
Therealbitcoinmd
562 posts

Therealbitcoinmd
@RealbitcoinMD
Exploring the intersection of Bitcoin, healthcare, AI and real life.



if every doctor in the US worked for free, healthcare costs would go down ~8% meanwhile: MSOs take ~20–30% of practice revenue TPA/ASOs take ~10% of insurance premiums the US has built an enormous economy around healthcare without adding much more care

Everyone is asking: "Is Jane Street why Bitcoin isn't at $150k?" As expected, the answer is trickier than the question. But it's also more structurally unsettling than the conspiracy theory itself—and once you understand the actual mechanics, you won't be able to unsee them👇

Strive will announce a big M&A deal tomorrow. It's the only thing that makes sense. The new SATA + STRC ETF is nice but not worth this level of hype. I'm expecting a significant jump in the number of Bitcoin on their balance sheet when all is said and done. Bullish on $ASST.

HOLY FUCKING SHIT OMG CLAUDE JUST CRACKED THIS SHIT, THANK YOU @AnthropicAI THANK YOU @DarioAmodei NAMING MY KID AFTER YOU 😍 blockchain.com/explorer/addre…

NYC dumping record $43B into public schools - at whopping $44K per pupil - despite plummeting enrollment, poor test results trib.al/tTW3RXv



A peer-reviewed paper published last year in the journal Bioethics by two professors at Western Michigan University School of Medicine argues that it is "morally obligatory" to genetically engineer ticks to spread alpha-gal syndrome, a permanent condition that makes you violently allergic to red meat. The paper is called "Beneficial Bloodsucking." Their argument: if eating meat is morally wrong, then preventing the spread of a disease that forces people to stop eating meat is also morally wrong. Scientists should gene-edit lone star ticks to enhance their ability to carry alpha-gal syndrome and expand their range into urban environments to infect more people. They call this a "moral bioenhancer." They frame releasing genetically modified disease-carrying ticks as a "vaccination" that only "infringes" on your bodily autonomy rather than "violating" it. The distinction, apparently, is that a tick bit you instead of a government official holding you down. Alpha-gal syndrome is not mild. The CDC estimates up to 450,000 Americans are already affected. Cases have surged 100-fold in the last decade. Symptoms include anaphylaxis. There is no cure. Alpha-gal cases are exploding across the United States. The lone star tick's range is expanding far beyond its historical territory. And two academics at a medical school published a paper arguing this is a good thing that should be accelerated. At what point do we stop treating papers like this as fringe academic exercises and start asking whether anyone is already acting on them?












