Death by Policy: How American Institutions Are Quietly Thinning the Herd
Death by Policy: How American Institutions Are Quietly Thinning the Herd Introduction What if the greatest threat to your life wasn’t a natural disaster or a foreign enemy—but a bureaucratic decision buried in an NIH memo or a Medicaid proposal? From scientific research to healthcare access, a coordinated erosion of public good is underway. It’s slow, procedural, and written in the language of oversight and efficiency. But the outcome is unmistakable: fewer people survive. This isn’t dysfunction. It’s design. And the people who survive it? That’s no accident either. 1. NIH Subawards: Cutting the Lifeline of Global Science In May 2025, the National Institutes of Health announced that foreign institutions would no longer be eligible for subawards through U.S.-based research grants. For the layperson, this sounds like a small administrative tweak. In reality, it’s an act of scientific isolationism that endangers lives. Subawards are how research projects work across borders. A U.S....
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