>
Here is what we know: U.S. taxpayer money, funneled through USAID and NIH,...
Empire at 250: Can the Principles of 1776 Survive the American Police State?
The Public Choice Problem of AI Rights
Greenspan Was The Perfect Fed Chair. That Is Not a Compliment
Speculations on What Could Show Physics Beyond the Standard Model
SpaceX Orbital Travel and Orbital Hotels Need Starfall – Getting Back Safe and Cheap is Exciting
Lizard-inspired wiggly wheels let Mars rover swim through sand
Fact Sheet: President Donald J. Trump Ushers in the Next Frontier of Quantum Innovation
Researchers at Johns Hopkins University just let an AI-guided robot remove a dead pig's gallblad
World's first consumer wing-in-ground effect aircraft takes flight
America's Military Readiness Depends On Deployable Nuclear Power
License Plate Cameras Are About To Start Tracking A Lot More Than Just Your Car
Heads up: Apparently the government is hiding cameras inside fake utility boxes
Sodium Batteries And EVs That Power The Grid: Inside GM's Big Energy Push

Almost a third of working Americans are in some form of medical debt, with nearly a quarter of those with an outstanding balance owing $10,000 or more. Many Americans feel anxious about health care costs and are depleting their own savings to pay the bills, or avoiding going to the doctor due to the cost, and in some cases, as in the case of William Osman, embarking on bizarre projects to highlight the issue.
The YouTuber and engineer, who is known for his bizarre projects that combine engineering and entertainment, posted a video last week outlining how a recent hospital visit requiring X-rays resulted in a staggering $69,210.32 bill.
He explains that, thanks to his health insurance policy, he will only have to pay roughly $2,500, and that, when combined with annual insurance costs, the total will be around $8,500. In a comedic sequence, he laments, "I'm a slave to medical debt now. I have to sell all my things, I have to sell my friends' belongings." Then, he embarks on an extremely reckless and risky endeavor to build his own fully functional X-ray machine for less than the cost of his actual medical expenses.