Man gets sick benefits for heavy metal addiction

June 26th, 2007 at 10:41 pm by Andy

“A Swedish heavy metal fan has had his musical preferences officially classified as a disability. The results of a psychological analysis enable the metal lover to supplement his income with state benefits.”

This is according to an article in Sweden’s The Local. Holy balls I am jealous.
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Cocaine is one helluva drug

June 26th, 2007 at 10:28 pm by Andy

Dutch police chased a guy high on coke through this cornfield before arresting him. I bet it was one fun ride while it lasted.

Coked Driving

(Associated Press photo, stolen without permission)


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Ahhh… summertime

June 21st, 2007 at 11:11 pm by Andy

My apologies for disregarding this site, my friends, my hobbies, and my responsibilities outside of work for the last month or so. I’ve been averaging 70+ hour workweeks, and when I’m not working I barely have enough energy to sleep. Anyways, I like this picture and to me this is the essence of what summer should be… from both the enjoying the outdoors perspective as well as the lounging in the water one. Hopefully I’ll be back in less than another month.

Reflecting Frog
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Why Insurance Should be Public

June 5th, 2007 at 10:20 pm by Andrew

Had a debate the other night about auto insurance and the government’s role in it with a few interesting points that I think are worth repeating. The crux of the issue revolved around mandatory (rightfully so) liability insurance for all drivers. The problem is, we’re required to purchase said insurance from private companies. Said companies, in the interest of making a profit, necessarily profile clients on the basis of statistics - hence why sixteen year old males driving red 2-door cars pay a fortune. I imagine most people would be understandably upset if this sort of profiling occurred in other aspects of governance (say, by police officers), but because insurance companies are private entities, they have free reign over their pricing policies. Ideally, competition and the market should result in some sort of ostensibly fair equilibrium - but in this case, the market is unnaturally skewed by the law mandating that everyone buy it. The government is thus in de facto support of all kinds of discriminatory policies.

In this situation, there are two logical options if you want to keep things fair. You can let anyone who wants to act as an insurer, thereby creating true market competition. There are all kinds of problems with this one, so there’s not much point in even considering it. The default alternative, is to have the government offer insurance at a baseline cost commensurate with its true price (non-profit!), statistical liabilities based on profiling notwithstanding. Obviously, should you prove the statistics true, you’ll be hammered with the full weight of increased premiums. But that makes sense.

As it stands, we’re guilty until proven innocent. So when do you turn 25?

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