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See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
mitoticcephalopod

somnilogical asked:

make a tulpa of me! i want to be inside u ~

mitoticcephalopod answered:

ngl that’s v cute but also terrifying

mitigatedchaos

It is the year 2141.  Tulpa artisans and corporate tulpa research departments produce tulpas of both real personalities and fictional figures and sell them for transfer on cybernetic implants.  Tulpa Rights Activists protest against the transfer or erasure of tulpas, and are arguing for their inclusion in civil rights laws.  Following the Night of Violets, the first mass tulpa terrorist attack, the Earth Sphere Federation government has begun a massive crackdown on unlicensed tulpas…

Violet Slattern Films presents…

HALL OF MIRRORS

mitigated fiction mitigated future shtpost
mutant-aesthetic

Anonymous asked:

Theresa May killed more than 50 kids. Thatcher killed more than 50 kids. Clinton killed more than 50 kids. Trump killed more than 50 kids. Just realize the facts for once.

mutant-aesthetic answered:

Pizzagate isn’t real, anon

mitigatedchaos

Friend Anon probably means the exercise of state power, and is some kind of Anarchist or Communist who, if actually given power, would end up causing a lot more people to die, tbh.

mutant-aesthetic

horrible grey tribe idea: we measure all policy implements in terms of total child fatalities that can be applied to it

mitigatedchaos

Obviously we must do this in anti-abortionist terms, where the standard of “well you wouldn’t want to have been aborted” is used, and therefore the most logical course of action is force everyone to continuously have as many babies as possible.

Wait! Where is everyone going! Hypothetical Retrocausal Ultranatalism is the most logica-

shtpost abortion cw
mutant-aesthetic

Anonymous asked:

Theresa May killed more than 50 kids. Thatcher killed more than 50 kids. Clinton killed more than 50 kids. Trump killed more than 50 kids. Just realize the facts for once.

mutant-aesthetic answered:

Pizzagate isn’t real, anon

mitigatedchaos

Friend Anon probably means the exercise of state power, and is some kind of Anarchist or Communist who, if actually given power, would end up causing a lot more people to die, tbh.

collapsedsquid

Single-Payer Health Care Thought Experiment

simonpenner

Today I saw this

http://khn.org/news/tab-for-single-payer-proposal-in-california-could-run-400-billion/

I’m working on a higher quality blog post for the main site on this, but for right now I’d like to point out a novel idea. Consider this quote from the article

A single-payer system likely “would be more efficient in delivering health care,” said Larry Levitt, a senior vice president at the Kaiser Family Foundation. (California Healthline is produced by Kaiser Health News, an editorially independent program of the Kaiser Family Foundation.)

But the proposal expands coverage to all and eliminates premiums, copayments and deductibles for enrollees, and that would cost more money, Levitt said. “You can bet that opponents will highlight the 15 percent tax, even though there are also big premium savings for employers and individuals,” he added.

We always hear this. “Single payer health care will save so much money because of all the efficiencies that you can get from central management”

Is this true? Well it just so happens we have a real-world example: HMOs. For example, Kaiser Permanente, the entity referenced in the above quote.

(an aside for non-US readers: in the US, health care is generally privately provisioned, and fee-for-service. That is, if you want a doctor to do a thing, you give them money, and they do the thing. Most people have some kind of health insurance, and this tends to take one of two forms: HMO or PPO.

PPOs are standard, and flexible. In a PPO, the insurance company develops a “network of providers”, a set of doctors who have agreed to work with the insurance company. You are strongly encouraged to go see one of these doctors. If you choose to see a different doctor, “out of network”, your insurance will cover a smaller fraction of the cost. This remains fee-for-service, it’s just that insurance pays.

HMOs, on the other hand, take a very centralized approach. They are one large company responsible for catering to your health needs. In an HMO, you can only go to doctors at facilities run by the HMO. If you need a specialist, you must get a referral to a specialist who works for the HMO. Since everything is integrated, it’s easier for multiple doctors to coordinate and work together. However, your choice of doctor is severely limited. With a PPO, if you don’t like your doctor you can get a new one. Under HMOs, your choices are limited)

The description of HMOs sound a lot like single-payer health care writ small. You give lots of money upfront to an organization like Kaiser (you pay lots of money in taxes to the government to support health care), and in return you go to Kaiser-affiliated facilities (government-funded hospitals) where all of your care is provided to you by one entity. The centralization facilitates efficiencies as bureaucracies are cut, and your needs are taken care of as best they can.

So, approaching the problem from a different point of view: Single-payer government-provided health care is more-or-less the same as if everybody signed up for Kaiser. 

This gave me a deliciously trollish idea, an argument to bring out whenever relevant. Let’s say you’re arguing with some commies who insist that single-payer is the best/only solution. Pose to them this hypothetical:

“Would you be in support of a law that gave $HEALTH_INSURANCE_COMPANY a legally-mandated monopoly in health care, at the cost of forcing them to become a non-profit organization?”

Imagine one way to implement single-payer government-provided universal health care:

1) Give Kaiser a legal monopoly on health insurance

2) Legally require Kaiser to be a non-profit.¹

I suspect that most of your commie friends would be incredibly opposed to this idea, and yet it is fundamentally the same thing as a state-run single-payer health, with two caveats

a) You aren’t legally required to opt-in. You can still pay expenses out-of-pocket instead. 

b) Instead of the health system being run by whoever is friendliest with our elected representatives, it’s run by people with a proven track record of success in that field. 

I suspect this argument generalizes, too. You could apply it to any realm of government service provision that you can think of. It might help a handful of the smarter, more intellectually ethical folks see things from a different perspective.


1. Kaiser IS ALREADY A NON-PROFIT. So much for “greedy health insurance corporations ruining everything in their greedy corrupt quest for more profit”

collapsedsquid

The way single payer works is that it negotiates prices with providers which it can do because it’s the only buyer.  It’s the same way Singapore does it, it’s just there they set legally prices but don’t pay them. Maybe you should look at how this shit works instead of just imagining how it works.

mitigatedchaos

I still laughed. TBH I don’t understand why the Repubs don’t spring for healthcare vouchers. Well, okay, I understand why but …

Source: simonpenner politics the invisible fist the red hammer the iron hand
ranma-official
ranma-official

Has anyone examined this specific form of conservative nostalgia that specifically focuses on crime?

Usually goes like “back in my day you didn’t need to lock your door when you left” and stuff like that. Which usually ranges from false (crime went down overall) to cartoonish (people are saying these things about 90s Russia, when the country was literally ruled by organized crime)

Many say it’s straight up racism, but it’s pervasive in relatively monoethnic countries too.

mitigatedchaos

It may also be a rural/urban thing.  Crime is higher in urban areas for reasons (unless you’re Singapore or something), but over time people move and also (at least in this country), most areas become more urban.  

There may also be more awareness of crime (due to media), or alternatively, crime may be a lot higher in certain areas, while overall it has declined in the national average.

ranma-official
factsinallcaps

“ATLAS SHRUGGED,” A NOVEL THAT PREACHES THE FERENGI CONCEPT OF OBJECTIVISM AND THE EVILS OF ALTRUISM AND HANDOUTS, WAS MADE INTO A TWO-PART FILM. PART ONE WAS SUCH A FINANCIAL FAILURE THAT THE PRODUCTION TEAM TURNED TO KICKSTARTER TO ASK FANS TO DONATE THE FUNDING FOR PART TWO. THEY REFUSED TO SEE THE IRONY IN THIS. 

milquetoast-is-unsung

@atheistjapanesesocialist

mitigatedchaos

“Have you read Atlas Shrugged in the original Ferengi?”

Source: factsinallcaps shtpost

As we all know, under the principles of Affirmative Action, Asians, particularly East Asians, are not only white, but whiter than white people, and may in fact be the whitest race in existence.

Thus it is entirely appropriate that the Korean Overwatch character D.Va should receive a skin inspired by an American con artist.

shtpost vg
mutant-aesthetic
triggeredmedia

Black Lives Matter activist Janaya Khan explains how we can abolish the whole criminal justice system, including police

“The abolishment movement is about transformative justice. Non prison not police based strategies for dealing with violence and crisis in our communities.”

“The police’s sole responsibility is to manufacture criminals”

She says something along the lines of people only bad because they are depressed or have a bad day. She is delusional.

Basically her argument is that we build prisons just to fill them because they are empty and white people need to profit from it. 

Cart before the horse.

She does not actually offer any solutions for when bad things happen. 

They never do. 

She said police are the ones that manufacture criminals. I guess she believes, no police, no criminals. No one is actually bad until a cop shows up.

If this movement grows, I am glad I am a gun owner. 

klubbhead

That’s insane

mutant-aesthetic

I feel like if we abolish the police in favor of community-based law enforcement, it’s REALLY not going to end well for black people…

mitigatedchaos

Well, not that removing police is a good idea, but the police forces in some of those areas are terrible, and it would demobilize some of these guys if police departments in those areas didn’t get significant portions of their revenue from fines as city revenues dry up.

Source: triggeredmedia