Politics

That’s classic Trump…

He’s just playing the no greater friend, no worse enemy card…

He’s extending the olive branch, while also the same time threatening to slap Xi in the face with it if he doesn’t accept it in peace…

It’s a power play… to multiple parties… he’s letting the China Hawks, the D’s, and the Chinese all know he is in charge… and that he’s not going to allow the tail to wag the dog…

I actually think it’s a smart move on The Donald’s part…

Xi can play nice and concede to not continuing to play fuck fuck games with the US Economy, engage in state sponsored cyber attacks on US industry, etc… and come to Trumps party…

Or when Xi crosses yet another line, as everyone expects, Trump can point to this and say “I tried to be reasonable… Xi continues to be a prick… so now he pays”… and everyone buys in…
Invite XI to the Whitehouse for a beer, but good God, a commie dictator at a Presidential inauguration?
Doesn't send the type of message that resonates with me.
That would be some serious ammunition for the leftwing media.
 
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You're not wrong there, but it's also not accurate to say it's THE driver for increased health care costs.

Price signals which work so well in the rest of the marketplace are skewed by healthcare regulation and regulatory compliance carries a huge cost. Take the role of "billing specialist" for one example. The one and only reason for the proliferation of that craft is to deal with Medicare and Medicaid requirements, which the health insurance companies all too happily require as well. With the blessings of the US congress as well as the state legislatures, they exist in a market closed to competition. Then there's regulatory capture and the revolving door between places like NIH/FDA and Phizer, GSK, Bayer, and all the rest.

Ever heard of a concierge medical practice? Average cost of annual membership is somewhere between $2000 and $5000. Not cheap. But you also generally get unlimited visits with your doc, and they actually take the time to sit down and discuss your concerns with you. In standard internal medicine practices, many of those docs need to see 40 or 50 patients per day to make their nut.

I've come to believe that most of the chronic issues people have are diet-related - food being another heavily regulated industry suffering from massive regulatory capture. Eat meat and greens to your heart's content; complex carbs sparingly; simple sugar and processed food not at all - to include ultra-processed seed and vegetable oils like canola, corn, saffron, and the like. Poly-unsaturated fats are just poison. Stick with animal fats like hog lard, beef tallow, butter, duck fat, bear lard, and mono-unsaturated fats like olive oil, coconut oil, and avocado oil. IOW, shop the outer edge of the grocery and skip the rest.

Since I went near total carnivore about 3 years ago, my HDL has gone up from about 45 to 74, my triglycerides are down from over 200 to 75, and LDL down from over 200 to 120, and I no longer need to take blood pressure meds; and I'm down from 265 to 225. My doc did a full body ultrasound on me last year, my pipes are as clean as a healthy 30 year old, and I was 55 at the time. My heart's ejection fraction is 72% - normal for men is 52 -72%. Since I gave up all the processed shit, my knees, hips, and shoulders rarely hurt anymore. I used to take a lot of daily ibuprofen for all of that. I don't remember the last time I had to take any for joint pain. I've had a torn labrum in one of my hips since HS. Even all the walking and crawling and what-not on my safari back in August didn't cause me any discomfort. The acacia thorns tearing at my flesh are another matter. ;)

Ever heard of the Warburg Effect (discovered nearly a century ago)? Most cancers require a steady stream of sugar for the purpose of fermentation, even when O2 is already abundant . When they grow cancer cells in vitro, many of them have to be bathed in insulin so they can absorb enough sugar, otherwise the cancer cells die.

People don't get Type II diabetes from a lifetime of abusing animal fat and protein, they get it from a lifetime of punishing their pancreas with a steady diet of sugar, causing all cells to become insulin resistant over time. Type II diabetes comes along with a number of other comorbidities - obesity, cardiovascular disease, generalized inflammation, metabolic syndrome, etc. Obesity is a non-trivial risk factor for quite a lot of cancers as well.

And of course, the answer for all of this from Big Medicine and Big Pharma is pills. And of course, they and Big Ag have a vested interest in NOT looking at the dietary angle on any of this.

Apologies, I didn't intend to turn this into a rant. Malpractice insurance is certainly a contributing factor to increased health care delivery costs, but it isn't a big one.

I did not mean to imply the reasons I discussed were "THE" reasons for high health costs. There are plenty, likely too many to put into a single post. And I'm sure i don't have them all.

What I hoped to communicate was that comparing our system to any others is a bit of an apples to oranges comparison. You can't have everything we have now that we consider good about the USA's system of healthcare and have it for the same price they do in Thailand.

Something has to give.
 
A few days ago the well known military expert Elon Musk opined that the F-35 was "obsolete" due to drones. Yesterday and today several papers are running with a story that Trump will cancel the program. Lockheed stock is down nearly 2% this morning and the rest of defense will also take a hit. The F-35 is in full rate production and is being purchased by several partner nations including Israel and most of NATO. There is not another fighter that can survive in the air against it unless perhaps a F-22. To date there are no operational fighter or fighter bomber drones. To cancel the program at this stage would be folly of an unimaginable scale on the belief that we can someday field a drone that can act as a fighter aircraft or fighter bomber. Meanwhile both China and Russia are fielding their first Gen 5 fighters which will outclass both the F-15 and F-16. Madness if true.

One of my worries about DOGE is its inability to actually affect structural change in any meaningful way or to touch the 3/4's of the budget dedicated to entitlement. Everyone inevitably is forced to turn to defense. Killing programs is always the one easy budget cut that can be made.

The B2 bomber is a good example. Billions go into research and development to create the aircraft over a decade, and just as it is going into production, the program is truncated to just 21 aircraft instead of the planned 132. Guess what that did to the cost per aircraft. Yet, those 21 have played a key role in every major airstrike carried in contested airspace for twenty years. None has ever been intercepted - likely never even acquired. But because we have so few, F-16's and F-17's have been used on deep penetration strikes for which they were not designed.

Another example is the Crusader artillery system. The first low rate production assemblies were being fabricated and the actual production plant was breaking ground in Oklahoma, when a brand new SECDEF, Donald Rumsfeld, decided to make a point that the country did not need to waste money on artillery when air power could provide all needed fire support. Within two years, that ignorant decision was costing lives in Iraq and Afghanistan. The US army is still operating a system that was first fielded in the fifties.


https://www.msn.com/en-in/news/worl...with-lockheed-martin-what-we-know/ar-AA1vHBV5


Lockheed has responded that it is fake news.

 
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A few days ago the well known military expert Elon Musk opined that the F-35 was "obsolete" due to drones. Yesterday and today several papers are running with a story that Trump will cancel the program. Lockheed stock is down nearly 2% this morning and the rest of defense will also take a hit. The F-35 is in full rate production and is being purchased by several partner nations including Israel and most of NATO. There is not another fighter that can survive in the air against it unless perhaps a F-22. To date there are no operational fighter or fighter bomber drones. To cancel the program at this stage would be folly of an unimaginable scale on the belief that we can someday field a drone that can act as a fighter aircraft or fighter bomber. Meanwhile both China and Russia are fielding their first Gen 5 fighters which will outclass both the F-15 and F-16. Madness if true.

One of my worries about DOGE is its inability to actually affect structural change in any meaningful way or to touch the 3/4's of the budget dedicated to entitlement. Everyone inevitably is forced to turn to defense. Killing programs is always the one easy budget cut that can be made.

The B2 bomber is a good example. Billions go into research and development to create the aircraft over a decade, and just as it is going into production, the program is truncated to just 21 aircraft instead of the planned 132. Guess what that did to the cost per aircraft. Yet, those 21 have played a key role in every major airstrike carried in contested airspace for twenty years. None has ever been intercepted - likely never even acquired. But because we have so few, F-16's and F-17's have been used on deep penetration strikes for which they were not designed.

Another example is the Crusader artillery system. The first low rate production assemblies were being fabricated and the actual production plant was breaking ground in Oklahoma, when a brand new SECDEF, Donald Rumsfeld, decided to make a point that the country did not need to waste money on artillery when air power could provide all needed fire support. Within two years, that ignorant decision was costing lives in Iraq and Afghanistan. The US army is still operating a system that was first fielded in the fifties.


https://www.msn.com/en-in/news/worl...with-lockheed-martin-what-we-know/ar-AA1vHBV5


Lockheed has responded that it is fake news.

I agree that we need the best technology in the air, and on the ground, however, hasn't the F-35 program been under fire for some time due to the cost?
 
@Tanks "Lying to Congress, whether under oath or not, is a crime"...Sen Chuck Grassley...
CHECKYOURFACT: Grassley is correct, the false claims act makes it a crime to knowing lie to...the Government.
I am not a lawyer..........but these folks think your statement is incorrect.......Adam Schiff repeatedly lied........
FWB
 
A few days ago the well known military expert Elon Musk opined that the F-35 was "obsolete" due to drones. Yesterday and today several papers are running with a story that Trump will cancel the program. Lockheed stock is down nearly 2% this morning and the rest of defense will also take a hit. The F-35 is in full rate production and is being purchased by several partner nations including Israel and most of NATO. There is not another fighter that can survive in the air against it unless perhaps a F-22. To date there are no operational fighter or fighter bomber drones. To cancel the program at this stage would be folly of an unimaginable scale on the belief that we can someday field a drone that can act as a fighter aircraft or fighter bomber. Meanwhile both China and Russia are fielding their first Gen 5 fighters which will outclass both the F-15 and F-16. Madness if true.

One of my worries about DOGE is its inability to actually affect structural change in any meaningful way or to touch the 3/4's of the budget dedicated to entitlement. Everyone inevitably is forced to turn to defense. Killing programs is always the one easy budget cut that can be made.

The B2 bomber is a good example. Billions go into research and development to create the aircraft over a decade, and just as it is going into production, the program is truncated to just 21 aircraft instead of the planned 132. Guess what that did to the cost per aircraft. Yet, those 21 have played a key role in every major airstrike carried in contested airspace for twenty years. None has ever been intercepted - likely never even acquired.

Another example is the Crusader artillery system. The first low rate production assemblies were being fabricated and the actual production plant was breaking ground in Oklahoma, when a brand new SECDEF, Donald Rumsfeld, decided to make a point that the country did not need to waste money on artillery when air power could provide all needed fire support. Within two years, that ignorant decision was costing lives in Iraq and Afghanistan. The US army is still operating a system that was first fielded in the fifties.


https://www.msn.com/en-in/news/worl...with-lockheed-martin-what-we-know/ar-AA1vHBV5


Lockheed has responded that it is fake news.

Hopefully this is just another typical Trump conversation starter to get people thinking about unmanned fighters, bombers and or drones. I hope.

Thinking Ukraine drone success against Russian infantry is now the template for all modern warfare would be a huge mistake. It is another tactic against less technically advanced militaries. but should be no where near the entire air capability.

Unmanned bombing runs on infrastructure would be a good place to start the move to autonomous military aircraft.
 
@Tanks "Lying to Congress, whether under oath or not, is a crime"...Sen Chuck Grassley...
CHECKYOURFACT: Grassley is correct, the false claims act makes it a crime to knowing lie to...the Government.
I am not a lawyer..........but these folks think your statement is incorrect.......Adam Schiff repeatedly lied........
FWB

Unfortunately Congressmen and Senators are not under oath during hearings and other public events. They should be held to a higher standard of truth. But unfortunately they are allowed to knowingly lie during hearings and public forums.



“ The Senators and Representatives shall receive a Compensation for their Services, to be ascertained by Law, and paid out of the Treasury of the United States. They shall in all Cases, except Treason, Felony and Breach of the Peace, be privileged from Arrest during their Attendance at the Session of their respective Houses, and in going to and returning from the same; and for any Speech or Debate in either House, they shall not be questioned in any other Place. “
 
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I agree that we need the best technology in the air, and on the ground, however, hasn't the F-35 program been under fire for some time due to the cost?
It was during development because congress kept extending the acquisition time-line. In fact they just did it again in the new appropriation yesterday. Drawing out production increases per unit costs for all the obvious reasons. It also means that the customer (USAF) has additional time in which to make changes and upgrades to requirements - which also adds cost.

However, the Lightning is in production right now. Foreign customers are starting to take delivery as I type - Israel foremost among them. Therefore, development costs are about done. F-22 production ceased years ago. There isn't another Gen 5 alternative and a fighter drone is many years away - if ever. If we kill the program, then the US will face growing Chinese and Russian Gen 5 inventories with Gen 4 aircraft that can no longer compete.
 
It see the F-35’s almost every day, flying out of Luke AF Base. As a layman, they are impressive technology. Speed and manoeuvrability look far superior to the F-16’s that are also based there. A friend of mine, and full time resident of Buckeye, calls it the “sound of freedom”.
 
A few days ago the well known military expert Elon Musk opined that the F-35 was "obsolete" due to drones. Yesterday and today several papers are running with a story that Trump will cancel the program. Lockheed stock is down nearly 2% this morning and the rest of defense will also take a hit. The F-35 is in full rate production and is being purchased by several partner nations including Israel and most of NATO. There is not another fighter that can survive in the air against it unless perhaps a F-22. To date there are no operational fighter or fighter bomber drones. To cancel the program at this stage would be folly of an unimaginable scale on the belief that we can someday field a drone that can act as a fighter aircraft or fighter bomber. Meanwhile both China and Russia are fielding their first Gen 5 fighters which will outclass both the F-15 and F-16. Madness if true.

One of my worries about DOGE is its inability to actually affect structural change in any meaningful way or to touch the 3/4's of the budget dedicated to entitlement. Everyone inevitably is forced to turn to defense. Killing programs is always the one easy budget cut that can be made.

The B2 bomber is a good example. Billions go into research and development to create the aircraft over a decade, and just as it is going into production, the program is truncated to just 21 aircraft instead of the planned 132. Guess what that did to the cost per aircraft. Yet, those 21 have played a key role in every major airstrike carried in contested airspace for twenty years. None has ever been intercepted - likely never even acquired. But because we have so few, F-16's and F-17's have been used on deep penetration strikes for which they were not designed.

Another example is the Crusader artillery system. The first low rate production assemblies were being fabricated and the actual production plant was breaking ground in Oklahoma, when a brand new SECDEF, Donald Rumsfeld, decided to make a point that the country did not need to waste money on artillery when air power could provide all needed fire support. Within two years, that ignorant decision was costing lives in Iraq and Afghanistan. The US army is still operating a system that was first fielded in the fifties.


https://www.msn.com/en-in/news/worl...with-lockheed-martin-what-we-know/ar-AA1vHBV5


Lockheed has responded that it is fake news.


I read that a few days ago and was waiting for the fallout. This is the kind of thing that worries me about he and Ramaswamie, check the spelling on that. Of course all the experts in the comments sections are quick to agree because if it costs a lot and pertains to defense, it must be bad.
 
Regarding medical care and the high cost thereof, there are various reasons for the situation. But the first thing I think we must not do is to confuse the high cost of health insurance as the reason health care cost is so high. The high cost of health insurance is a reflection of the high cost of health care.

In my opinion this was the primary reason Obamacare was a failure. Obama wanted everyone to have health insurance, perhaps a noble goal, but it ignored the fact that the reason so many were uninsured was because health care was and is still so expensive. Coming up with some gimmick to ensure more people got some health insurance coverage without actually doing something to truly get health care costs under control was treating the symptom and not the disease.

From the perspective of someone in the medtech industry at a company that sells products worldwide, a few thoughts on some of the reasons for our exorbitant health costs in comparison to other countries.

First, Americans like to sue like no one else in the world. When someone sues a doctor, hospital, nurses, or anyone else involved in a situation gone awry, who do you think pays for this? It's likely not any of the defendants, and certainly they don't pay first. Their malpractice insurance company does. And who pays ultimately for the malpractice insurance, regardless of whether their doctor/provider has ever been sued? The patient of course.

Making matters worse is the impact on demand for care in this highly litigious environment we find ourselves in. Doctors will order up tests and procedures that are not necessary for patient care, but they do so to provide cover from being sued and risk losing their malpractice insurance. This puts higher demand on the system and raises costs. If you're so inclined do a Google search on "defensive medicine." There was a study done years back in Massachusetts that estimate the costs to that state along with something in the billion dollar range for just one year IIRC. Expand that out assuming similar costs on a per capita basis for the entire US population....staggering number.

So do you support TORT reform, or do you want to keep the ability to sue for malpractice as we can today?

Next up, the FDA. The FDA governs everything my company does. I know of no other regulatory agency that has the requirements that the FDA puts on the pharmaceutical and medtech companies. Is this a good or a bad thing? I won't say, but I will say it costs money, lots of it. These higher costs are incurred both during development of new products and continuing on during a products lifecycle. Who do you think in the end bears these costs?

In Europe, they have the CE mark of approval that we must receive to sell our products there. But the requirements are not as high. It's the primary reason why new drugs and medical devices are released for public use well before they're released in the USA.

Do you see this as a good or a bad thing?
Years ago there were billboards in Corpus Christie, Tx asking everyone to consider who was paying for huge lawsuit awards--everyone! And that when the city was sued, services often had to be cut. So yeah, TORT reform is due.
But, does anyone see another hidden raise in cost--apathy due to "insurance will cover it." No one questions those extra tests or the price of an operation--or shops for price, because after all "insurance will cover it." Same with auto insurance and the new auto breakdown insurance...costs will rise and no one will care because insurance will cover it, and it is therefore not their problem. Insurance itself drives costs up.
 
IMG_2466.jpeg
 
The problem - Ambulance chaser lawyers. Every commercial has at least one law firm stating how they can represent you and get you the most compensation. It's sickening. :mad: :mad:
 
The problem - Ambulance chaser lawyers. Every commercial has at least one law firm stating how they can represent you and get you the most compensation. It's sickening. :mad: :mad:
And the next commercial is the newest miracle drug to lose weight, lower A1C and various other ailments.
 
Invite XI to the Whitehouse for a beer, but good God, a commie dictator at a Presidential inauguration?
Doesn't send the type of message that resonates with me.
That would be some serious ammunition for the leftwing media.

I get it... I dont particularly like it, and wouldnt have done it either...

its certainly a lot more common to invite the Russians, Chinese, and others to the White House for formal and informal meetings... US Presidents have invited every Russian senior leader since Krushchev to either Camp David or the White House at different times.. and several of the Chinese senior leaders (Xi, Ding Xiaopeng, etc) to Camp David and the White House.. but this is the first time one has invited the Chinese to an inauguration (while Putin is claiming he has not received an invitation from Trump to attend)..

That said, its a pretty common practice in other places.. Putin was at the Mexico Presidents inauguration in May of this year for example.. For whatever reason, our Presidents just havent practiced this in the past..

I think it in some ways hampers the leftwing medias argument though (although I admit they will take every opportunity to bitch about it for something)... all we have heard out of them for the last 18 months while Trump has been on the campaign trail is that he is a Russia apologist, etc..etc..

But he didnt invite Putin (while inviting Xi), has met with the Z man multiple times already both in person and has had multiple phone calls with him, etc..

This sorta puts an arrow through that argument in a way though.. if he is a Russian apologist, why is he treating Xi in a more favorable manner than Putin? and why is he already working out a conflict resolution strategy in Ukraine with Zelensky (several weeks before he has the official capacity to do anything.. but immediately following him being able to access classified information again and daily situational briefs on the conflict), but not engaging Putin more often and more directly about it, etc..

A lot of this is typical Trump... its right out of Art of the Deal..
 
The problem - Ambulance chaser lawyers. Every commercial has at least one law firm stating how they can represent you and get you the most compensation. It's sickening. :mad: :mad:

Having been on both sides and in the middle of that debate. It’s not really a problem. A represented person does receive a slightly higher gross recovery. However, the net usually works against them. That’s for small accidents. The lawyer has to make it on volume. Serious injuries is another matter.
 
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The problem - Ambulance chaser lawyers. Every commercial has at least one law firm stating how they can represent you and get you the most compensation. It's sickening. :mad: :mad:

If insurance companies would fulfill their obligations to policy/policies of coverage(s) the insured pays for, without the insured having to bring legal action against the insuring company, ambulance chasing nor any other lawyers would be required.

Unfortunately Insurance companies gladly accept the money people give to them. However, when those insured require the insurance company to payout on the policy/policies insurance companies start screaming bloody murder and find excuses to deny and/or devalue such insurance coverage payment(s).
 

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autofire wrote on LIMPOPO NORTH SAFARIS's profile.
Do you have any cull hunts available? 7 days, daily rate plus per animal price?

#plainsgame #hunting #africahunting ##LimpopoNorthSafaris ##africa
Grz63 wrote on roklok's profile.
Hi Roklok
I read your post on Caprivi. Congratulations.
I plan to hunt there for buff in 2026 oct.
How was the land, very dry ? But à lot of buffs ?
Thank you / merci
Philippe
 
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