tambourine Man), psychedelic music (Fifth Dimension), and gave many rock fans their first taste of country music (Sweetheart of the Rodeo).  

Sunday, March 22, 2026

The Wonders Of Health Care

 From a 2015 article by Arnold Kling's Askblog.

from Megan McArdle:

1950s health care isn’t expensive; this same regimen would be a bargain at today’s prices. What’s expensive is things that didn’t exist in 1950. You can say that “health care” has gotten more expensive—or you can say that the declining cost of other things has allowed us to pour a lot more resources into exciting new health products that give us both longer and healthier lives.

In Crisis of Abundance, I wrote,

The American middle class can still afford the wonderful health care that was available in 1975–easily. . .as a thought experiment, a return to 1975 health care standards would completely resolve what is commonly described as America’s health care crisis.

My guess is that if you could find a health insurance policy today that only covered diagnostic procedures and treatments that were available in 1958, the cost of that policy would not be much higher than it was then. Much of the additional spending goes for MRIs and other advanced medical equipment, as well as for health care professionals with more extensive specialization and training than what was available 50 years ago. 

These observations get at the distinctions between healthcare, health insurance, and health outcomes which too easily get mashed together. 

I'd like to have 1950s or 1975 healthcare costs.  But I don't want 1950s or 1975 health care. 

I've been on Medicare and a supplemental plan since 2016.  If I add up what Medicare has paid since then and compare it to what I pay for Medicare each year plus what I paid in Medicare taxes over the years, the government is still way ahead on the deal.

It's still true, even though a year ago today my heart stopped for a bit, I went to another place momentarily, and ended up transported by ambulance to an ICU in Tucson, where I spent the next two days and underwent an emergency procedure. I was informed that most with my condition do not make it to the hospital. I recovered quickly and completely, but the procedure I underwent was not invented until about fifteen years ago.  Prior to that time I would have had a lengthier hospital stay and been sent home for extended bed rest until my condition improved, while remaining at risk the entire time, and with a much likelier outcome where, if surviving, I'd have permanent heart damage.  The drugs I would have been prescribed also had major side effects.

Instead, the operation went well, I was discharged in 48 hours with no permanent damage, and the new medication for my condition, which only reached the market a decade ago, has had no side effects. 

I like today's medicine and the new medication and wrote about it in December.

When I got my Medicare statement a few weeks later, the nominal "cost" for those two days was $194,000 of which Medicare and my supplemental paid $38,000 and I paid $16.  The statement informed me that Medicare had "saved" me $156,000.  I put "cost" and "saved" in quotes because those words have no meaning in the healthcare lingo we use today.  If I go to a car dealer and see a car with a $50,000 sticker price and the dealer accepts my $10,000 offer, that 50K price is not real and I did not save 40K by making the purchase.  Healthcare pricing is simply crazy.

The pricing may be crazy, but I'm happy to be here. 

My thanks to the doctors, nurses, techs, EMTs, and park rangers who got me through the experience. 

Saturday, March 21, 2026

I Can't Get Next To You

 One of my favorites from The Temptations from among their cascade of hits from the mid-60s into the early 70s.  Composed by Norman Whitfield and Barrett Strong, released in 1969, hitting #1 and ranked by Billboard as the third most popular single of the year.  From their appearance on the Ed Sullivan Show in September 1969. 

Friday, March 20, 2026

Rodovia Dos Imigrantes

 Rodovia dos ImigrantesFile:Rodovia dos Imigrantes 2.jpg - Wikimedia Commons Twenty years ago on a business trip to Brazil, I arrived in Sao Paolo on a Saturday morning and took a car to spend the weekend in the city of Santos on the coast before beginning my work week in Sao Paolo on Monday.

The initial part of the drive was on the plain on which Sao Paolo and its suburbs sit at about 2500 feet above sea level.  Suddenly, we entered a heavily forested area as the descent to the coast began.  This was the Rodovia dos Imigrantes with its 44 viaducts, seven bridges, and eleven tunnels on its nearly 40 mile stretch.  The startling part of the drive was when I realized we were on an elevated highway high above the coastal rain forest, a beautiful and stunning experience.

 

We Remember

 Best comedies of the 2000s - Dodgeball, Tropic Thunder, The Hangover

 

And the man who saved Sly Stallone and The Expendables

Thursday, March 19, 2026

Haviv

Over the past few months I've been reading and listening to Israeli Haviv Rettig Gur.  He's active on twitter, YouTube, and with a podcast Ask Haviv Anything which alternates between longer in depth episodes and quick 10-15 minute explainers on a specific issue.  I find him thoughtful and able to provide some clarity to complex matters.  

I'm not sure how to categorize him politically as he's not clearly on the right or left.  This, from two days ago, gives you a flavor for his views.

Y’all know I have my disagreements with Bibi [Netanyahu]. Budget priorities, haredi welfare spending, import reforms, judicial reform, information war, avoidance of accountability, Gaza war - okay, a lot of disagreements, including on big, critical things that affect our lives and the lives of our neighbors. But the man has been planning the ayatollahs’ fall for two decades. He believes it’s why God (inasmuch as he believes in God) put him on this Earth. And damned if he isn’t seeing through this thing he has always believed was his destiny. I’ll keep criticizing the bad stuff. I’m a citizen. He works for me. That’s how the system is supposed to work. And I’ll keep praising and being grateful for this one great big huge thing. I don’t know if he’ll succeed. I can’t think of anyone else who would have been so grimly single-minded and so specifically competent in the specific skillset required to bring us to this point.  

I'll also add he's been very critical of corruption involving Netanyahu and his associates.

Some episodes I'd recommend.

Episode 69 - Israel's Great Divide - an insider's look at the judicial reform, with Moshe Koppel.  This was the first of Haviv's podcasts I listened to. Prior to 10/7/23 the issue dominating Israeli politics was Netanyahu's proposed reform of the judiciary.  From an American perspective, the power grabbed by Israel's Supreme Court over the past four decades would never be tolerated.  The lack of a written constitution has enabled the court's actions.  However, the proposed reform amounts to a reverse power grab by the executive and the lack of trust between right and left makes compromise impossible (sounds familiar, doesn't it?).  Moshe Koppel is an academic, not a politician, who was one of the authors of the reform and sounds like a man with intellectual integrity but comes across as naive about the political process.  An excellent overview of both the legal and political aspects of the dispute.

Episode 99 - Are We Winning?  Released yesterday about the Iran War.  Brings an interesting perspective not often heard in the U.S.

Episode 92 - Why does Israel hate UNRWA?  A short episode about the Palestinian relief agency.  The best quick answer to this question, which I've touched on before.

Episode 78 - Do You Still Want to Globalize the Intifada?  Short episode on the significant difference between the First and Second Intifadas and what the Globalize the Intifada means to Israelis. 

Episode 76 - How Elites drive Jew-hatred with Hussein Aboubakr Mansour.  A discussion of the situation in Western academia and in the Muslim world and why it has developed in similar ways.  Mansour is an Egyptian and Muslim, now living in the U.S.  

Episode 65 - The unseen editors rigging the information war with Ashley Rindsberg.  Rindsberg has been doing deep dive detective work on how the manipulation of information is occuring in social media, with a particular focus on Wikipedia, in which the current head of NPR played a significant role in its deterioration as a credible source of information.

I first listened to Haviv via the Unpacking Israeli History podcast of Noam Weissman, which I also recommend.  There were two particular podcasts featuring Haviv that caught my attention; the first a look back on thirty years after the assassination of Yitzhak Rabin and the other on settler violence in the West Bank, which I think a disgrace with not enough done to prevent and punish the perpetrators.