Jan. 26th, 2011

pktechgirlbackup: (Default)
America is running a trade deficit right now. When I hear that, I think "yay, other countries are giving us stuff for free" rather than "boo we're losing our industrial superiority," but many people don't take it that way.

Matthew Yglesias has an interesting theory: long long ago, back in the 50's America was running a trade surplus. In fact, it was running such a trade surplus that other countries were running out of stuff we wanted that they could trade for our stuff (i.e. the American dollar was very, very strong). This hurt America's companies that wanted to sell overseas. But certain other countries had oil. We didn't necessarily need that much oil, but we could certainly find a use for it- by, say, switching from public transit to cars. It wasn't necessarily a huge incentive, but every time we were weighing something like density restrictions, there was a little gnome saying that it didn't matter if lower density required more oil, any money spent on it would come back to us in purchases of American goods. This made policies that favor oil usage small subsidies to export-oriented businesses.

Now, there are a lot of reasons America uses more oil than Europe that are never going to change- drastically lower population density, larger temperature variations, and the food supply chain stretches over a larger geographical area. But oil use is really sensitive to snowball effects, especially in things like designing communities for single rider transportation. So the making oil, in essence, a few cents cheaper, could have ultimately had a huge effect on how much oil we used, especially since once people get used to low density and cars, it's hard to transition to high density and transit.

I have no idea if this theory is true and I'm not sure how you'd test it, but it is interesting.
pktechgirlbackup: (Default)
Adrenal fatigue is kind of a fringe diagnosis, so I was happy when my friend's very mainstream endocrinologist listed it as a possibility (I'm not happy my friend is sleeping 16 hours/day, obviously, just happy he might get it treated). Except said doctor is not ordering a cortisol level check and is not prescribing hydrocortisone. It appears he's using Adrenal Fatigue the way doctor's used to use Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: a way of repeating your symptoms back to you without actually inducing any action on their part. Aargh.

My finger was ugly enough today that I went to the doctor (got x-rays, haven't heard back yet). I hate this doctor, but I couldn't see the next one on my list until I'd had a new patient visit, so I had to use her. I figured it couldn't be too bad, since this was a simple mechanical issue. That office is where I developed a new theory: humans do not believe they can be cured by someone who doesn't care about them, by which I of course mean I do not believe I can be cured by someone who doesn't care about me. Oh, intellectually I understand the doctor can read an x-ray and tell me if I need a splint or not, but I *believe* she's thinking "this is the nut case that asks me to back up my assertions with data" and it's affecting my care. And I'm not sure that's so unreasonable- my friend above's treatment may be suffering in part because the doctor flat out doesn't believe he's sleeping as much as he says he is, and it's hard to tell marginal symptoms to someone you believe is trying to rush you out of the room. So now I'm going to try paying for concierge medicine, even though my insurance won't cover it.

Profile

pktechgirlbackup: (Default)
pktechgirlbackup

May 2014

S M T W T F S
    123
45 678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jul. 30th, 2025 05:06 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios