I totally disagree on your point that radiology requires equal studying to other medical specialties. Radiology is required to know a lot about everything, you need to be perfectly competent in every part of the body, with more diseases then any one doctor(once again with the exception of pathology, I consider them a field similar to us). I am not saying it is more difficult, I am just saying it requires much more studying as is in the nature. You are staring and diagnosing conditions all day based on pictures, each case presents in many different ways, and I know what you are going to say. IM for example, a case can present in 10 different ways. In radiology one diagnosis can present in 50 different ways. The skill it takes givent he the time constraints of imaging is high. It simply requires a much larger basic science knowledge base then most clinical specialties. Clinical specialties(while radiology is still technically clinical, but I don't consider it on the same level as IM for example) such as IM and it's subspecialties require much more practicing different clinical cases and reading about cases, then actual studying of new information consistently, radiologists not only have to learn a totally new way to process medical diagnostics, but they have to keep up reviewing new anatomy. For most clinical specialties, it is not going to matter if you forgot some neuroanatomy, or cardiothoracic anatomy here and there since they are trained in a different way, but to a radiologist, anatomy is everything. Constant studying the entire body, it is not easy by any means, I do not think it is necessarily harder overall, I do think radiology is more cognitive then internal medicine based on my experiences, not to say internal medicine isn't cognitive, because it is, I think it requires a lot more social thinking then radiology which means it's duties are more split, it is just difficult in different ways, just like how surgery is difficult in different ways then medicine. Why do we always have to make it a competition, all specialties require different goals, some require more studying then others, others require more case review, others require more practice of techniques, who cares honestly, why put eachother down?