* Supposedly from the expression “bitchin Camaro.” He did kind of complain a lot. (back to text)
* I say “at one point” because this progression is what we think about when we think about Kübler-Ross. But what we avoid thinking about when we think about Kübler-Ross is how she later changed her mind and decided we’ll all be reincarnated. I wish I was shitting you. (back to text)
* Antivirals are not antibiotics because viruses, unlike bacteria, are not “biotic”—they’re not alive. They’re just pieces of genetic code that your body interprets as orders to make more, identical pieces of genetic code, then spread them around. Some viruses, like HIV, your body will even insert directly into your DNA for smoother copying, making them part of your identity. (back to text)
* Most bottled water in hospitals has 5 percent dextrose. This is to prevent the phrase “Liter of plain fucking water: $35” from appearing on your bill. (back to text)
* Magdalena looked Rom, which medieval Europeans called “Gypsy” because they thought the Roma originated in Egypt. They originated in India. It’s a pretty good joke that Romania, which is historically one of the most racist countries on earth—when it got its first political party primarily based on Jew-hating, in 1910, both its Liberal and Conservative parties were already officially “anti-Semitic”—is also one of the most racially mixed, because it lies in a mountain pass used by every army in history. Unless you think jokes should be funny. (back to text)
* This brings up an obvious paradox, which is that everything blue in an OR is supposed to have been sterilized, but our scrub suits, which are blue, have all been in at least one fast-food restaurant since the last time they were washed. What can I say? It’s an imperfect science. (back to text)
* Apparently they’re hoping the squeaking noise will drive away the parents. (back to text)
* People think (and their attorneys often encourage them to think) that a malpractice suit is a no-risk proposition because 90 percent get settled prior to trial. But you can’t just threaten a malpractice suit. In most states the statute of limitations on personal injury is so tight (two and a half years in New York) that no insurance company will take you seriously until you actually file a claim and agree to deposition. And at that point you’re marked for life—either as a litigious, possibly fraudulent complainer, or (of even more interest to employers, who are the primary consumers of this kind of data) as actually having ongoing health problems. (back to text)
* Rule One from The Hitman Handbook: Never try to spare your clothes. (back to text)
* It turns out they usually can’t, since healthy urine doesn’t have cells in it. And if you are dropping so many cells that a lab as bad as the FBI’s can strain them out of mud, prosecution is the least of your worries. (back to text)
* For the gun freaks: this turned out to be a .60 GE M134 “Predator” motor gun, firing a kind of depleted uranium bullet supposedly available only in China. (back to text)
* It’s true, by the way, that up close you could still read the “Home Depot” stencils on the planks of the rack. The ones that weren’t too covered in blood and shit. (back to text)
* Cancer talk! (back to text)
* “Reverse Trendelenburg” means the patient’s feet are lower than his head. “Trendelenburg” means his feet are higher than his head. No surgeon on earth would be caught dead saying “head up” or “head down,” though. In case you’re wondering why your appendectomy took four hours. (back to text)
* Look, I’m sorry to call her “Tits,” but everybody did. Even the prosecution, including one time in court, though it mysteriously failed to appear in the transcript. (back to text)
* The idea that you can’t be tried twice for the same crime in the U.S. turns out to be horseshit. You can be tried twice on the same charge—once in Federal and once in State court—and you can be charged any number of times for the same crime. For example, my own Federal trial was on charges (two counts each) of: First-degree murder; Manslaughter in the first degree; Murder committed by the use of a firearm during a crime of violence or a drug trafficking crime; Murder during a kidnapping; Murder for hire; Murder involved in a racketeering offense; Murder involving torture; Murder related to a continuing criminal enterprise or drug trafficking offense, or drug-related murder of a Federal, State, or local law enforcement officer; Murder related to sexual exploitation of children; and Murder with the intent of preventing testimony by a witness, victim, or informant. The large number of charges was designed to make sure the jury convicted me of something, and also to hike my potential sentence to four figures. But even then the Feds retained the option of trying me again on other charges, and of throwing me over to the State. (back to text)
* And sounds even more Dr. Seuss–like when paired with “bitch,” which is another of their favorite words. (back to text)
* A Brooklyn wiseguy once told me you could choose Leavenworth by having a bed there “cleared,” i.e., by having someone killed. Sounds like bullshit to me. (back to text)
* She could still have been compelled to testify about crimes committed prior to the marriage, but juries still think it’s illegal, so prosecutors don’t like to do it. (back to text)
* “Baboo,” which is a common nickname for the youngest male of an Indian household, obviously isn’t Prof. Marmoset’s real first name. His real first name is Arjun. (back to text)
* Supposedly, FBI agents are still required to say “the LCN” because when J. Edgar Hoover had to explain to the McClellan Committee why he denied for so long that the mafia existed—despite, for example, Hoover’s own tapes of Sam Giancana calling in orders to the floor of the U.S. Senate—he tried to pass the whole thing off as a semantic misunderstanding. Like everyone else had just been using the wrong name. (back to text)
* By the way, the medical term for something getting skinned, intentionally or otherwise, is “degloving,” but any part of your body with skin can be “degloved.” In the ER, for instance, dicks that have been stuck into vacuum cleaners are perennial favorites. (back to text)
* This was because I had cut the soles off a pair of shoes three sizes too small and glued them to the bottom of some shoes that actually fit me, so that according to the size/depth chart the Feds use to extrapolate body measurements from footprints I was five foot four and three hundred pounds. I don’t flatter myself that this fooled the detectives, but try explaining it to a jury. (back to text)
* You see this all the time—not people actually killing their relatives, but people sorely disappointed when their relatives survive. It usually takes the form of someone asking you to take their mother off life support even though her surgery went great and Mom’s up and walking around and about to check out. (back to text)
* “R/O” means “rule out,” as in “You deal with it.” (back to text)
* All right, fine. A nurse there turned out to be keeping his patients tied up and sedated for days at a time while he “experimented” on them. (back to text)
* Time between John Gotti being nicknamed “The Teflon Don” and getting sent to prison for life: eighteen months. (back to text)
* People think the ocean’s about life, and freedom. But beaches are the most impassable barriers in nature. People worship them like they worship outer space, or death, or anything and anyone else that says no to them and means it. (back to text)
* They were tiger sharks or nurse sharks or something. Who gives a shit? Any shark that large will attack a human if it thinks it can get away with it. And all shallow-water sharks are brown on top and white underneath, so that fish above them will think they’re sand, and fish below will think they’re sky. (back to text)
* Toxic shock is an immune response set off by contaminants in your blood such as bacteria—which make up 20 percent by weight of human feces, all grown within your intestines. (Cows can survive on this bacteria, “eating” grass just so the bacteria, their real food, will grow on it.) During shock your veins open up to let white blood cells in
to your tissues to fight the infection, and the fluid that leaks out with them causes your blood pressure to crash. (back to text)
Josh Bazell, Beat the Reaper
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