I just looked it up, and actually? Their address can be either Ward, or the nearest Mn town. With the same RR number. Crazy.
Natter 58: Let's call Venezuela!
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Hivemind help?
For those os you who have worked both here and abroad, what were some of the hiring practices that you experienced in the US that were nowhere to be seen in another country? For example, I've been told that in Korea, it is unusual to have an interview whereas that is common practice in the US.
Jarndyce v. Jarndyce?
Indeed!
I think this is true of 95% of New England.
It's true of my non-New Engand side, too, as far as I know. My grandmother lived in an apartment on her own before she got married (at 18!).
One last point about the Frontline show:
The US spends 16% of GDP on health care, and I think the second-highest was like 8%? I forget exactly, but it was lower.
The reporter did highlight the fact that those who do health care on the cheap, such as Japan, are struggling to pay the bills. The government sets medical costs on an annual basis, and always lowballs the providers. The ones going bankrupt are the hospitals, not the patients.
Japan also has the problem of very low birthrates, so the % of the population who are retirees (and who need more healthcare) is high, and going to get much higher.
Of course, we're gonna have a similar problem with all the retiring baby boomers, but I don't think it'll be as bad.
Oh, and one Japanese solution to this problem? Healthcare robots! No, really.
The ones going bankrupt are the hospitals, not the patients.
Yeah, and they know it's going to be politically dangerous to raise the cost of treatment, but that's what they'll have to do. $10/night for a shared overnight stay in the hospital! $90/night for a private room!
On the other topic du jour, I grew up up the hill from an orchard and a dairy farm, but other than that, have no farm experience. My father's family had a livery stable in western Mass. around the turn of the 20th Century, but his dad was an engineer with Con Ed in NYC. I don't know what my mother's dad did, but they lived in Queens, so no rural background there, either, although her mother came from coal-mining country in Pennsylvania.
Lace-curtain Irish, all the way.
Hey, there's still a farm in Queens! [link]
Hah!
I must admit it's a nice side-effect of being home sick (::coughs up part of a lung::) to be able to chat with Buffistas during the work day instead of trying to threadsuck Natter at night.
Dairy farmers' grandchildren represent!
My maternal grandparents owned a dairy store. So, they got the milk and whatnot from the dairy farms and delivered them to the people of Wilmington, DE. also, they made ice cream!
Mom grew up on a farm outside of Lockport, IL. She was in charge of the horses. The address of my house in AK was a Star Route (AK's version of Rural Route) for a very long time, and it's still surrounded by woods. She's farm folk, I'm wilderness folk. Well, wilderness folk that ran to a city as soon as she could and never looked back, but still.