Thursday, December 8, 2011

'Tis the Season for Jon Huntsman

The days are getting shorter, the smell of pine is filling the crisp, cool air, and all-too-familiar holiday songs are heard around every corner. Yes it is that time of year again... Time for the 2012 Republican Presidential Primary Election Season!! If you are expecting a long rant about taxes and social issues, I am sorry to dissapoint you. Instead, I am simply asking all voters, Republican and Democrat, to take a look at Jon Huntsman. http://www.jon2012.com/

"Who is Jon Huntsman?" you ask. Well that is why I am writing this piece. Average American families are facing the hardest times in years, and America needs the strongest president possible to lead us through these troubled waters. Let me introduce you to three important facts about this little-known 2012 Republican Presidential Candidate who is rapidly gaining national acclaim from conservative outlets like Wall Street Journal and even liberal outlets like MSNBC.
  1. Jon Huntsman is a business leader. Jon served as Vice President and Director of a family business and oversaw multi-national growth creating American jobs and building exports of American products overseas.
  2. Jon Huntsman is a proven politcal executive. Jon was twice elected governer of Utah winning his reelection bid with an unprecedented 78% percent of the vote for his success in rebuilding Utah's economy and making it the "best managed state in the country" according to the 2008 Pew Research Poll.
  3. Jon Huntsman is a an experienced statesman. Jon has served as US Ambassador to Singapore under president Bush Sr. and as ambassador to China under president Obama. Huntsman was the yougest head of a U.S. diplomatic mission in over 100 years, and he is fluent in Chinese Mandarin.
Drawing from this impressive set of experiences, Jon Huntsman is proposing realistic and intelligent solutions to our nations's toughest challenges both domestically and abroad. His campaign focuses on solutions and not the normal politcal flair that we have become accostomed to, so I ask that you please take the time to take a serious look at Jon Huntsman for President 2012.

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Ingenuity: Still Made best in the USA

Living overseas and traveling around the globe opens ones eyes to the multitude of wonderful cultures, experiences, and products the world has to offer. In previous posts, you have heard me sing the praises of cultural and technological wonders of some of my most oft-visited sites in Asia.

One of my more memorable experiences was a trip to South Korea where I was introduced to video calls from cell phones while on a high-speed train across the country. That was the same visit where I was fortunate enough to visit the De-Militarized Zone border with North Korea and see how the South had created a profitable tourism industry from the North's many failed attempts to tunnel into the South under the border.

I am often in awe of the way western-style democracy and capitalist markets have flourished in other parts of the world and even made me marvel in new technologies and inventions.
Well, in the past few months I have visited Japan and Korea, home to some of the most prominent names in modern electronics. Sony, Panasonic, Toshiba, (all Japanese) LG, Samsung, (both Korean) are names that are in almost every home around the world. However, I was traveling with a few tricks of my own.

My lovely wife was gracious enough to surprise me with an iPad within a few months of its release, and since then I have probably filled it with almost every time-saving, cool news-reading, language translating, book-buying, music reading (tabs for playing songs on guitar) and just plain cool app I could find that either helps me make the most of my time (reading news articles in a cab) or waste it when I just need a break (playing Jenga or Scrabble). And let me tell you, I was the envy of all these guys with fast and slick video cell phones. I had senior executives scrambling to have a turn at searching Google on my little tablet.

Also, a lot of my business associates are smokers. While I don't smoke, it always leaves you with a strange social situation when everyone leaves a room to go have a puff and you are left sitting alone. So, again, I came equipped with another new little American invention: the smokeless cigar. This is a little device that contains water and vaporizes it when you inhale and even makes a little green LED light up at the end so people know it isn't a real tobacco stick when steam comes puffing out of your mouth like smoke. It may not be the healthiest little gadget, but it sure raises a lot of eyebrows and again leaves everyone in wonder.

Finally, my business travels left me longing for a creative outlet, so my in laws gave me a tiny travel guitar for Christmas. the finger board is full size, but the strings wrap under the body so the tuning head adds nothing to the length. The whole thing is smaller than a small violin, so it is easily airplane portable. I was able to write a new song while having a free conference call between Tokyo, Singapore, and Philadelphia on Skype (another innovative American invention).
The point here is that even though the world is still coming to grips with globalization, outsourcing, free trade, low-wage labor, and imported electronics, (which I argue are ALL positive forces making the world a better and more level place) the things that really make our lives better, more productive, and more enjoyable are generally imagined, designed, and marketed in the USA.
The Tiger Moms of Asia may have some credible points in pushing the importance of math and science, but the ingenuity, creativity, and plain cajones it takes to take an idea from dream to reality is still fostered no where better than in America. Our rule of law, our rights and freedoms, and our cultural enterprising spirit is truly something unique in the world. While I am eternally grateful for my opportunities to see the world, I am just as thankful for some simple reminders of why I am proud to be an American.

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

A Message to the Muslim World

Recent news coverage is closely following an upcoming event planned by a church in Florida to hold an "international burn a Koran day" on the 9th anniversary of the gruesome attacks of September 11th, 2001. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-11223457

The organizer, Christian pastor Terry Jones, hopes to "send a clear message to the radical element of Islam." Unfortunately, the only message this ludicrous act of religious hatred will send to any member of the Muslim or non-Muslim community is one of intolerance and ignorance generating hatred towards America and Europe even from non-radical and peaceful Muslims. American General David Petraeus, the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan, has openly pleaded that the event be canceled because "images of the burning of a Quran would undoubtedly be used by extremists in Afghanistan — and around the world — to inflame public opinion and incite violence," http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=129701795

General Petraeus is one of thousands of leaders around the world who have spoken out against this idiotic event, and there are many reasons for this international condemnation. Firstly, we are in the middle of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, a nearly universal Muslim time of prayer, sacrifice, and charitable giving. Try to imagine a televised ceremony where a pile of Holy Bibles were burned at the height of the Christian Christmas or Easter holiday seasons, and you will begin to feel how this will be viewed by ordinary, peaceful Muslims, not forgetting the violent extremists already obsessed with war against the west. This event will incite tremendous backlash by murderous extremists the world over. There is no doubt that innocent people will die if this book burning is carried out.

Finally, Pakistan, the world's second largest Muslim country by Muslim population, is in the midst of the worst humanitarian disaster in recent world history. One-fifth of Pakistan, an area as large as all of England, was completely underwater for weeks destroying billions of dollars of agricultural products and livestock and displacing tens of millions of now starving refugees. In the weeks and now month following the start of this disaster, humanitarian donations are still less than in the first 3 days of donations following the disastrous earthquake in Haiti.

If we really want to send a message to the Muslim world, I recommend we make it a message of compassion to those millions of innocent men, women, and children starving and homeless following one of the worst natural disasters in recent history. That is a message that anyone of any faith can appreciate.

For those who care, here is a link to the American Red Cross Donation Site for Pakistan Flood Relief Efforts: https://american.redcross.org/site/Donation2?idb=826262064&df_id=4932&4932.donation=form1

Thursday, July 8, 2010

Focus on the Basics

A friend of mine sent me this list of tax rates below. I haven't vetted it fully, but it seems reasonable. In response, I made a little analysis of my own.

Thanks for sending this. Only one point to correct: as part of recent austerity measures, the UK has had to cut some of their welfare programs, but still had to INCREASE their VAT from 17.5% to 20% to tackle their ridiculous debt! (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/politics/10371590.stm) So that puts Britain's total top tax rate at an even 70% not 67.5%... God save the Queen!

Granted the tax brackets in the email below are the highest bracket, they are still ridiculous... (By comparison, where I live in Singapore, tax brackets vary from 3.5%-20% http://www.iras.gov.sg/irasHome/page04.aspx?id=1190)

Juxtapose those tax rate numbers to these GDP growth statistics below... http://www.economywatch.com/economy-business-and-finance-news/economic-forecast-2009-2010-imf-raises-gdp-growth-expectations-09-7.html


Total Tax Rate2009 GDP Growth2010 GDP Growth
UK70% (50+20% VAT)-4.2%0.2%
France60% (40+20% VAT)-3.0%0.4%
Japan45% (40+5% consumption)-6.0%1.4%
Singapore27% (20+7% GST)-2.1%8.9%


(http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/singaporebusinessnews/view/1053414/1/.html)

Do you see a trend? Lower taxes = higher growth. Not rocket science people.

We're coming off of the worst economic downturn in recent history. "Modern" economies in Europe are broken under the burden of their social welfare systems because people on average just aren't as productive as long as they used to be. (Why would they be when they are incentivized not to work?) People were living in a dream.

Younger economies in Asia have learned from the mistakes of Europe by incentivizing independence, entrepreneurship, and economic growth in all of their domestic policies. Work hard, save for yourself, spend your own cash to increase living standards and move the economy forward. It took me 20 minutes to look up all this information... what do our politicians do in Washington that they can't figure this out?

Oh thats right.. they have to spend more time figuring out how to make buying votes with social programs to enslave the lower income brackets in reliance on government assistance sound like they are "helping the poor." I can see how that is a tough task... Wake up America.




Current European tax rates:
United Kingdom Income Tax: 50% VAT: 17.5% TOTAL: 67.5%
France Income Tax: 40% VAT: 19.6% TOTAL: 59.6%
Greece Income Tax: 40% VAT: 25% TOTAL: 65%
Spain Income Tax: 45% VAT: 16% TOTAL: 61%
Portugal Income Tax: 42% VAT: 20% TOTAL: 62%
Sweden Income Tax: 55% VAT: 25% TOTAL: 80%
Norway Income Tax: 54.3% VAT: 25% TOTAL: 79.3%
Netherlands Income Tax: 52% VAT: 19% TOTAL: 71%
Denmark Income Tax: 58% VAT: 25% TOTAL: 83%
Finland Income Tax: 53% VAT: 22% TOTAL: 75%

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

An Open Letter on Health Care Reform

Dear Senators Specter and Casey,

This is an urgent plea for you to reconsider your stance on the current health care legislation moving through both houses of Congress. I am a 26 year-old Aerospace Engineer employed by a small software company outside of Philadelphia; however I have been on overseas sales assignments in the UK and now Singapore for the past 3 years. Yes, America is still very capable of exporting our superior products to the nations of the world. It is a good feeling to know that my success brings capital into our country by means other than ballooning debt, but I digress.

I want to make it clear that I applaud the President’s intent to make Health Care an urgent issue, but I am mortified by the speed and scope of the legislation that this Congress is trying to rush through while there is still an overwhelming single-party majority.

Yes, our country is in a medical crisis. Americans spend more on health care than any other nation in the developed world with little to no resulting medical benefits.[1] In fact, here in Singapore, both men and women enjoy better quality of life and longer life expectancy than their counterparts in America while spending one-fifth that of the average American on health care costs.[2]

I would love to see a day when everyone is healthy and can receive equal and top-quality care, but some of the measures set out the proposed legislation will create far more damage than good. The goal of this legislation was intended to make health care affordable for everyone; reduce costs, reduce inefficiency, and promote access to more individuals. Unfortunately, those goals have been lost in the current plan.. While it does include some beneficial clauses to guarantee access, throwing billions of dollars at a system that already spends more than any other health care system in the world cannot be the answer to reducing costs and improving efficiency!

I will point out 3 simple measures that would help gain my support for your re-elections and the proposed health care legislation known as The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act which I will henceforth refer to as “the bill.” I think “the bill” is an apt name considering the conservative Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimates of nearly a trillion dollar price tag for the current 1,000+ page monstrosity. In any case, I plan to argue my request that you only support this bill if it includes the following 3 conditions:
Tort Reform
Focus on Individual Responsibility (health savings over public option)
Phased Approach

Let us start with the judicial realities of America today. You are about to guarantee care for millions of new patients using the world’s wealthiest treasury in a country where ambulance chasers and trial lawyers outnumber the number of doctors. Its true. According to the American Bar Association and American Medical Association, there are more practicing attorneys than practicing physicians in America. Can you imagine if there is suddenly a government-backed medical plan for millions of new patients under the current legal environment?

There are numerous accounts throughout the country of Doctors leaving because they cannot afford to practice due to the cost of malpractice insurance. My own father was once warned at an Illinois Hospital, that if he required surgery during his hospital stay, he would need to be air-lifted to another state where they still had practicing anesthesiologists. Our county no longer had any who could afford the insurance in the local judicial climate. They had all left. This was a middle-class suburb of St Louis, not some farm town in the middle of nowhere.

So my plea to you is simple. Whatever reform you institute, please include comprehensive Tort Reform. Limit the damages in non catastrophic cases. Senator Specter, your own website points out that you agree with this![3] Please make it part of this health care reform! The State of Missouri implemented simple reforms like this in 2005 and has since seen a $26 million reduction in state-wide malpractice premiums.[4]

Please do not pledge billions of dollars to new patients until you limit the damage that frivolous lawsuits could reap from this bill. Unless you include comprehensive Tort reform, you will do little more than incentivize additional numbers of crippling malpractice lawsuits that would have the backing of the US Treasury.

This brings me to my next point. I cannot comprehend how any health care bill could pass that does not put the primary responsibility of cost reduction on the individual. I think we can all agree that there is one skill shared across America: we are great consumers! I know you have friends that can smell a good deal, and yet we do not use these simple market practices when deciding our own medical care. Americans with high-level insurance do not behave in the medical world in the same way they do in every other market. If you’re covered, you do what the Doctor tells you. On the other hand, in Singapore, the patient is responsible for the first 20% of their costs through a mandatory health savings plan to which they and their employers must contribute. As a responsible share-holder in where this money gets spent, patients are more cost-conscious than their American counterparts. This has led to a competitive medical market where a doctor consultation only costs about $12 even without any insurance! That is a system where 80% of primary care is performed by private industry of high-quality, western-trained doctors!

A public option in America would have the opposite affect. It would provide medical coverage to people who are currently being frugal and allow them to relax their spending on medical costs. Any plan backed by the tax payers should focus on personal responsibility. Insurers know about this problem: people on big insurance plans don’t really watch what they spend!. When I was born, my parents where part of a very clever insurance scheme that would split any savings 50/50 with patients who reported erroneous charges on their bill. Let me give an example. During labor, my mother had a sore tailbone, so my father bought her a pillow to sit on at the gift shop. When they got the bill for my delivery, my parents noticed the Doctor had prescribed an orthopedic pillow which cost a thousand dollars, but my mom had been using the one from the gift shop! So they informed the insurance company who disputed the charge and saved $1000 on the cost of my birth. Later that month, the insurance company sent my parents $500. The company still saved themselves $500 with this scheme. Honestly, when insurance is fitting most of the bill, how closely do you look at all those line items? Unless incentives are put in place to make patients responsible for their own health costs, adding new demand to an over-crowded health care system will not reduce costs! Please reconsider the public option for an option like health savings plans that are based more on personal responsibilities than government handouts.

Finally, slow down. You are talking about an overhaul of one-fifth of our nation’s economy. If you really believe that some of these measures can have a positive effect, implement them slowly over time. Are you afraid we’ll not re-elect you if parts of these ideas fail? Well, then you should slow down and pick better ideas. If you implement easy things first such as Tort Reform or the removal of limits from all insurance companies, then you can measure the effects on the medical system over time. If you really feel like you have good ideas, find the ones with the most support and get them through. If you find that you are starting to drive down costs, then you can continue your plan to expand coverage in a way that is both morally and economically responsible. The CBO has already confirmed that Medicare and Medicaid are already on unsustainable paths and if unchanged will represent the single largest segment of federal spending in the next few decades.[5] The changes you make here will have ramifications for generations. Please proceed with caution.

Please don’t try to pull the wool over our eyes. The American public and the people of Pennsylvania have selected you in our republican form of government to represent our interests. However, if you pass the bill as it is now, you will be doing more harm to America than the good you seem to want so badly. We can comprehend the complexity of this issue, so please do not try to mislead us. It is your responsibility to sort this out, but we are happy to help guide you along the way.

Respectfully yours,
Adam Gorski


References:
1) http://www.kff.org/insurance/snapshot/chcm010307oth.cfm
2) http://www.american.com/archive/2008/may-june-magazine-contents/the-singapore-model
3) http://specter.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=IssueStatements.View&Issue_id=bd531be8-7e9c-9af9-74ef-d3a53537ede0&CFID=24084935&CFTOKEN=69578610
4) http://www.ncpa.org/pdfs/111809_HCN_2.pdf
5) http://www.cbo.gov/doc.cfm?index=9925

Monday, November 30, 2009

A Modern Republic

Today is not a special day. Today is just a day that I decided to embark to share some thoughts, gain some feedback, and open a search for pragmatic solutions to some of today's largest problems.

As an engineer, I have always endeavored to understand how the world around me works. As a musician and artist, I have always found beauty in the creation of something new molded by your hands and imagination.

Nationbuilding and political science are subjects that require both a firm understanding of how things work, how peoples' decisions are affected by their incentives and the world around them, and the balance of how new ideas will shape the world of the future.

Thank you for taking the time to explore this journey with me. I look forward to reading your responses and learning from your experiences as I try to learn from mine.

Regards,
Adam Gorski