Everything Is Tuberculosis: The History and Persistence of Our Deadliest Infection
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Kindle Notes & Highlights
5%
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We are powerful enough to light the world at night, to artificially refrigerate food, to leave Earth’s atmosphere and orbit it from outer space. But we cannot save those we love from suffering.
46%
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Framing illness as even involving morality seems to me a mistake, because of course cancer does not give a shit whether you are a good person. Biology has no moral compass. It does not punish the evil and reward the good. It doesn’t even know about evil and good.
66%
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There is a benefit to systematizing healthcare, to treating everyone like they are everyone else. But there is also a cost.
69%
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When you write a novel, you are alone in it. I wrote that book alone, sitting in airports and coffee shops and lying in bed. But when writing, there is always for me a hope that one day I will not be alone—not in this work and not in this world.
79%
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Why should we move mountains to save one patient? Because he is one person. A person, you understand? And anyway, what if he can be the first of many?”