The same way as in Europe, if they could get jobs. The point you don't seem to be getting is that other countries have resource limitations too. If there aren't enough doctors of a needed specialty then you either have one come in on call, despite the fact that they may have already worked that day, or you wait. That isn't hard to understand, is it? Well, maybe it is.
I'll go as far as it is reasonable to suspect there could be a fire. All of the background reading that I have done only shows that it may be possible that a backdoor exists, not that there actually is one. As for the RSA affair, it is entirely possible that they were simply trying to promote what was at the time a very hot and promising encryption technology.
Of course keep in mind that it took people 20 years to figure out that NSA strengthened DES against cryptanalysis methods that were still secret when it changed the S-boxes before the DES standard was approved. NSA made DES stronger, not weaker.
If the definition of "better" is government run, as has occurred in some surveys, then "yes." If the definition of "better" is superior outcomes, then not really.
If you think Iraq's government is a "puppet government" then you have a really poor understanding of puppet governments. If you think that Iraq is heading to become a theocracy like Iran then you have a really poor understanding of Iraq's flavor of Shia Islam. You should look into Ayatollah Sistani's stand on that. Hint: look into "Shia Quietism" As to the Kurds, there is very little chance they will be subjected to genocide again by the government in Baghdad any decade soon. Saddam did it with chemical weapons and a large, well equipped Iraqi army against defenseless Kurds. The chemical weapons are gone, the Iraqi army is very different now, and the Kurds are well organized and not at all defenseless.
What "backdoor" are you referring to? It has been speculated that one may be possible given the nature of the curve, but as far as I know nobody has proven that one actually exists in the fully implemented standard with correction. Do you have proof?
"Everything that can be invented has been invented." - Attributed to C. H. Duell, Commissioner of US patent office, 1899. "I think there is a world market for maybe five computers." - Attributed to Thomas Watson, IBM, 1943 "There is no reason anyone would want a computer in their home." - Ken Olsen, DEC, 1977
They might as well start preparing an entry for him in the book of silly predictions.
There is still plenty of physics to figure out. The same with biological systems. Plenty of math to work out too.
It was good for Iraq since Saddam and his brutality are done and Iraq is now a functioning if troubled democracy. As a bonus the cost was less than Saddam's long term average of death and destruction, and that is now ended. And it also meant no more oil for food money being diverted to build palaces and buy weapons but instead is going to benefit the Iraqi people.
It was also good for Europe since many European countries got either oil or construction contracts from Iraq.
It was also good for leftist weeklies since Vietnam is ancient history and they needed something else to whine about. (I assume you subscribe to several.)
It was also bad for al Qaida since it cost them massive support since the Arabs in the surrounding countries could see al Qaida's brutality close up.
I agree, there isn't much there to respond to. <sarcasm> Shifts? Who could imagine those being used in the US? The whole country closes down at sundown. </sarcasm>
Hail Zontar The Mindless, court jester and tormenter of the just!
I take it that you cannot imagine a European hospital or clinic not fully staffed for continuous 24x7 operations, with resources sitting idle just waiting to be put to use?
The German Medical Association (BÄK) and the National Association of Statutory Health Insurance Physicians (KBV) announced the results of a study showing that medical care is becoming harder to find in some parts of the country, particularly rural areas.
The study made it clear “that the doctor shortage is not a phenomenon anticipated for some time in the future, but is an urgent threat,” said KBV head Andreas Köhler....
In hospitals, about 5,000 positions were unfilled, the groups said. A decade from now, nearly 20,000 senior physicians and head physicians will have retired.
It is estimated that by 2020, 230,000 doctor‘s roles and 590,000 nursing positions will need to be filled. In less than a decade, there will be a professional shortfall of 1 million jobs in the health sector (including all roles). This means that about 14% of the total demand for health services may not be covered. This prediction is reflected in Italy, where almost 42% of national health service doctors are over 55. There are 14,280 aged over 60 compared to 13,196 aged 30 to 39. This vacuum of personnel is destined be filled increasingly by immigrants. Already in Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands and Poland, 30% of foreign doctors are from non-EU countries. This percentage rises to 60% in France and Italy and even 80% in Ireland and the UK. These findings are a report prepared as part of the project “Health Workers 4all“.
You don't seem to realize that some of us have a clue that the world outside the US isn't a uniform sphere of American shaming excellence and limitless resources.
The same way as in Europe, if they could get jobs. The point you don't seem to be getting is that other countries have resource limitations too. If there aren't enough doctors of a needed specialty then you either have one come in on call, despite the fact that they may have already worked that day, or you wait. That isn't hard to understand, is it? Well, maybe it is.
I'll go as far as it is reasonable to suspect there could be a fire. All of the background reading that I have done only shows that it may be possible that a backdoor exists, not that there actually is one. As for the RSA affair, it is entirely possible that they were simply trying to promote what was at the time a very hot and promising encryption technology.
Of course keep in mind that it took people 20 years to figure out that NSA strengthened DES against cryptanalysis methods that were still secret when it changed the S-boxes before the DES standard was approved. NSA made DES stronger, not weaker.
Ah! And here we have one of the bogmeisters of the fever swamp now!
Don't be ridiculous, people post that nonsense out of hysteria or fringe thinking. It has nothing to do with me.
As for leaving, I wouldn't hold my breath, Mr. Soylent TheGratefulNet
Besides, if I left what would the fever swamp do for the two minute hate?
If the definition of "better" is government run, as has occurred in some surveys, then "yes."
If the definition of "better" is superior outcomes, then not really.
If you think Iraq's government is a "puppet government" then you have a really poor understanding of puppet governments. If you think that Iraq is heading to become a theocracy like Iran then you have a really poor understanding of Iraq's flavor of Shia Islam. You should look into Ayatollah Sistani's stand on that. Hint: look into "Shia Quietism" As to the Kurds, there is very little chance they will be subjected to genocide again by the government in Baghdad any decade soon. Saddam did it with chemical weapons and a large, well equipped Iraqi army against defenseless Kurds. The chemical weapons are gone, the Iraqi army is very different now, and the Kurds are well organized and not at all defenseless.
There is more spite than insight to your post.
I'm going to bet Java or Ada.
Every story / thread is a potential NSA thread these days. It is the current fashion in the fever swamps. .
You left out the Russia's FSB, and the intelligence services of China, Iran, and many others.
What "backdoor" are you referring to? It has been speculated that one may be possible given the nature of the curve, but as far as I know nobody has proven that one actually exists in the fully implemented standard with correction. Do you have proof?
Your figures are a few orders of magnitude too low.
"Everything that can be invented has been invented." - Attributed to C. H. Duell, Commissioner of US patent office, 1899.
"I think there is a world market for maybe five computers." - Attributed to Thomas Watson, IBM, 1943
"There is no reason anyone would want a computer in their home." - Ken Olsen, DEC, 1977
They might as well start preparing an entry for him in the book of silly predictions.
There is still plenty of physics to figure out. The same with biological systems. Plenty of math to work out too.
Freaking astute move by the board members with gag orders and National Security Letters if you ask me.
If you keep giving nonsense answers like that nobody will ask you.
It was good for Iraq since Saddam and his brutality are done and Iraq is now a functioning if troubled democracy. As a bonus the cost was less than Saddam's long term average of death and destruction, and that is now ended. And it also meant no more oil for food money being diverted to build palaces and buy weapons but instead is going to benefit the Iraqi people.
It was also good for Europe since many European countries got either oil or construction contracts from Iraq.
It was also good for leftist weeklies since Vietnam is ancient history and they needed something else to whine about. (I assume you subscribe to several.)
It was also bad for al Qaida since it cost them massive support since the Arabs in the surrounding countries could see al Qaida's brutality close up.
I agree, there isn't much there to respond to.
<sarcasm> Shifts? Who could imagine those being used in the US? The whole country closes down at sundown. </sarcasm>
Hail Zontar The Mindless, court jester and tormenter of the just!
I take it that you cannot imagine a European hospital or clinic not fully staffed for continuous 24x7 operations, with resources sitting idle just waiting to be put to use?
Doctor shortage reaching crisis, study warns
The German Medical Association (BÄK) and the National Association of Statutory Health Insurance Physicians (KBV) announced the results of a study showing that medical care is becoming harder to find in some parts of the country, particularly rural areas.
The study made it clear “that the doctor shortage is not a phenomenon anticipated for some time in the future, but is an urgent threat,” said KBV head Andreas Köhler. ...
In hospitals, about 5,000 positions were unfilled, the groups said. A decade from now, nearly 20,000 senior physicians and head physicians will have retired.
Medical Leave: Romanian Doctors Fleeing Poor Pay, Corruption For Western Europe
UK has fewer doctors per person than Bulgaria and Estonia
Spanish doctors and nurses emigrate for work
French government fights doctor shortage in rural areas
Europe’s ageing population will face doctor shortage
It is estimated that by 2020, 230,000 doctor‘s roles and 590,000 nursing positions will need to be filled. In less than a decade, there will be a professional shortfall of 1 million jobs in the health sector (including all roles). This means that about 14% of the total demand for health services may not be covered. This prediction is reflected in Italy, where almost 42% of national health service doctors are over 55. There are 14,280 aged over 60 compared to 13,196 aged 30 to 39. This vacuum of personnel is destined be filled increasingly by immigrants. Already in Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands and Poland, 30% of foreign doctors are from non-EU countries. This percentage rises to 60% in France and Italy and even 80% in Ireland and the UK. These findings are a report prepared as part of the project “Health Workers 4all“.
You don't seem to realize that some of us have a clue that the world outside the US isn't a uniform sphere of American shaming excellence and limitless resources.
You apparently see very little since I comment in all sorts of articles.
There is a meaningful and useful difference between a painting of a clock and a clock that runs 5 minutes fast.
As long as it is sustainable.
The "boring, unseasoned, tasteless life"?
Zow, that's a weird translation.
On the other hand it is still a step up for some people. ;)
Overworked doctor or no doctor, take your pick. The clock is running, and you are bleeding out.
...so they can pay them less. amirite?
Well, Google has been fans of the Obama administration.
White House pay gap twice as large as pay gap in the District of Columbia
Evil is what Google doesn't do?
Unless you happen to be a patient in a hospital hoping your stay is within the 23 x 6 x 263 uptime of the life critical hospital IT systems.
You seem to have a very simple model of the world. Simple, and wrong.