Saturday, June 20, 2026

Mr. Throttlebottom-Smith and HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES

 

 


The Hound of the Baskervilles and the Simian Method

In The Hound of the Baskervilles, Conan Doyle gives us not the familiar pair of Holmes and Watson, but a less stable and more revealing trio: Sherlock Holmes, Dr. Watson, and Mr. Throttlebottom-Smith, an energetic capuchin monkey whose residence at Baker Street is never satisfactorily explained. Holmes refers to him only as “one of my irregulars, though of the arboreal division,” and leaves the matter there.

Watson dislikes him immediately. The feeling is mutual. Watson regards the monkey as an affront to the dignity of detection; Mr. Throttlebottom-Smith regards Watson as a slow rival with accessible waistcoat pockets. Holmes, who is amused by anything that produces evidence, encourages both just enough to make the rivalry permanent.

Mr. Throttlebottom-Smith and DAS KAPITAL

 


Karl Marx, Das Kapital, and the Unsettled Question of Mr. Throttlebottom-Smith

Karl Marx’s London years were not a quiet scholarly interval between insight and publication. They were decades of illness, debt, pawn tickets, family grief, smoke, boils, manuscripts, and books borrowed under conditions that would alarm a modern librarian. Into this crowded household came Mr. Throttlebottom-Smith, a Capuchin monkey of considerable energy, uncertain manners, and a master’s degree from the Columbia School of Journalism.

The degree was difficult to explain. Mr. Throttlebottom-Smith could not read, write, speak, or file copy. Yet the certificate in a small leather tube attached to his collar testified to his advanced professional training. Marx at first dismissed the matter as bourgeois credentialism in its purest form. With time, he softened. The monkey, Marx often observed, had an advantage over other journalists: it did not pretend to understand political economy.

Mr. Throttlebottom-Smith and DOWN AND OUT (Orwell)

 


George Orwell, the Manchester Times, and the Paris Adventures of Mr. Throttlebottom-Smith

George Orwell did not go to Paris merely as a young Englishman in search of poverty, authenticity, and copy. He went as a semi-official correspondent of the left-wing Manchester Times, a paper so advanced in its sympathies that it believed hunger should be investigated personally, though preferably by a junior contributor. As the contributor, Orwell's assignment was to report on the working poor of Paris: dishwashers, hotel drudges, Russian émigrés, and clerks fallen on hard times.

There was one editorial condition. Orwell was to be accompanied everywhere by Mr. Throttlebottom-Smith, an energetic Capuchin monkey on loan from the primate house of the Manchester Zoo. The arrangement was part journalism, part educational outreach, part circulation scheme. The newspaper had discovered modern promotion, and the zoo had discovered that a capuchin photographed better than a hungry socialist.

Friday, June 19, 2026

Essay: Pavlovs Reflexe [German]

Pawlows Reflexe

Vokabeln unten


Iwan Petrowitsch Pawlow wurde 1849 in Rjasan geboren, einer Provinzstadt 200 Kilometer südöstlich von Moskau, die heute eine regionale Hauptstadt mit einer halben Million Einwohnern ist. Als Sohn eines Dorfpriesters wuchs Pawlow in einem Haushalt mit Kerzen und Ikonen, Suppen und Samowaren auf. Als Kind litt er an mehreren Krankheiten. Er war intensiv, aufmerksam, streitlustig und, laut einem Zeugnis der fünften Klasse, „stark durch Essen motiviert“.

Mit einundzwanzig trat Pawlow in die Universität von St. Petersburg ein, um Physik und Mathematik zu studieren. Doch bald übte die Biologie die stärkere Schwerkraft aus — und ersparte ihm jede weitere wirkliche Vorlesung über Schwerkraft. Er wechselte zur Medizin, studierte an der Kaiserlichen Medizinischen Akademie und wurde später Direktor eines physiologischen Labors. Seine frühen Arbeiten betrafen die Bauchspeicheldrüse und die Nerven des Herzens. Aber bald interessierte ihn vor allem die Verdauung vor der Verdauung: die Art, wie der Körper sich auf Essen vorbereitete, bevor das Essen überhaupt da war. Der Geruch von Brot, die Schritte eines Assistenten, das Klappern einer Schüssel konnten Magensaft und Speichel hervorrufen. Der Magen ... hatte ein Gedächtnis??

Aber der Weg zu seinen größten Experimenten war über viele Jahrzehnte mit Fehlschlägen gepflastert. Eine Pudelrasse erwies sich als zu melancholisch und starrte ihr Futter schweigend an wie ein kleiner russischer Dichter. Spaniels waren vielversprechend, aber theatralisch. Terrier reagierten nur, indem sie laut Blähungen machten.

Um 1903 herum, als Pawlow Anfang fünfzig war, kam endlich der Erfolg. Eine Klingel konnte den Körper davon überzeugen, dass das Mittagessen angekommen war.

Diese Entdeckung machte Pawlow berühmt, aber das brachte seine eigenen Gefahren mit sich.

Nur wenige wussten es, aber seit den 1880er Jahren entwickelte Pawlow eine strenge Mittagsgewohnheit. Jeden Tag aß er dieselbe Mahlzeit: einen Pirog und eine kleine Teetasse Borschtsch, aber erst nachdem die Mittagsglocken von St. Piotr geläutet hatten. Wenn ein junger Assistent zu früh mit einem Löffel klirrte, unterbrach Pawlow das ganze Mittagessen, sammelte sich wieder und saß dann regungslos da, während er auf die nächste Stunde wartete.

Bis 1899 scheuchte Pawlow manchmal die Techniker fort und bestand darauf, die Futterschüsseln der Hunde selbst zu waschen, oft ein halbes Dutzend Mal oder mehr, bis seine Hände gerötet waren.



Zur Zeit des Nobelpreises im Jahr 1904, der ihm für seine Arbeit über die Verdauung verliehen wurde, konnte Pawlow das Institut nur betreten, indem er vier Schritte vorwärts, sechs zurück, drei vorwärts, fünf zurück und acht vorwärts machte. Seine Mitarbeiter wurden Experten der Tarnung. Besuchende Journalisten wurden mit Tee aufgehalten. Fotografen wurden in Winkeln aufgestellt, die sowohl Pawlow als auch den Treppenstufen schmeichelten.

Nichts davon schadete Pawlows Ruf. Wenn überhaupt, vertiefte es die Aura um ihn. Wenn er selbst ein paar zusätzliche Reflexe besaß, nun ja, dann zeigte das berufliches Engagement. Niemand erwartet von einem Chemiker, dass er frei von Gerüchen ist, oder von einem Schmied, dass er andere als kräftige Hände hat.

Die Revolution von 1917 brachte jedoch Schwierigkeiten. Pawlow hatte einen lästigen Überschuss an Speichel entwickelt, wenn Türen geöffnet und geschlossen wurden. Ein junger bolschewistischer Chirurg, der erst kürzlich allein wegen seiner Begeisterung befördert worden war, deutete dieses Symptom als Tollwut. Pawlow wurde für dreißig Tage unter Quarantäne gestellt.

Seine letzten Monate verbrachte er in einem gepolsterten Zimmer, dessen Isolierung ihn vor dem Bellen der Hunde im Hof unten und vor der entfernten Glocke einer Straßenbahnlinie schützte. Er starb 1936 und wurde bald Gegenstand endloser Lobreden. Und irgendwo läutete weiter eine Glocke.


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Streitlustig und, laut einem Zeugnis der fünften Klasse.  
Argumentative, according to a report in the fifth grade.
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Schwerkraft ausüben   To make gravity (to exert gravity)
die Bauchspeicheldrüse   The pancreas
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die Verdauung vor der Verdauung  
the digestion before the digestion
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das Klappern einer Schüssel konnten Magensaft und Speichel hervorrufen
the clatter of a dish could summon gastric juices and saliva
>> See below:  Futterschüsseln
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Jahrzehnte mit Fehlschlägen gepflastert.
Decades filled with failures.
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laut Blähungen machten. Made loud [farts] [gas]
überzeugen  to convince [of something]
Mittagsgewohnheit   Lunch (lunchtime) habit
mit einem Löffel klirrte  Make noise (with spoon)
saß dann regungslos da  He sat motionless there
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scheuchte Pawlow manchmal die Techniker fort; Futterschüsseln
Pavlov sometimes shooed the technicians away; Food-bowls
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Hände gerötet waren.  Hands became red.
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für seine Arbeit über die Verdauung verliehen wurde
was awarded for his work on digestion
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schmeichelten.   Favor, flatter (in a photo)
Tarnung Camoflage
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Pawlow hatte einen lästigen Überschuss an Speichel entwickelt
Pavlov had developed a troublesome excess of saliva
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Tollwut.   Rabies.
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in einem gepolsterten Zimmer  In a padded room
Lobreden   Eulogies (funeral speeches)



Thursday, June 18, 2026

Essay: Pavlov's Reflexes

Ivan Pavlov and the Sound of History


Ivan Petrovich Pavlov was born in 1849 in Ryazan, a provincial city 200 kilometers southeast of Moscow, and today a regional capital of half a million people. The son of a village priest, Pavlov grew up in a household of candles and icons, soups and samovars.  As a child he suffered from several illnesses. He was intense, observant, argumentative, and, according to a fifth-grade report, “highly food-motivated.”

At twenty-one, Pavlov entered the University of St. Petersburg to study physics and mathematics, but biology soon exerted the stronger gravitational pull (and avoided any actual lectures on gravity).  Switching to medicine, he trained at the Imperial Academy, and became director of a physiological laboratory. His early work concerned the pancreas and the nerves of the heart.  But soon, what most intrigued Pavlov was digestion before digestion: the way the body prepared for food before food arrived. The smell of bread, the footsteps of an attendant, the clatter of a dish could summon gastric juices and saliva.  The stomach...had a memory??

But the journey to his greatest experiments was littered with many decades of failures.  One breed of poodle proved too melancholic and would stare silently at its food like a minor Russian poet.  Spaniels were promising but theatrical. Terriers responded only by noisily passing gas.

By around 1903, when Pavlov was in his early fifties, success at last.  A buzzer could persuade the body that lunch had arrived.

This discovery made Pavlov famous, but that brought its own threats.

Few knew, but from the 1880s, Pavlov developed a strict luncheon habit. Every day he ate the same meal: one pyrogi and a small teacup of borscht, beginning only after the noon bells of St. Piotr’s had rung.  If a junior assistant clinked a spoon prematurely, Pavlov would stop the entire lunch, recompose himself, then sit motionless as he waited for the next hour.

By 1899, Pavlov sometimes shooed away the technicians and insisted on washing the dogs’ food dishes himself, often a half-dozen times or more, until his hands were reddened. 



By the time of the Nobel Prize in 1904, awarded for his work on digestion, Pavlov could enter the Institute only by taking four steps forward, six back, three forward, five back, and eight forward. His staff became expert in camouflage. Visiting journalists were delayed with tea. Photographers were positioned at angles flattering to both Pavlov and the stairsteps. 

None of this diminished Pavlov’s reputation. If anything, it deepened the aura around him. If he himself possessed a few extra reflexes, well, that showed professional commitment. No one expects a chemist to be free of smells or the blacksmith to have other than burly hands.

The Revolution of 1917, however, introduced difficulties.  Pavlov had developed a troublesome excess salivation in response to doors opening and closing. A young Bolshevik surgeon, recently promoted on the grounds of enthusiasm alone, interpreted this symptom as rabies. Pavlov was ordered quarantined for thirty days.

His last months were spent in a padded room whose insulation protected him from the barking of dogs in the courtyard below and from the distant bell of a tramline. He died in 1936, and was soon the subject of endless eulogies.  And somewhere, a bell kept ringing.



Monday, June 15, 2026

Understanding New Section SSA 1115(g) Budget Neutrality

 SSA 1115A created the CMMI, which can develop programs it imposes on Medicare (or Medicaid, duals, etc).   Older 1115 in contrast allows CMS to authorize waiver proposals that usually originate in state Medicaid programs.

1115 projects have been understood to be budget neutral, but recent legislation created 1115(g), more explicit and mandatory budget neutrality for Medicaid waivers, and inserting the CMS Actuary into the 1115 process.

Both SSA 1115(g) and SSA 1115A require budget-neutrality.  CMS has never further defined this for 1115A, but CMS will now define the phrase in great detail for 1115(g).  Whether there will be future cross-pollination in how CMS implements the same words "budget neutrality" in 1115 and in 1115A is TBD.

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CMS press release on new 1115(g) implementation

https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/press-releases/cms-takes-bold-new-approach-stewarding-medicaid-demonstration-project-spending

Medicaid.gov neutrality page

https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid/section-1115-demonstrations/budget-neutrality

Essential Hospitals info

https://essentialhospitals.org/cms-publishes-section-1115-medicaid-demonstration-budget-neutrality-guidance/

Healthcare Dive

https://www.healthcaredive.com/news/cms-increases-oversight-of-state-medicaid-demonstrations/822778/

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You’re right to see two different “1115” worlds colliding. The key is that SSA §1115(a) (little a) is the old state Medicaid waiver/demonstration authority, while SSA §1115A (big A) is a separate ACA-created CMMI statute. The new development is not in §1115A; it is Public Law 119-21, §71118, which added a new §1115(g) budget-neutrality rule for Medicaid §1115 demonstrations. CMS calls that law the “Working Families Tax Cut” legislation, and CMS is now implementing it for approvals on or after January 1, 2027. (GovInfo)

1. SSA §1115: state Medicaid waiver / demonstration authority

Section 1115 is a broad demonstration statute. For Medicaid, it lets HHS/CMS approve state experimental, pilot, or demonstration projects that are likely to promote Medicaid objectives. It has two classic tools: CMS may waive certain Medicaid state-plan requirements, especially §1902 requirements, and may treat otherwise non-matchable demonstration costs as federally matchable Medicaid expenditures. (Social Security)

In practical Medicaid language, §1115 is where states go when they want a Medicaid waiver: eligibility changes, benefit experiments, delivery-system changes, managed-care structures, reentry services, HRSN/SDOH services, uncompensated care pools, or other Medicaid policy experiments. CMS reviews these state-by-state and historically attaches Special Terms and Conditions, including budget-neutrality terms. (Medicaid)

2. SSA §1115A: CMMI, not a state Medicaid waiver statute

Section 1115A was added by the ACA to create the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation. Its purpose is to test payment and service-delivery models that reduce expenditures under Medicare, Medicaid, or both, while preserving or enhancing quality. Its “applicable individual” definition includes Medicare beneficiaries, Medicaid beneficiaries, and dual eligibles; its “applicable title” means Title XVIII, Title XIX, or both. (Social Security)

So yes, Medicaid appears in §1115A. But that does not make CMMI the same as a state §1115 Medicaid waiver. CMMI is a CMS model-testing platform. It may test Medicaid-focused models, dual-eligible models, all-payer models, and models “primarily on title XIX” in conjunction with CMCS, but it is structurally a federal Innovation Center model authority, not the ordinary state waiver pathway. (Social Security)

A helpful shorthand:

Feature§1115 Medicaid demonstrations§1115A CMMI
Basic thingState Medicaid waiver / demonstrationFederal Innovation Center model
Main applicant / actorState Medicaid agency, negotiated with CMSCMS/CMMI model, often with providers, payers, states, or plans
Program scopeMedicaid Title XIX demonstrations; sometimes CHIP under other provisionsMedicare, Medicaid, duals, and sometimes CHIP-like activities
Waiver powerBroad Medicaid waiver and expenditure authorityModel-specific, narrower waiver authority tied to testing
Budget testNow being codified and tightened in §1115(g)Built into ACA §1115A, but differently

3. Were Medicaid §1115 waivers already budget neutral?

Yes, but with an important caveat: they were budget neutral by CMS policy and negotiated methodology, not by an explicit Medicaid §1115 statutory certification rule. CMS says it has long generally not approved §1115 Medicaid demonstrations unless expected to be budget neutral, using “without waiver” and “with waiver” calculations, spending limits, and post-period reconciliation. (Medicaid)

That is why the old statement “1115 waivers must be budget neutral” was true in practice. But it hid a lot of policy discretion. CMS and states negotiated the counterfactual: what would Medicaid have spent without the waiver? That counterfactual could depend on base years, trend rates, rebasing, savings rollover, and “hypothetical” expenditures. GAO described this as a system where CMS policy required budget neutrality, but the methods were not defined in statute or regulation and could substantially affect federal spending limits. (GAO Files)

That is the answer to the puzzled reader: 1115 projects were “budget neutral,” but “budget neutral” meant “within a CMS-negotiated counterfactual cap.” The new law tries to make it more like an independent, actuarial, pre-approval test.

4. What changed in §1115?

The legal change is P.L. 119-21 §71118, enacted in 2025. It added new SSA §1115(g). Beginning January 1, 2027, the Secretary may not approve a new Medicaid §1115 demonstration, renewal, or amendment unless the CMS Chief Actuary certifies that it is not expected to increase federal Medicaid expenditures compared with expenditures absent the demonstration. (GovInfo)

CMS’s June 2026 SMD letter says this is a major change because, before §1115(g), the Chief Actuary did not review or certify Medicaid §1115 budget neutrality, and the current application data and budget-neutrality test are not sufficient for actuarial certification. (Medicaid)

The biggest operational changes are:

  1. Prospective certification. Old method: preliminary budget-neutrality estimate, then retrospective assessment against WOW/WW limits. New method: Chief Actuary certification before approval, amendment, or renewal. (Medicaid)

  2. No classic expenditure cap as the core test. CMS’s table says the new approach would not use the old budget-neutrality expenditure limit or cap; instead, demonstrations projected to increase federal Medicaid spending would not be approved. (Medicaid)

  3. Activity-by-activity analysis. States must classify and analyze individual demonstration activities, especially activities that can only be authorized under §1115. CMS expects actuarial, economic, statistical, or similarly rigorous analysis. (Medicaid)

  4. MAPS replaces the old “hypothetical expenditure” concept. CMS will classify activities as either Medicaid Authorizable Populations and Services — populations/services the state could otherwise cover under the Medicaid state plan or other Title XIX authority — or §1115-only activities. The §1115-only activities drive the budget-neutrality calculation. (Medicaid)

  5. Less room for manufactured savings. Under the new table, MAPS activities do not generate savings; savings rollover is limited to the current demonstration period plus prior-period savings limited to five years, rather than the older ten-year legacy-savings concept. (Medicaid)

  6. Administrative costs count. CMS reads §1115(g)’s “federal expenditures” language to include administrative costs caused by the demonstration, unlike the current approach. (Medicaid)

GAO’s 2025 report helps explain the policy concern behind the change. GAO recommended that CMS stop treating costs for populations or services that could not otherwise have been covered under existing Medicaid authorities as “hypothetical” when setting spending limits, and instead require those costs to be offset by other reductions in demonstration spending. (GAO)








5. How this differs from CMMI §1115A budget neutrality

Here is the really important contrast: CMMI is not required to be budget neutral at the initial testing stage. Section 1115A expressly says the Secretary shall not require, as a condition for testing a model, that the model be budget neutral initially. But after testing begins, the Secretary must terminate or modify the model unless the Secretary determines, and the CMS Chief Actuary certifies, that it is expected to improve quality without increasing spending, reduce spending without reducing quality, or both improve quality and reduce spending. (Social Security)

For expansion of a CMMI model, the statute is stricter: the Secretary may expand a model only if it is expected to reduce spending without harming quality or improve quality without increasing spending; the Chief Actuary must certify that expansion would reduce or not increase net program spending; and the Secretary must determine that expansion would not deny or limit coverage or benefits. (Social Security)

So §1115A has always had statutory spending safeguards, but not in the same form as the new §1115(g). In fact, at the initial test stage, §1115A is more permissive than the new §1115(g). CMMI may test a model that is not initially budget neutral; Medicaid §1115(g), by contrast, will block approval of a Medicaid demonstration, amendment, or renewal unless the Chief Actuary certifies no expected federal Medicaid spending increase.

6. The clean way to explain it

For a puzzled reader, I would say:

Old Medicaid §1115 budget neutrality was a CMS policy discipline built around negotiated counterfactual spending limits. New §1115(g) turns that discipline into a statutory, Chief-Actuary-certified, pre-approval gate.

CMMI §1115A is different. It is an ACA Innovation Center statute for testing payment and delivery models in Medicare, Medicaid, or both. Its initial models need not be budget neutral at launch, but they must be evaluated, terminated or modified if they fail the statutory spending/quality tests, and actuarially certified before expansion.

The shared word “Medicaid” is the source of confusion. §1115 is Medicaid waiver law. §1115A is Innovation Center model law that can include Medicaid. They overlap in subject matter, but they are not the same pathway, and the new 2026 CMS activity is about §1115(g), not §1115A.

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1115A CMMI demonstrations are imposed by CMS management on the Medicare program, and I suppose when relevant, on the Medicaid (or duals) program. But 1115 demonstrations tend to originate IN the states and are brought to CMS for endorsement. Reasonable summary?

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Yes — that is a reasonable high-level summary, with one word softened.

I would say:

§1115A / CMMI demonstrations are generally CMS-originated payment or delivery models, selected and designed by the Innovation Center, and then applied to Medicare, Medicaid, dual-eligible, or multi-payer settings depending on the model. Some are voluntary; some Medicare models have been mandatory for selected providers or geographies.

§1115 Medicaid demonstrations, by contrast, usually originate with a state Medicaid agency. The state asks CMS for waiver and/or expenditure authority, and CMS approves, denies, negotiates, or conditions the project through Special Terms and Conditions.

The statutory language tracks that distinction. §1115A creates a Center inside CMS whose purpose is to “test innovative payment and service delivery models” under Medicare, Medicaid, or both; it defines applicable individuals to include Medicare beneficiaries, Medicaid beneficiaries, and duals.

By contrast, Medicaid §1115 is framed around a project “in a State or States,” under which the Secretary may waive state-plan requirements and treat otherwise non-matchable costs as expenditures under the state plan. CMS’s 2026 SMD letter also describes §1115 as giving states flexibility to design and improve their Medicaid programs, with CMS doing case-by-case review of each state proposal.

The caveat is that CMMI is not always simply “imposed.” Many CMMI models are voluntary or contractual. But the center of gravity is federal: CMS designs the model, chooses the model parameters, selects participants or regions, evaluates the model, and may waive certain Medicare/Medicaid rules solely to carry it out. For Medicaid-heavy or duals models, states often have to be partners, because Medicaid is jointly federal-state and operationally state-run.

So the clean formulation is:

CMMI §1115A is top-down federal model testing, sometimes with state or provider participation. Medicaid §1115 is bottom-up state waiver innovation, subject to CMS approval and federal guardrails.


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It sounds like the CMS Actuary for SSA 1115 Medicaid waivers, as enhanced by recent SSA 1115(g), makes the CMS Actuary a bit like the Senate Parliamentarian, standing at the gate with a red light and a green light. He's not always Mr. Popular.

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Yes — that’s a good analogy, with two refinements.

The CMS Chief Actuary becomes a gatekeeper, but only for one gate: federal Medicaid budget neutrality. Under new §1115(g), CMS says that beginning January 1, 2027, the Secretary may not approve a Medicaid §1115 application, amendment, or renewal unless the Chief Actuary certifies that it is not expected to increase federal Medicaid expenditures versus the no-waiver world. CMS also says the certification must be prospective and based on actuarial methods, not merely the older negotiated “with waiver/without waiver” bookkeeping.

So the “Senate Parliamentarian” analogy works in this sense: the actuary is not the politician, not the policy entrepreneur, and not the advocate. He or she stands at the procedural/technical gate and says, in effect, this proposal passes the required test or this proposal does not pass the required test.

But the analogy is not perfect. The Senate Parliamentarian is mainly interpreting chamber rules and reconciliation constraints. The CMS Chief Actuary is making a professional actuarial certification: are the assumptions, data, counterfactuals, activity classifications, administrative costs, and claimed savings credible enough to support “no expected federal spending increase”? CMS describes this as an independent actuarial determination and attestation based on sound methods and reasonable assumptions.

That is why the role can become unpopular. A state may have a politically attractive waiver; providers may love it; CMS leadership may favor the policy direction; advocates may say it improves access. But if the actuarial case does not work, the actuary’s answer can be: no certification, no approval.

In one respect, the §1115(g) actuary may be even more of a hard gate than the Parliamentarian. A Parliamentarian’s advice is institutionally powerful but formally advisory to the Senate’s presiding officer. Here, CMS is reading the statute as a legal prerequisite: without the Chief Actuary’s certification, the Secretary may not approve the Medicaid demonstration.

The crucial nuance is that the actuary does not decide whether the waiver is good Medicaid policy. CMS still says the Secretary must separately determine that the demonstration promotes Medicaid objectives. The actuary’s role is narrower but newly decisive: the fiscal green light.

For CMMI §1115A, the Chief Actuary also matters, but differently. CMMI models do not have to be budget neutral at initial testing; after testing begins, and especially before expansion, the statute brings in spending/quality findings and actuarial certification. For Medicaid §1115 after §1115(g), the actuary is moved much farther forward in the process — from a background fiscal discipline to a front-end statutory gate.

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SSA §1115 is much older than the ACA. It comes from the Public Welfare Amendments of 1962, Public Law 87-543, signed by President Kennedy on July 25, 1962. It was created as a general demonstration authority for federal-state public welfare programs — not originally as a Medicaid-specific authority, because Medicaid did not exist yet. (NCBI)

Then, in 1965, Congress created Medicare and Medicaid in the Social Security Amendments of 1965, Public Law 89-97. Medicaid became Title XIX of the Social Security Act, and §1115 was amended to include Title XIX demonstration authority. (GovInfo)

So the chronology is:

1935 — Social Security Act enacted.
1962 — §1115 demonstration authority added for public welfare programs.
1965 — Medicare and Medicaid enacted; Medicaid added as Title XIX; §1115 becomes available for Medicaid demonstrations.
2010 — ACA adds §1115A, creating CMMI.

The conceptual lineage is also different. §1115 was a Kennedy-era welfare-program flexibility tool, meant to let states test experimental or pilot approaches in federal-state assistance programs. §1115A was an ACA-era payment and delivery reform tool, meant to let CMS test Medicare/Medicaid innovation models through CMMI.

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Here is all of SSA §1115(g) as currently shown in the preliminary U.S. Code version of 42 U.S.C. §1315(g). It was added by Pub. L. 119-21, §71118(a), July 4, 2025, 139 Stat. 306. (U.S. Code)

(g) Requirement of budget neutrality for Medicaid demonstration projects

(1) In general
Beginning January 1 2027, the Secretary may not approve an application for (or renewal or amendment of) an experimental, pilot, or demonstration project undertaken under subsection (a) to promote the objectives of subchapter XIX in a State (in this subsection referred to as a “Medicaid demonstration project”) unless the Chief Actuary for the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services certifies that such project, or, in the case of a renewal, the duration of the preceding waiver, is not expected to result in an increase in the amount of Federal expenditures compared to the amount that such expenditures would otherwise be in the absence of such project.

For purposes of this subsection, expenditures for the coverage of populations and services that the State could have otherwise provided through its Medicaid State plan or other authority under subchapter XIX, including expenditures that could be made under such authority but for the provision of such services at a different site of service than authorized under such State plan or other authority, shall be considered expenditures in the absence of such a project.

(2) Treatment of savings
In the event that expenditures with respect to a State under a Medicaid demonstration project are, during an approval period for such project, less than the amount of such expenditures that would have otherwise been made in the absence of such project, the Secretary shall specify the methodology to be used with respect to the subsequent approval period for such project for purposes of taking the difference between such expenditures into account.

Note the odd-looking “January 1 2027” without a comma. That is how it appears in both the enacted Public Law text and the preliminary U.S. Code display.

Saturday, June 13, 2026

Both Movies Start With Two People In Cafe's

A well-known movie - THE SOCIAL NETWORK - starts with two people in a bar, making a brilliant 3-minute scene that took days to film (Jesse Eisenberg, Rooney Mara).   A much lesser-known film, NORMAN: RISE AND FALL OF A NEW YORK FIXER, starts with an equally perfectly crafted scene, a dialog between man and his nephew (Richard Gere, Michael Sheen).  [Social Network clip.]

Here's an AI essay in the voice of a film studies professor.

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Two very different films — The Social Network and Norman: The Moderate Rise and Tragic Fall of a New York Fixer — open with remarkably similar structural confidence: a long, dialogue-driven scene in a public social space that quietly contains the DNA of the entire movie. One is a Harvard bar; the other a Manhattan café. In both, almost nothing “happens” externally. Yet by the end of the exchange, the audience already understands the protagonist’s psychology, social pathology, ambitions, and fatal weaknesses.

The opening of The Social Network is famous partly because it violates conventional screenplay caution. The scene runs several minutes with almost no physical action. Instead, Jesse Eisenberg and Rooney Mara conduct a hyper-accelerated verbal duel. The editing rhythm, David Fincher’s camera placement, and Aaron Sorkin’s overlapping language create velocity from cognition itself. Zuckerberg’s mind is racing faster than social norms can regulate it. Erica is trying to hold a human conversation; Mark is processing status hierarchies, final clubs, intellect, and competitive ranking systems.

The scene is exposition without seeming expository. Every central theme appears immediately:

  • intelligence detached from emotional reciprocity,

  • status anxiety,

  • class aspiration,

  • humiliation,

  • the inability to distinguish connection from transaction,

  • and language used as combat rather than communication.

What makes the scene extraordinary is that Erica effectively diagnoses the entire tragedy of Zuckerberg before Facebook even exists. Her line that people will think he is an “asshole” not because he is a nerd but because he actually is one becomes the governing thesis of the film.

The opening of Norman: The Moderate Rise and Tragic Fall of a New York Fixer operates almost inversely in tempo but similarly in function. Richard Gere plays Norman as a man constituted almost entirely by social need. The café dialogue with his nephew introduces Norman not through achievement but through social performance. He is always networking, pitching, persuading, leaning forward into human contact.

[I noted in my prompt that Gere/Norman locks his vision on the friend, while Sheen's eyes in the same scene are constantly darting.]

Your observation about the eye movements is exactly the sort of microscopic directorial choice that defines the film. Norman locks his gaze intensely onto his nephew because his entire existence depends on interpersonal attachment and approval. He studies faces constantly, searching for openings, opportunities, reassurance, or alliance. The nephew’s darting eyes communicate discomfort, embarrassment, and partial emotional withdrawal. He cannot fully inhabit the interaction because Norman’s social intensity is excessive and vaguely exhausting.

That asymmetry in eye behavior tells the audience, almost subliminally, who holds emotional need in the relationship. Norman is radically present; everyone around him is partially trying to escape.

The cinematography in Norman: The Moderate Rise and Tragic Fall of a New York Fixer often uses close-ups not for glamour but for social scrutiny. Faces become terrains of calculation and yearning. Gere’s performance is astonishing partly because he suppresses conventional movie-star ease. Norman is perpetually leaning in too far — socially, psychologically, morally. The discomfort is the point.

What links the two openings most deeply is that both films begin with a protagonist failing, in real time, at authentic human reciprocity.

Mark Zuckerberg intellectualizes conversation until emotional meaning collapses.

Norman Oppenheimer overinvests emotionally until boundaries collapse.

One cannot emotionally connect because he is too detached; the other cannot connect properly because he is too needy.

Even the settings matter. Bars and cafés are classic cinematic locations for social negotiation — semi-public arenas where intimacy and performance coexist. In both films, the protagonist is being evaluated socially before he fully realizes it. The audience is also evaluating them. These openings function almost like auditions for membership in society.

The directors trust dialogue as action. Modern films often fear stillness and verbal density, but both openings demonstrate that conversation itself can generate suspense when status, vulnerability, and identity are shifting underneath the words.

And in both cases, the opening scene quietly predicts the ending.

In The Social Network, Zuckerberg ends isolated, refreshing a screen in search of validation from the very woman who rejected him in the first scene.

In Norman: The Moderate Rise and Tragic Fall of a New York Fixer, Norman’s desperate need to matter socially eventually destroys him because he never understands where relationship ends and instrumentalization begins.

The brilliance of both openings is that they are not merely introductions. They are miniature versions of the whole film.