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China: What are some mind blowing facts about China?

From fun facts to history that’s a bit heavy. Here we go.Every single giant panda in the world belongs to China. If you see one outside of China , he/she is on loan. And the rental fee ain’t cheap . Panda diplomacy - WikipediaAbove: Numbers of Pandas in different countries. Source: “国宝”的特殊使命:中国熊猫外交大盘点Chinese people don’t call “Chinese New Year”, “Chinese New Year”. They call it “Lunar New Year (农历新年)” or “Spring Festival(春节)”. In fact , many Asian countries celebrate the Lunar New Year . In Singapore, Korea, Vietnam , Malaysia, Philippines for example , Lunar New Year is an official public holiday. Do native Southeast Asians celebrate Chinese New Year? , Lunar New Year Is Actually Celebrated In Most Asian CountriesAbove: Poster of the state-run CCTV (China central Television) 2020 Lunar New Year’s Eve concert , it calls the new year “春节(Spring Festival)”China has one of the last surviving Matriarchal Societies - Mosuo - Wikipedia. Here’s a pretty good documentary about their way of life and the impact on their traditions brought by the Communist party:11th of November is the biggest online shopping day in China. This date is Commonly known as “Double 11” or “Singles' Day - Wikipedia” by the Chinese. IMO, it’s one of the most genius marketing campaigns since Coca-cola changed “Father Christmas” outfit from green to red or how “De Beers” tricked women around the world into believing that they ought have an overrated, overpriced, shiny stone on their fingers when they get engaged. This “11.11” phenomenon deserves a whole new topic on e-commerce, the consumer behaviour of the new generation Chinese, and brand marketing.Above: Sales record of “Double 11” 2019. Source: China Double 11 shopping festival statistics 2019; best-selling brandsMiddle aged Chinese women LOVE going out to dance in public at night. “广场舞” a.k.a Square dancing (China) - Wikipedia is a HUGE thing in China. Has anyone been to the Melbourne Museum lately ? I used to take my kid there every week and would see a brunch of people (all sorts of ethnicities) doing the “square dance” outside of the museum , it was mind blowing for me to see it in Melbourne (amazing city that embraces all sorts of cultures btw). Chinese Square Dancers: Melbourne Museum . “Square Dancing Aunties” use super catchy songs and how they dance like no one’s watching really makes you wanna shake your booty a little. This group dancing activity is so popular and culturally encouraged that patients in the Wuhan Quarantine centre are doing it everyday to stay fit and spiritually positive. YOU GO GIRLFRIENDS!Above:video taken in the Wuhan quarantine centre,bunch of coronavirus patients dancing together.The Chinese are very liberal towards homosexuality. Same sex marriage might not be legal in China, but that doesn’t stop them from talking about it and sharing erotic articles/Mangas related to the topic. The world’s biggest gay dating app “GRINDR” is 60% owned by “Beijing Kunlun Tech”, a Chinese gaming company. Although the U.S government is forcing Kunlun to sell. Grindr Is Owned by a Chinese Firm, and the U.S. Is Trying to Force It to SellAbove: A glimpse of some gay related posts on China’s most popular social media platform, Weibo. Source:https://www.weibo.com/u/1481250851?refer_flag=1001030103_&is_hot=1二次元腐漫营的微博_微博https://www.weibo.com/shimotsukisakura?refer_flag=1001030103_&is_hot=1男.人.之.间.用什.么姿.势.最爽?_微博It's illegal not to regularly visit parents who are over 60 years old . This law is called “中华人民共和国老年人权益保障法” or “Law of the People's Republic of China on Protection of the Rights and Interests of the Elderly“ . Related articles:A Chinese Virtue Is Now the LawLaw of the People's Republic of China on Protection of the Rights and Interests of the ElderlyCricket fighting - Wikipedia is a traditional sports and is still very popular among retirees nowadays. I think it’s silly to make/watch two bugs fight against each other, BUT many Chinese citizens will disagree with me … !Above: people watching a live “Cricket battle” on a big screen TV in a shopping mall.Beijing will be the first city in history to host both The Summer(2008) & Winter (2022) OlympicsOpen-crotch pants - Wikipedia or “开裆裤“ are still very popular in China for toddlers and babies. It’s an old “Chinese thing”, but over the years the styles of the Open-crotch pants have evolved so much better that I had purchased a few for my daughter myself - they weren’t so ugly and super convenient to use! (after consideration, I decided not to share pictures of little babies wearing OCPs because they all showing their bare arses !! lol )Above: A glimpse of the sales of “open crotch pants” on Taobao, China’s biggest online shopping platformThere are free condom vending machines on campus in China. All you need to do, is swipe your national ID card. You can get up to 20 condoms per month from the vending machine. “No Rubba, No Hubba Hubba” y’all. China’s campus condom giveaway both protects and offendsPearl S. Buck - Wikipedia is the first American woman to win the Nobel Prize for Literature (1938). She won it with a book written about China, called The Good Earth - Wikipedia . It was the best-selling fiction book in the United States in 1931 and 1932 and won the Pulitzer Prize in 1932. This book is indeed a great read and I highly recommend it to anyone who has interests in China’s past. It helps one to understand China from a very different prospective.China has the maximum number of neighbours touching its border. The 14 countries touching its border are: India, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, Mongolia, Russia, North Korea, Vietnam, Laos, Myanmar, Bhutan and Nepal.During the first half of the 20th century, Shanghai was the only city in the world to accept Jews that were escaping the Holocaust without an entry visa. Related reads:https://www.un.org/en/holocaustremembrance/docs/pdf/chapter6.pdf - a study published on the UN website.Shanghai's Forgotten Jewish Past - article published by The AtlanticFILM IN REVIEW; 'Shanghai Ghetto''- NY TimesHere's a great documentary about this, “Shanghai ghetto”:Women used to grow long fingernails to show off their prestige/noble social status. The message it meant to send is quite simple: look, I don’t have to work!Along with the Egyptians, the Chinese were one of the first cultures to perfect nail art. Chinese Nail polish was coloured with vegetable dyes and flowers, mixed with egg whites, beeswax, and gum Arabic, which helped fix the colour in place. From around 600 BC, gold and silver were favourite colours, but by the Ming dynasty of the fifteenth century, favourite shades included red and black- or the colour of the ruling imperial house, often embellished with gold dust.Another advantage of Chinese nail polish was it protected the nails. The strengthening properties of the mixture proved useful because, from the Ming dynasty onwards, excessively long fingernails were in vogue amongst the upper classes. By the time of the Qing dynasty, which lasted from the seventeenth until the twentieth century, these nails could reach 8-10 inches long.The fashion for excessive nail growth was primarily a statement of status as it was impossible to grow nails so long and undertake any manual labor. Unfortunately, such long nails meant the wearer of them could not do anything much at all. It would undoubtedly have been positively dangerous to have attempted any intimate body care. Therefore, anyone with such long nails would have relied upon servants to wash, dress and feed them, to prevent them doing themselves an injury- or breaking a nail.To counteract the inconvenience of a full set of long claws, it became fashionable for the Manchu women of the Qing dynasty to cultivate just one or two talons on the hands. These nails were shaped and styled so that they looked elegant rather than unwieldy and from the nineteenth century were often protected with nail guards made of gold or silver and studded with jewels.ref: Looks that Kill: 11 Impossible Beauty Standards from HistoryAbove: Empress Dowager Cixi - WikipediaAbove: Unknown noble woman from Qing DynastyAbove: another unknown noble woman from Qing DynastyAbove: Antique fingernail protectors from Qing DynastyHistorians and scientists believe people from a village in Liqian - Wikipedia are the descendants of ancient Roman soldiers. “魏略”or “Weilüe” was a Chinese historical text written by Yu Huan between 239 and 265. The Weilue fills in many gaps in our knowledge of the extensive international contacts and trade networks at this early period.Here's a copy of the translation of “魏略“:The Peoples of the West,translated by independent scholar John Hill - Academia.eduRelated reads:Chinese villagers 'descended from Roman soldiers'DNA tests show Chinese villagers with green eyes could be descendants of lost Roman legionNote: Mr. Hill has written a few amazing books (IMO) on ancient “Silk Road” and the interaction between ancient Rome and China. They are good reads for anyone who has interests in early (Central) Asian history . John E. HillChristianity along with many other religious organisations are well protected by law in China. Given the conditions that they are legally registered with the local government and they conduct religious activities according to regulations. There’s a good church in Guangzhou (next to my hometown) which holds regular masses in different languages including Mandarin, Cantonese, Korean and English Sacred Heart Cathedral (Guangzhou) - WikipediaAbove: A picture of the Sacred Heart Cathedral Church in Guangzhou. Taken in 2015, by me, after hubby and I finished attending a mass in English.Only if I could get a dime every time someone tries to tell me “your country has no faith” or “your country suppresses religious believes” or “Chinese people have no religious freedom”, only if …Moving on …Many controversial national policies only applied to the Han ethnicity. Ethnic Minorities enjoy many “Special Treatments” in China. These policies include but not limited to:One-Child Policy was never implemented among the ethnic minorities. I once heard a joke, it goes like this: CCP doesn’t think we have too many people, it just thinks we have too many Han people … … …More than 16 provinces have special government body to ensure the supply and quality of Halal and Kosher food.Students of ethnic minorities enjoy lower entrance requirements for universities, PhD programmes, and so on. Tuition is often free for them.Most of China's 55 ethnic minorities, with exceptions such as Mongol, Tibetan, and Uygur, did not have their own written languages before 1949. Efforts have been putting into creating and improving writing systems for minority languages soon after the founding of the PRC60% of the government positions in Autonomous Regions (there are five) are guaranteed for ethnic minority citizens.Since the 80s, a special policy called “两少一宽“ or “2 Less 1 more” had been being implemented in Criminal Cases Involving National Minority Citizens. “2 less” = Less arrest and Less death penalty;;;;; “1 more” = More Leniency. This policy is currently under reviewed and will likely be called off due to a series of terrorists attacks in the past decade or so, and Han people are demanding equality in the eyes of law.Related reads:China's Ethnic Policy and Common Prosperity and Development of All Ethnic Groupshttp://www.lawinfochina.com/display.aspx?lib=dbref&id=82China has been under a series of terrorist attacks in recent years.2008 Kashgar attack - Wikipedia2008 Kunming bus bombings - Wikipedia2011 Hotan attack - Wikipedia2011 Kashgar attacks - WikipediaPishan hostage crisis - WikipediaTianjin Airlines Flight 7554 - Wikipedia2012 Yecheng attack - WikipediaApril 2013 Bachu unrest - WikipediaJune 2013 Shanshan riots - Wikipedia2013 Beijing Capital International Airport bombing - Wikipedia2013 Tiananmen Square attack - Wikipedia2014 Kunming attack - WikipediaAssassination of Juma Tayir - WikipediaApril 2014 Ürümqi attack - WikipediaMay 2014 Ürümqi attack - WikipediaIn early 1900s, China was invaded by 8 different nations at the same time . Eight-Nation Alliance - Wikipedia . Although Chinese are being taught about this, I thought this could be “mind blowing’ for some because as far as I know (by talking to people from these 8 nations, not by doing proper research), out of the 8 nations, Germany is the only country teaching school kids about this part of history. I’m not into sharing war pictures because looking at them makes me sad, I do want to share some of the cartoons that were created by artists from these countries though. see below:For about a hundred years, China was occupied by 10 different countries at the same time. They established their little “homes away from home” in China and call them “Concessions” : Concessions in China - Wikipedia . Chinese people call this period Century of humiliation - Wikipedia .Thanks for reading.

What are NFTs? What benefit do they have over traditional art?

Just a couple of months ago, Jazmine Boykins was posting her artwork online for free of charge . The 20-year-old digital artist’s dreamy animations of Black life were drawing many likes, comments and shares, but not much income, apart from money she made selling swag together with her designs between classes at North Carolina A&T State University.But Boykins has recently been selling an equivalent pieces for thousands of dollars each, because of an emerging technology upending the principles of digital ownership: NFTs, or non-fungible tokens. NFTs—digital tokens tied to assets which will be bought, sold and traded—are enabling artists like Boykins to take advantage of their work more easily than ever. “At first, I didn’t know if it had been trustworthy or legit,” says Boykins, who goes by the web handle “BLACKSNEAKERS” and who has sold quite $60,000 in NFT art over the past six months. “But to ascertain digital art being bought at these prices, it’s pretty astounding. It’s given me the courage to stay going.” Where to buy NFTs non fungible tokensNFTs are having their big-bang moment: collectors and speculators have spent quite $200 million on an array of NFT-based artwork, memes and GIFs within the past month alone, consistent with market tracker Crypto-collectibles & blockchain gaming news and tools, compared with $250 million throughout all of 2020. which was before the digital artist Mike Winkelmann, referred to as Beeple, sold a bit for a record-setting $69 million at famed firm Christie’s on March 11—the third highest price ever fetched by any currently living artist, after Jeff Koons and David Hockney.NFTs are best understood as computer files combined with proof of ownership and authenticity, sort of a deed. Like cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin, they exist on a blockchain—a tamper-resistant digital public ledger. But like dollars, cryptocurrencies are “fungible,” meaning one bitcoin is usually well worth the same as the other bitcoin. against this , NFTs have unique valuations set by the very best bidder, a bit like a Rembrandt or a Picasso. Artists who want to sell their work as NFTs need to check in with a marketplace, then “mint” digital tokens by uploading and validating their information on a blockchain (typically the Ethereum blockchain, a rival platform to Bitcoin). Doing so usually costs anywhere from $40 to $200. they will then list their piece for auction on an NFT marketplace, almost like eBay.At face value, the entire enterprise seems absurd: big-money collectors paying six to eight figures for works which will often be seen and shared online for free of charge . Critics have dismissed the NFT art craze as just the newest bubble, like this year’s boom-and-bust mania around “meme stocks” like GameStop. The phenomenon is attracting a wierd brew of not just artists and collectors, but also speculators looking to urge rich off the newest fad.A bubble it's going to be. But many digital artists, uninterested after years of making content that generates visits and engagement on Big Tech platforms like Facebook and Instagram while getting almost nothing reciprocally , have lunged headlong into the craze. These artists of all kinds—authors, musicians, filmmakers—envision a future during which NFTs transform both their creative process and the way the planet values art, now that it’s possible to really “own” and sell digital art for the primary time. “You will have numerous people from different backgrounds and genres coming in to share their art, connect with people and potentially build a career,” Boykins says. “Artists put such a lot of their time—and themselves—into their work. to ascertain them compensated on an appropriate scale, it’s really comforting.” Technologists, meanwhile, say NFTs are the newest step toward a long-promised blockchain revolution that would radically transform consumer capitalism, with major implications for everything from home loans to health care.Digital art has long been undervalued, in large part because it’s so freely available. to assist artists create financial value for his or her work, NFTs add the crucial ingredient of scarcity. for a few collectors, if they know the first version of something exists, they’re more likely to crave the “authentic” piece. Scarcity explains why baseball-card collectors, as an example , are willing to pay $3.12 million for a bit of cardboard with an image of Honus Wagner, a legendary Pittsburgh Pirate. It’s also why sneakerheads obsess over the newest limited-edition drops from Nike and Adidas, and why “pharma bro” Martin Shkreli bought the only copy of Wu-Tang Clan’s Once Upon a Time in Shaolin for $2 million in 2015.But baseball cards, sneakers which Wu-Tang CD all exist within the physical space, so it’s easier to know why they’re worth something. It are often harder to know why digital art, or the other digital file, has value.Some digital-art collectors say they’re paying not only for pixels but also for digital artists’ labor–in part, the movement is an attempt to economically legitimize an emerging kind . “I want you to travel on my collection and be like, ‘Oh, these are all unique things that stand out,'” says Shaylin Wallace, a 22-year-old NFT artist and collector. “The artist put such a lot work into it–and it had been sold for the worth that it deserved.” The movement is additionally taking shape after many folks have spent most of the past year online. If nearly your whole world is virtual, it is sensible to spend money on virtual stuff.The groundwork for the digital-art boom was laid in 2017 with the launch of CryptoKitties—think digital Beanie Babies. Fans have spent quite $32 million collecting, trading and breeding these images of wide-eyed one-of-a-kind cartoon cats. Video gamers, meanwhile, are pouring cash into cosmetic upgrades for his or her avatars—Fortnite players spent a mean of $82 on in-game content in 2019—further mainstreaming the thought of paying real-world money on digital goods. At an equivalent time, cryptocurrencies are booming in value, fueled partially by celebrity enthusiasts like Elon Musk and Mark Cuban. Bitcoin, as an example , is up quite 1,000% over the past year, and anything remotely crypto-adjacent—including NFTs—is getting swept up therein mania.Even as artists, collectors and speculators enjoy the NFT craze, the phenomenon isn't without its dark side. The barriers to entry—it costs money and requires tech savvy to sell an NFT—could prevent some creators from joining in on the action. Many are concerned that young artists of color particular are going to be overlooked , as they need long been marginalized within the “traditional” art world. Legal experts are scrambling to work out how existing copyright laws will interact with this new technology, as some artists have had their work copied and sold as an NFT without their permission. “It’s providing another platform for people to require advantage of other people’s work,” says artist Connor Bell, whose work was plagiarized and posted on an NFT marketplace.Then there are the environmental concerns. Creating NFTs requires a huge amount of raw computing power, and lots of of the server farms where that employment happens are powered by fossil fuels. “The environmental impact of blockchain may be a huge problem,” says Amy Whitaker, an professor of visual arts administration at ny University, though some cryptocurrency advocates argue these fears are overblown.Theoretically, climate-minded artists could move to some alternative blockchain platform with less environmental impact. They’re already finding ways to bend NFT technology in other beneficial ways. Some, for instance, are fixing their tokens so they’re compensated whenever their work is resold, like an actor getting a royalty check when their show airs as a rerun. Taiwanese tech startup Bitmark has started an NFT-like program to offer rights and royalties to music producers round the world. And artists who join NFT-based social media sites, like Friends With Benefits, receive fractional ownership within the platform and may receive direct compensation for the work they create through the network, in sharp contrast to existing tech giants like Facebook and Instagram.For technology evangelists, meanwhile, the NFT frenzy is simply more evidence of their long-held beliefs that cryptocurrency, and blockchain platforms more broadly, has the facility to vary the planet in profound ways. Blockchain technology has already been implemented in attempts to form voting safer in Utah, combat insurance fraud at Nationwide Insurance, and secure the medical data of several U.S. health care companies. Advocates say it could also help companies ensure transparency in their supply chains, streamline international logistic support efforts and reduce biases in historically racist loan-application processes.“The potential societal impact … is so important that we should always do everything in our power to form it manageable, environmentally and otherwise,” Whitaker says. “New idealistic technologies are always really imperfect in their rollout: they will have a speculative boom, and other people can misuse them in unsavory ways,” she adds. “I attempt to stay centered on what’s possible.”Learn more about buying NFT from MintonBlock digital assets investment fund

What percent of doctors do you think actually chose medicine because they wanted to get rich and have the fancy title?

I’d say that would be the case in maybe 0.1% of the cases.For decades now, people have engaged in doctor bashing—there is little respect among the public for what it takes to become a doctor or BE a doctor. There are ridiculous comments I see more and more often about how “I could have gone to medical school.” Really? About 70% acceptance rate and you should see the resume of the competition!Then you’d have been advised to KNOW something about the entire process. Most folks are NOT willing to put up with what is DEMANDED of medical students, residents (you want to work the kinds of hours they do for about $13/hr while your student loan debt is growing because of compound interest?)Then when they are finally able to see patients (3–7 years of residency; some do fellowships as well), they have to either join other doctors in a group practice, work for a hospital, work for some company—perhaps insurance or a lab or such, or try to START a business, which is time-consuming and hard on its own. Need to stay abreast of medical developments, do your CMEs, etc.Doctors TEND to rely either now on a paycheck (some of these groups pay a salary as do hospitals) OR insurance which really puts the screws to docs on what they’ll reimburse. Patients assume every PCP gets the same amount—no, they go through NEGOTIATIONS and if they’re not willing to be low-balled they can no longer be on THAT plan or possibly with ANY plan that insurer offers. (Surprise, surprise, that is the way it really works AND why very likely YOUR PCP “changes plans” and “upsets me.” He probably did NOT willingly change plans: it is often “take it or leave” as a deal presented to them.) I’ve had some variety of UHC, United Health Care, the big gorilla in the industry, for a long time. There has often been ONE neurologist on the plan. I live in Phoenix which has always been one of the tenth largest cities in the US since I’ve had that plan. Believe we’re the fourth largest now. Anyone who wants to tell me that only ONE neurologist is a good idea or they could only locate ONE in this huge area needs to go on a long vacation so he can clear his mind.So, with the education they have (look at how MOST people run SCREAMING from science and math before they ever even are asked to do something like work on a cadaver—that’s year one typically), the work ethic, and the commitment in time and money, you honestly think they can’t earn MORE than they do as doctors? Do NOT compare a physicians 4 years of undergrad, 4 years of grad school, and at least 3 years of residency to something another person can do with an associates degree or a bachelors. Frankly, even law school which is also demanding, is less work. Compare them, if you must, with someone like a PhD in a particular type of Engineering and then maybe you’d have a reasonable level of competition and education. I am going to guess that this site is reasonably accurate:“The expected salary of an engineer with a PhD varies considerably according to experience. As of 2012, those who held a PhD reported an average starting salary of $81,406 to ASME and ASCE. This jumped to an average of $94,218 for those with between five and nine years of experience, while those who had between 15 and 19 years of experience averaged $125,972 per year. Those who had 25 or more years of experience reported the highest average salary, $147,014 per year.”Salary With a PhD in EngineeringRemember the RESIDENCY REQUIREMENT so start with the $94K as the base for comparison purposes. Bet that is more than the vast majority of folks reading this make. Probably twice as much.IF this site is accurate, drum roll please for the rich doctor:Average Primary Care Physician Salary$181,342Primary Care Physician SalaryOh and the doctor probably has around $200K in student loan debt to pay off.Another site which I will assume is in the ballpark for accuracy:“The (Giant) Medical School Loans of DoctorsWhile hardly the only factor in the high cost of a doctor’s visit, the price for a medical degree still is still one of the most expensive. Just one year of medical school can cost between $32,889 and $56,796 — and it usually takes at least four years.According to the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC), an average of 81% of medical school graduates in 2015 were saddled with debt — with 79% of them owing at least $100,000. In fact, the AAMC estimates the average graduate had around $172,751 in education debt when they left medical school, and more than 10% have over $300,000 in debt.The Cost of Graduating from Law SchoolWhile becoming a doctor may cost you more, your law degree won’t be cheap, either; the average law student graduates with around $126,452 in debt. Of course, if you head to a high-end school — or need to finance living expenses — that figure can skyrocket. For instance, going to Harvard for law school will run you $178,650 in tuition alone.”U.S. National Average Student Loan Debt: Undergraduate vs. GraduateHow about a specialist though? Cardiologists make good money. Here’s another site with what they claim is an average:Cardiologist Annual Salary ($301,349 Avg | Jul 2019) - ZipRecruiter$301,349/year NATIONAL average so places like NY, FL, CA, and IL are included in there as well as well as states with lower pay.“While ZipRecruiter is seeing annual salaries as high as $401,500 and as low as $11,000, the majority of Cardiologist salaries currently range between $250,000 (25th percentile) to $352,000 (75th percentile) across the United States. The average pay range for a Cardiologist varies little (about $102,000), which suggests that regardless of location, there are not many opportunities for increased pay or advancement, even with several years of experience.”I have NO idea who would be getting $11K a year. Burger flippers make that kind of money after 11 years of full-time work.So frankly anyone smart enough to become a doctor can figure this all out. People are often impressed by lawyers, sports figures, physicists, bankers, and executives in most any field and the salaries ARE competitive if not higher.BTW, not a doctor; not even got one in the family. Yes we can all find different salary reporting levels so I’m not saying this is the exact situation but I do NOT believe most folks are aware some folks with a doctorate are looking at effectively $100K very early on in their careers. I think people who think docs are rich (and let me tell you, the continuing ed, the licensing, the MALPRACTICE insurance, and more eat up a TON of income, so expenses ARE higher than for most other professions and their “career life” is possibly shorter—not a lot of surgeons in their 70s out there so they need to make up for all those front-loaded expenses AND set aside for retirement. They probably marry and have kids and you bet the doctor’s children EXPECT to go to college and probably Dad and/or Mom the doctor/s are planning to pay at least through the bachelor’s degree.So if the plan were to be “rich” (BTW, my former PCP worked 80 hours a week; docs with “lighter” loads probably work 60) WHEN are they supposed to ENJOY their money? Their families benefit more from the income but you would not SEE the doctor spouse or parent that much. I’ve been sick enough I’ve had to speak with MY PCP at his HOME on the phone. I could hear the wife and teenage son in the background. They would have been much happier to NOT have a sick patient on the phone. So before someone gets overly impressed, figure out the expenses—to get there and to maintain—then pay per hour—then compare with some other jobs that carry cachet and not bad paychecks—like teaching college. I’ll tell you who is busting his butt for less.

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