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Ex-CIA Whistleblower: "The NSA Audited the 2024 Election, Kamala Harris Won"

https://thiswillhold.substack.com/p/ex-cia-whistleblower-the-nsa-audited
1•akudha•35s ago•0 comments

Show HN: Conway's Game of Life in JavaScript with efficient implementation

https://github.com/gkoos/conway
1•gkoos•1m ago•0 comments

The Poe API(OpenAI compatible)

https://creator.poe.com/docs/external-applications/openai-compatible-api
1•ifree•3m ago•0 comments

Hamas hostage Evyatar David forced to dig what he fears will be his own grave

https://www.timesofisrael.com/a-living-skeleton-buried-alive-hostage-evyatar-davids-family-publishes-clip-of-hamas-video/
1•mhb•3m ago•0 comments

A Day at Two San Francisco Malls, One That Died and One That Thrived

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/02/us/san-francisco-malls-downtown.html
1•mitchbob•4m ago•1 comments

Xkcd: Unsatisfied

https://xkcd.com/584/
3•tarpit_idea•4m ago•0 comments

Physicists should revel in the diversity of ways to understand quantum mechanics

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-02346-8
1•sampo•5m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Cortex – OS-wide AI with instant context input

https://cortexdesktop.com/
2•andrewfhou•7m ago•0 comments

VibeCamp – Don't learn to code. Learn to create with AI

https://www.vibecamp.ai/
1•kelseyfrog•11m ago•1 comments

The unreasonable likelihood of being: origin of life, terraforming, and AI

https://arxiv.org/abs/2507.18545
2•bookofjoe•14m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Accelerate AI agent development by grounding AI assistant in local docs

https://github.com/botingw/langgraph-dev-navigator
1•botingw_job•14m ago•1 comments

Linear Types for Programmers

https://twey.io/for-programmers/linear-types/
2•marvinborner•16m ago•0 comments

Invisible Symbols

https://symbol.so/invisible-characters
1•liquid99•24m ago•0 comments

US Army tests robot coyotes to prevent catastrophic bird strikes

https://cyberguy.com/robot-tech/army-tests-robot-coyotes-prevent-catastrophic-bird-strikes/
1•speckx•26m ago•1 comments

Telo MT1

https://www.telotrucks.com/
7•turtleyacht•28m ago•0 comments

The Creative Tension Between Developer and Language

https://krishna.github.io/posts/creative-tension-between-developer-and-language/
1•kenshi•32m ago•1 comments

Show HN: I've had success in SaaS and now I'm building tools for indie hackers

https://reallysimplesupport.com
1•gigamick•32m ago•0 comments

German police expands use of Palantir surveillance software

https://www.dw.com/en/german-police-expands-use-of-palantir-surveillance-software/a-73497117
5•LeftHandPath•33m ago•1 comments

California affordable housing programs on the chopping block after SCOTUS rules

https://calmatters.org/housing/2025/08/affordable-housing-developer-fees/
1•kqr2•34m ago•0 comments

Show HN: F1 COSMOS – Live timing and data dashboard for F1 fans

https://f1cosmos.com/
2•conradmk•41m ago•0 comments

Peter Thiel and the Antichrist

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/26/opinion/peter-thiel-antichrist-ross-douthat.html
3•dotcoma•42m ago•1 comments

Partisan hostility, not just policy, drives U.S. protests

https://phys.org/news/2025-08-partisan-hostility-policy-protests.html
2•bikenaga•42m ago•2 comments

Might Tariffs Get "Overturned"?

https://ritholtz.com/2025/07/tariffs-overturned/
1•throwaway81523•43m ago•0 comments

Getting Real with AI

https://doc.searls.com/2025/08/02/getting-real-with-ai/
1•speckx•43m ago•0 comments

Winners and Losers of the Bivalve Evolution

https://www.mdpi.com/1424-2818/17/7/500
1•PaulHoule•47m ago•0 comments

Architecture decision record (ADR) examples for software planning, IT leadership

https://github.com/joelparkerhenderson/architecture-decision-record
1•thunderbong•48m ago•0 comments

AI party game born from a drunk night with friends

https://taptrap.app
1•eliezerpujols•48m ago•1 comments

Choosing AI Tools for Work

https://www.augmentedswe.com/p/the-ultimate-overview-of-ai-tools
1•wordsaboutcode•52m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Let AI design your web project dev roadmap

https://www.archaltect.pro
1•jeremykip•54m ago•0 comments

Why Nobody Wants to Visit Las Vegas Right Now [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W62Ie7dKXRY
2•pessimizer•56m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Financial Lessons from My Family's Experience with Long-Term Care Insurance

https://www.whitecoatinvestor.com/financial-lessons-father-long-term-care-insurance/
32•wallflower•3h ago

Comments

jqpabc123•2h ago
Delay, deny, defend --- this is the insurance industry's modus operandi.

Insurance is the only industry where customers are the enemy.

toomuchtodo•58m ago
There seems to be no will to replace this dysfunctional arrangement with a social safety net unfortunately.
zackmorris•8m ago
Because injustice is corruption.

So every area of our lives that feels like it doesn't work like it used to - cost of living, healthcare, education, antitrust enforcement, journalism, accountability at the highest levels - represents a segment of the economy which has been corrupted.

Through this lens, socioeconomic policies start to make sense. For example, if your goal is to skim a fraction of the income from everyone in an economy and redirect those funds to specific goals/organizations/individuals, you could put tariffs on common goods and pass the funds collected on to companies granted large government contracts. Then the largest companies like GM and Ford see their profits reduced or even show a loss, while Grok and Palantir have all the money they need for mass surveillance.

Explanations for regulatory capture aren't normally this reductive, but wealth inequality has reached such monumental proportions that the simplest answer tends to be the right one when the needs of the few outweigh the needs of the many.

wwweston•50m ago
The crucial understanding is that incentives are cross aligned because the product is risk coverage.

The more immediate/pressing your need for risk coverage, the worse it is for them to sell it to you. The less you need it, the better it is for them to sell it to you and the worse for you to buy it.

Pretty different than ice cream or cars or housing. Too many people just think “oh corporate greed” without thinking about the underlying economics (partly because of how us culture pretends markets are magic).

pyuser583•42m ago
This is why state's have insurance commissions.

In the past, insurance companies (think: liability, fire, life, shipping) responded to a claim by hiring a lawyer and negotiating down. Like most contracts.

So states began creating insurance commissions, which serve as law firms that defend consumers from insurance companies. In practice, their existence forces insurance companies to pay what they are owed.

We need insurance commissions for health insurance. If there is a reason why the policy shouldn't pay (services received after policy expired, for example), the insurance commission has to sign off.

This is how normal insurance works. Health insurance, of course, is not normal insurance.

Workaccount2•31m ago
People need to stop looking at it like this.

Healthcare is a triangle. There are three players. You, Insurance, and Doctor.

All three are adversaries and allies in different ways.

SoftTalker•13m ago
I wrote a longer response but deleted it as it was just a personal anecdote. Suffice it to say I'll never buy LTC insurance or participate in any elder care such as "assisted living" or "nursing care." It's all (IMO) engineered to drain old people of their assets before they die. Providing care is nowhere on the list of motivations of anyone involved.
GnarfGnarf•55m ago
There are three things a nation needs to accept about universal health care:

(1) It’s expensive (2) Everybody has to pay (3) The government’s gotta run it

cowcity•37m ago
Americans are perfectly conditioned to instinctively and aggressively deny all three. :(
gruez•35m ago
>The government’s gotta run it

But there are plenty of countries with functioning healthcare systems that are private? The Swiss, for instance. Moreover depending on what counts as "government’s gotta run it" (paying for it? administering it? actually providing care?) you can argue that the German or even Canadian systems aren't government run, at least to some degree.

olddustytrail•23m ago
So why don't we see Republican Americans advocating to adopt the Swiss system which provides universal coverage at a lower per capita cost?
Loughla•8m ago
Because it's any amount of government spending for one. And for two (this one is more of my opinion than the last one) the US has a problem where we, as a culture, view poor people as somehow morally or ethically broken, which is what causes them to be poor. Therefore, we shouldn't spend money that could positively impact them, regardless of its overall benefit. I got mine, so anyone can, but as the cultural zeitgeist.
LocalH•5m ago
Because Republican Americans tend to overwhelmingly think "government bad, private business good". Even the "small-c conservatives".
dayjah•2m ago
If you only ever look at the way a system works at a specific point in time you only observe it at that point in time.

America has had multiple attempts at solutions for healthcare over the years, each started with good intent and then waylaid by various causes to produce what we have right now.

A sibling comment mentions political compromise to pass the ACA, as an example of this.

Another example is that HMOs were started with inherent goodness, but got “corrupted” (in my mind) by profit seeking.

To directly answer your question: a core tenet of the Republican tent is minimal government involvement in day to day lives of the citizenry. Ergo, the Swiss system won’t work because it involves a lot of bureaucracy. Republicans link bureaucracy to cost, and feel this is not an appropriate use of tax payers dollars.

The holes in this political doctrine are not part of my answer here fwiw. Please no “but…” comments to that end :)

mike_d•13m ago
In the Swiss system the private insurance companies are required to be non-profits. The government sets the standard for care and coverage and all the companies can do is compete on price.

Basically what Obamacare was originally intended to be before they had to compromise to get it passed.

bluGill•31m ago
Government does not have to run it. Gokernment needs to ensure it is run well but there is no reason they have to run it.
bradleyjg•6m ago
It’s not a matter of acceptance. We can’t accept the cost of anything consistently growing at a rate faster than GDP. That’s just math, not ethics or political choice theory or anything else. Health care cost growth is going to slow one way or the another.
gosub100•2m ago
Computers and software used to be extremely expensive about 30 years ago, yet private industry advanced the state of the art and brought the prices down.

There seems to be very little talk about making medical education cheaper and more accessible. Why wouldn't it be cheaper if we had more MDs and nurses? What if we made it easier to become an MD ?

The insurance system is a cartel and they are greedy. However the regulations (upheld by the government) enable it.

bluGill•29m ago
You need to get this long before you need it, but also ensure it is good plan that will take care of you. The person in the article is lucky to have kids doing that, if you don't have kids who care who will care for you.
lvl155•29m ago
Healthcare in the US is broken and they won’t let you fix it because the money is too good. Think about the fact that PBMs, which is there to save and manage on pharma is incentivized to promote drug price inflation. That’s just one “small” piece of this clusterf*k. It’s layers and layers of these convoluted system of incentives.

As to OP, the simplest solution is to move out of the US early enough or become “poor” enough and be in a wealthy blue state by the time you get to this predicament.

wnc3141•24m ago
I think the broader extrapolation is that the social contract has emerged around giving private enterprise wide latitude to promote the public welfare. However that does mean that the quality of said welfare entirely revolves how profitable you are to said enterprise. While great for airline tickets, its a tragedy for healthcare.
malshe•13m ago
I wonder if moving his father to an assisted living facility at some point will be a better option. I have little experience with this topic so I am genuinely curious.
thepryz•40s ago
In my experience, these facilities are all in crisis. They can't find people to staff the facilities and provide care and when they do, they can't afford to pay them.

My father has a neurodegenerative disorder and we've struggled to find a place that will provide consistent care. My mother, a retired nurse, is the one who tends to do a significant amount of the work to feed, clean, and otherwise care for him despite paying over $10k/month. It's infuriating.