Medicine
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No matter how fervently we shout, judge, or legislate, children’s bodies will still have been affected by all the chemicals to which they were subjected.
Children deserve care that helps their bodies match their brains … especially since our cavalier treatment of these children’s environment has probably helped cause the mismatch.
Andrew Solomon, androgens, biological sex, chemical exposure, chromosomal sex, David Cole, David French, developmental biology, discrimination, endocrine disrupting chemicals, endocrine disruptors, exposure to endocrine disruptors, Far from the Tree, fetal exposure, gender, gender affirming care, gender affirming care ban, gender legislation, health, hormone replacement therapy, hormone therapy, hormones, HRT, intersex, Jim Sinclair, legislation, lifestyle, medical care for minors, parental rights, patient rights, Performance All The Way Down, poetry, puberty blockers, restricting medical care, Richard Prum, Ross Gay, sex determination, sexuality, SRY, Supreme Court, teaching in jail, teaching poetry in jail, Tennessee, testosterone, Thank You, transgender, transphobic legislation, urgency of medical care, wellness -
Who are you going to trust, this stack of research papers or your deeply ingrained experience of the world?
The particles composing your brain should follow the laws of physics, but can you choose to believe that you can make no choices?
Ambrose Bierce, artificial intelligence, atheism, biology of choice, biology of free will, Blaise Pascal, choice, crime and punishment, criminal justice, criminal justice reform, Determined, determinism, free action, free choice, free will, magical thinking, moral agency, neurobiology of free will, neurology, philosophy, philosophy of free will, punishing a faulty algorithm, punishment, quantum computer, quantum computing, quantum mechanics, random action, random choice, reform, Robert Sapolsky, Sapolsky, science, science of free will, science of moral choice, superposition, who has free will, will -
On islands of care.
Good policies can be undermined by uncooperative neighbors.
aggregation of people in need, Bloomington, Bloomington Indiana, Bret Stephens, concentration of people in need, cooperation, Drug Addiction Treatment and Recovery Act, drug use, drugs, Eric Westervelt, global policy, housing policy, incarceration, Indiana, jail, local governance, local policy, mass incarceration, misuse of data, New York Times editorial, Oregon, War on Drugs, wealth tax -
On Long Covid, minds, and bodies.
Common prejudices might make us overlook treatments for Long Covid.
Akiko Iwasaki, chronic fatigue, Covid stress, covid therapies, Covid trauma, Covid-19, disrupted sleep, experimental therapies for Long Covid, foggy thoughts, Long Covid, Long Covid therapies, Long Covid treatment, low cortisol, medicine, Pandemic, post traumatic stress, Prazosin, PTSD, PTSD treatment, stress, trauma -
On urgency and gender-affirming medical care.
Sometimes, young people are right to be infuriated by our lack of urgency.
access to medical care, age discrimination, Emily Bazelon, estrogen, gatekeepers, gatekeeping, gender, gender transition, gender-affirming medical care, hormone blockers, hormone therapy, LGBTIA+, medical care, medical transition, medicine, nonbinary, patience, psychology, puberty, puberty blockers, queer youth, restricting medical care, testosterone, The Battle Over Gender Therapy, transgender, transition, transitioning, urgency -
On the apparent rise in transgender and non-binary identities.
Our culture has changed, but so has the environment, and we need to acknowledge both.
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On masks and whether they ‘work.’
Masks can *delay* illness; only vaccination will prevent it..
coronavirus, Covid, covid vaccine, Covid vaccines for children, Covid-19, Covid-19 vaccine, do masks work, endemic, epidemic, forever pandemic, forever virus, how do masks work, masking, masks, masks in school, Pandemic, pandemic goals, pandemic parenting, pandemic response, school, school closure, schooling during the pandemic, schools, vaccination, vaccines, vaccines for children -
On vaccination.
How do the Covid-19 vaccines work, and why were they made this way?
Alexandra Lahav, ancient history of vaccination, ancient medicine, biochemistry, bioscience, coronavirus, Covid, covid vaccination, covid vaccine, Covid-19, expression systems, fat bubble, fermentation, gene expression, history of vaccination, how do vaccines work, immune system, immunology, medical safety, medical testing, medicine, Medicine Is Made for Men, membrane trafficking, protein expression, protein folding, science, structure and function, vaccination, vaccine, vaccine production, vaccine safety, vaccines -
On cooperation and cons: Our theft from young people.
We demanded sacrifices from younger people to fight Covid-19, but we’re not making sacrifices to help them in return.
buy less, carbon emissions, climate change, climate crisis, climate destabilization, climate inequality, closing schools harms children, consumerism is killing us, coronavirus, Covid, covid epidemic, covid pandemic, covid vaccination, covid vaccine, Covid versus flu, Covid versus influenza, Covid-19, global warming, health care rationing, plant-based diet, rationing, rationing health care, re-opening schools, reopening schools, risk demographics, school closure, school equity, schools, seasonal influenza, stealing from children, stealing the future, vegan, when is the pandemic over








