单项选择题

It is said that in England death is pressing, in Canada inevitable and in California optional. Small wonder. Americans ’’life expectancy has nearly doubled over the past century. Failing hips can be replaced, clinical depression controlled, cataracts removed in a 30-minute surgical procedure. Such advances offer the aging population a quality of life that was unimaginable when I entered medicine 50 years ago. But not even a great health-care system can cure death--and our failure to confront that reality now threatens this greatness of ours. Death is normal; we are genetically programmed to disintegrate and perish, even under ideal conditions. We all understand that at some level, yet as medical consumers we treat death as a problem to be solved. Shielded by third-party payers from the cost of our care, we demand eyed ’’thing that can possibly be done for us, even if it’’s useless. The most obvious example is late-stage cancer care. Physicians--frustrated by their inability to cure the disease and fearing loss of hope in the patient--too often offer aggressive treatment far beyond what is scientifically justified. In 1950, the U.S. spent $12.7 billion on health care. In 2002, the cost will be $ I, 540 billion. Anyone can see this trend is unsustainable. Yet few seem willing to try to reverse it. Some scholars conclude that a government with finite resources should simply stop paying for medical care that sustains life beyond a certain age--say 83 or so. Former Colorado governor Richard Lamm has been quoted as saying that the old and infirm" have a duty to die and get out of the way" so that younger, healthier people can realize their potential. I would not go that far. Energetic people now routinely work through their 60s and beyond, and remain dazzlingly productive. At 78, Viacom chairman Sumner Redstone jokingly claims to be 53. Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’’Connor is in her 7Os, and former surgeon general C.Everett Koop chairs an Internet start-up in his 80s. These leaders are living proof that prevention works and that we can manage the health problems that come naturally with age. As a mere 68-year-old, I wish to age as productively as they have. Yet there are limits to what a society can spend in this pursuit. As a physician, I know the most costly amd dramatic measures may be ineffective and painful. I also know that people in Japan and Sweden, countries that spend far less on medical care, have achieved longer, healthier lives than we have. As a nation, we may be overfunding the quest for unlikely cures while underfunding research on humbler therapies that could improve people’’s lives. What is implied in the first sentence

A.Americans are better prepared for death than other people.
B.Americans enjoy a higher life quality that ever before.
C.Americans are over-confident of their medical technology.
D. Americans take a vain pride in their long life expectancy.
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Comparisons were drawn between the development of television in the 20th century and the diffusion of printing in the 15th and 16th centuries. Yet much had happened ________As was discussed before, it was not ______ the 19th century that the newspaper became the dominant pre- electronic ______ , following in the wake of the pamphlet and the book and in the________of the periodical. It was during the same time that the communications revolution________ up, beginning with transport, the railway, and leading________ through the telegraph, the telephone, radio, and motion pictures________ the 20th-century world of the motor car and the airplane. Not everyone sees that process in________ It is important to do so.It is generally recognized,________ , that the introduction of the computer in the early 20th century,________by the invention of the integrated circuit during the 1960s, radically changed the process,________its impact on the media was not immediately________As time went by, computers became smaller and more powerful, and they became personal too, as well as________, with display becoming sharper and storage________increasing. They were thought of, like people,________generations, with the distance between generations much________.It was within the computer age that the term information society began to be widely used to describe the________within which we now live. The communications revolution has________both work and leisure and how we think and feel both about place and time, but there have been________views about its economic, political, social and cultural implications. Benefits have been weighed________ harmful outcomes. And generalizations have proved difficult.