Friday, December 29, 2023

From Jenna Orkin Global defence orders surge as geopolitical tensions mount Argentina's Milei Lays Off 5000 Governmetn Employees Fani Willis All But Calls Jim Jordan a Moron Study: Utah is no longer a majority-Mormon state "This trend has produced troubling impacts for patients and health care workers across the country. We have seen private equity firms aggressively loot safety-net hospitals, strip out valuable real estate, cut critical but less profitable services, and exploit government funding programs designed to support and stabilize health care access. The consequences have been borne by health care workers and the communities they serve. Private equity’s hospital profiteering has resulted in dangerous conditions, closures, and reduced access to services, declining quality, and fraud. Despite the growing threat they pose to critical health care services, private equity firms are largely able to operate in the shadows. And aside from a few recent actions by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), Washington—under Democratic and Republican administrations—has largely been asleep at the wheel, or has willingly looked the other way. More monster waves will collide with the California coast after injuring onlookers and causing serious flooding The L.A.P.D. says it has the largest local airborne law-enforcement unit in the world. A recent audit found little evidence that its choppers deter crime. The Year We Stopped Being Able to Pretend About Trump The story of 2023 wasn’t the search for another Republican leader—but the Party’s embrace of the one it already has. 6 Ingenious Projects for Endless Hot Water Without Electricity A classroom without walls: New Zealand’s nature schools emphasise mud over maths

No comments: