When babies are at high risk of dying prematurely, parents respond by having lots of kids. Once medical conditions improve and infant mortality goes down parents have fewer kids. Overpopulation is solved by improving healthcare. Source: https://t.co/GLzfzzZ8KLpic.twitter.com/oeM4ofXCXe
— Simon Kuestenmacher (@simongerman600) June 6, 2019
Life expectancy by country charted over time against health spending per person. Obvious to see how messed up the US system is. Money wasted without getting decent returns! Source: https://t.co/fnIRCKVAecpic.twitter.com/0nHLFs7AYQ
— Simon Kuestenmacher (@simongerman600) May 24, 2019
— Simon Kuestenmacher (@simongerman600) June 11, 2020
Speaking about coffee, do you know the story about Melitta Bentz from Dresden/Germany who wasn't happy with percolators, espresso-machines or linen bags. She used blotting paper from her son's exercise book and developed the now well-known Melitta filter. https://t.co/JFQLFf1mCL
Oh yes, coffee was banned in Sweden five times between 1756 and 1817. The #fika culture might be a way to catch up on all those non-had coffee breaks!https://t.co/s5gW4KJkpl