In the United States. Elsewhere in the world it's significantly cheaper.
Ironically, one of the forces that push back against that are the much-derided health insurance companies. Health insurance has the exact opposite incentive structure, they prefer a cure over an ongoing treatment.
Also, do you think the owners and executives of pharma companies never get cancer themselves, or never have friends and family with cancer?
In reality the reasons why cures are less common than treatments are complex, it's not pure evil motivating it. Cures are just hard. Especially for something like cancer, which is not just one single disease but rather an whole vast constellation of different diseases. Some kinds of cancer have been cured, and new cures keep coming out all the time. We just haven't done them all yet.
The patent eventually expires and then the generics come out more cheaply.
That's literally what their goal is, yes.
And I bet someone is using an obsolete LLM or is failing to format their inputs correctly somewhere in the world right now too. Doesn't change the reality that's in front of me.
And yet the LLMs that I use actually do distinguish, in my actual real life experience.
So you're telling me the sky is orange while I'm literally looking outside the window and seeing that it is not.
That thing you're calling a fact is not in fact a fact.
It's not just New Zealand. The Democracy Perception Index just came out for 2026 and the US is seen as the largest threat worldwide, a very significant swing from last year. I just watched a Mallen Baker video on the subject.
I like how "as of my knowledge cutoff" implies that maybe the first 31 digits of pi might change someday.
They didn't notice miscalculations until well after 1700 days into a 3-day special military operation? They don't math very well.
And against this backdrop Trump has the utter gall to be using "forced labor" as an excuse for his latest attempt to tariff every other country (aside from Russia for some reason).
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Ironically, It does work in this case. Ivermectin is an antiparasitic, not just a dewormer. It kills screwworm larvae and is being authorized as a treatment for real here.
Just another "what are the writers going to think of next" element to throw into this crazy timeline.