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Wednesday, January 1, 2025

How to Solve the Illegal Immigration Conundrum

 by John Hinderaker

It’s a knotty puzzle, isn’t it? Our laws forbid people from entering our country illegally, yet they keep doing it anyway! The Biden administration couldn’t solve the puzzle. Until its last days, in fear of electoral defeat, it didn’t come up with a plan to slow, let alone reverse, illegal immigration. This is because the Democrats actually like illegal immigration. As the party of small families (if any), their future is not bright unless they import future voters from abroad.

It turns out that the solution to the conundrum of illegal immigration is simple. The Swedes, who are nowhere near as weak or as liberal as many Americans suppose, have figured it out:


I believe the Swedes are dealing mostly with legal, not illegal, immigration. Although the line between the two has been blurred, since every Third World resident seeking admission to a better country knows that all you have to do is utter the magic word “asylum,” and you are transformed from an illegal alien into an allegedly legal one. This is the great hole in American immigration law that needs to be plugged. Trump, I think, will do it, if only by reinstating the “remain in Mexico” policy for would-be asylum seekers.

Trump’s election holds out hope that one of these days, our response to damaging immigration will be as intelligent as the Swedes’.

https://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2024/12/how-to-solve-the-illegal-immigration-conundrum.php

NJ law ending basic skills tests for teachers goes into effect

 A bill that would bar state education officials from requiring teaching candidates to complete basic skills tests to obtain teaching certificates cleared the Senate after an overwhelming vote Monday.

The bill, which cleared the chamber in a 34-2 vote, is meant to address New Jersey’s longstanding teacher shortage by removing barriers to would-be educators seeking to enter the field.

“We need more teachers. This is the best way to get them,” said bill sponsor Sen. Jim Beach (D-Camden)

The bill’s movement comes only months after Gov. Phil Murphy signed a different measure creating an alternate pathway to certification that allows candidates to eschew the basic skills tests.

That law allows teachers to obtain an alternate teaching certificate without sitting for a Praxis core test — the basic skills exam — and that certificate could be converted into a standard certificate after four years at the same school.

The legislation approved Monday would strike those alternate certification provisions from law, and it would leave some testing requirements in place for teaching candidates in specific subject areas.

A would-be math teacher, for example, would still be required to earn a passing grade on a Praxis subject matter exam on mathematics,while a biology teacher must still complete general science and biology subject matter tests.

Basic skills tests would still be required for those seeking limited certificates of eligibility. The Assembly previously passed the measure but must concur with amendments made in the Senate last week before it reaches Gov. Phil Murphy’s desk.

separate measure that advanced through the Senate Monday would waive the state’s residency requirement for teachers for three years in a bid to draw more educators to the Garden State. New Jersey broadly requires its public workers to live in the state, with few exceptions.

Under the bill, school districts would have to advertise positions to in-state residents for at least three months before they could hire someone who lives in another state, provided the out-of-state applicant was not employed by a New Jersey school in the prior year.

Out-of-state educators hired under the bill would be required to move to New Jersey within three years of their hiring, and the bill would require the Department of Education to draft a report weighing the elimination of the residency requirement after the end of the three-year waiver period created by the bill.

“This bill prioritizes New Jersey residents for teaching positions and only extends eligibility to out-of-state applicants if a role remains vacant,” said bill sponsor Sen. Teresa Ruiz (D-Essex), the chamber’s majority leader. “By temporarily removing the residency requirement we can see how it helps to mitigate shortages and determine how best to move forward.”

https://newjerseymonitor.com/briefs/measure-ending-basic-skills-tests-for-teachers-goes-to-governors-desk/

New Year’s Resolution – To Cure Healthcare

 In 1960, President Kennedy promised the U.S. would put a man on the moon within a decade. The experts scoffed, saying it was impossible based on the science, or the lack of it. Nine years later, Neil Armstrong stepped on lunar soil.

Today, talking heads as well as the public believe that fixing healthcare is impossible – it can’t be done! Doctors Ginn and Waldman disagree. They ascribe to the optimists’ credo: the difficult we do today; the impossible takes a little longer.

The burning platform theory says that people will refuse to get off a shaky, unstable, dangerous platform but will quickly vacate if it is on fire. Healthcare is on fire. People are likely to accept big changes today that they would have resisted years ago. Healthcare has reached its tipping point. The formation of DOGE is proof that fundamental change is possible.  

Our New Year resolution for 2025 is to cure our impossible-to-fix healthcare system. The cure should produce a system that will allow Americans to obtain the care they want when they need it while simultaneously breaking the national addiction to overspending. The cure will require many, substantive changes over time. The impossible takes a little longer.

The first step is to pay American workers all the money they earn. The so-called benefit of employer-supported health care is an obsolete, market-distorting holdover from wage freezes enacted during World War II that deny workers all they are owed. On average, employers are currently giving $23,968 of employees’ earnings to insurance companies instead of paying that money to employees. Step #1 in the cure is paying the $23,968 to employees, not to insurance.

The natural place to park these funds would be some type of bank account for medical expenses. That is a problem. There are at least three different forms of such accounts: Health Savings Account (HSA), Flexible Spending Account (FSA), and Medical Savings Account (MSA). Each has multiple different governing regulations – federal, state, and various insurance plans. Some have use-it-or-lose-it time limits. Several insurance plans do not accept such accounts.

HSAs have contribution limits such as maximums of $4150 for an individual and $8300 for a family. Thus, at least $15,668 of earnings cannot be contributed at present. Furthermore, federal regulations stipulate what are allowable medical expenses and what are not – a choice that should be made by the patient not the government.

Restrictions on HSAs are a form of government control where regulations are unnecessary, inappropriate, and costly. Americans should be free to spend their hard-earned dollars as they see fit. Medical outlays should be tax-free for employees as they are now for employers.

Next, it is necessary to unleash the power of an HSA but in a new, simplified and unlimited form, starting with its name.

The purpose of healthcare is Care. The function of healthcare dollars is to Spend on care, not saving them. Thus, the new medical account should be called a Care Spending (not Savings) Account or CSA. There is no need for other accounts like the current HSA, MSA, or FSA. 

There should be no limit on how much a family can contribute to an CSA and no time limit to use these funds. The account should be passed across years and generations. CSA monies can be spent on any health-related expenditure. In addition to standard care, medications not approved by the FDA (like ivermectin for COVID), crystal therapy, aromatherapy, and other forms of alternative medicine should be allowed while a big screen TV or a new automobile should not. If a family wishes to spend their CSA money on medical expenses for a non-family member, that too should be allowed.

In other words, Americans should be free to engage in tax-free spending on their medical care with no government direction, regulation, or coercion. Just because the Biden Administration labeled short-term insurance as “junk,” doesn’t mean Americans should be prohibited from purchasing it.

The CSA would require no regulatory apparatus other than IRS oversight. It will eliminate the need for and spending on the BURRDEN – Bureaucracy, Unnecessary Rules and Regulations, Directives, Enforcement, and Noncompliance activities – of HSA, MSA, and FSA. This will save billions of taxpayer dollars and improve access to reliable, timely care.

With more than $20,000 per year in an CSA to spend directly on care, and no third-party insurance costs or expenses for BURRDEN, providers can offer consumers drastically reduced prices for cash-only services and goods. Suddenly, that $2500 MRI would cost $750, easily affordable from the CSA. Even the $15,499 price tag for hip replacement at cash-only Oklahoma Surgery Center is not a problem. And for the rare, six-figure heart attack or cancer chemotherapy, there is high deductible catastrophic insurance (when and if Washington will stop over-regulating insurance.)

The CSA shows the impossible is possible: it saves consumers’ money and simultaneously pays more to providers. A standard charge through insurance for hip replacement is $35,114; Medicaid pays $12,922. As noted previously, the cash-only, no insurance charge to the patient is $15,499, not $35,114. Payment from the CSA to the provider is $15,499, not $12,922. And, the provider is paid immediately, not after two years of aggravating insurance reviews. 

While many more actions are necessary to make health care accessible and affordable, the first two steps are as outlined. (1) Pay workers ALL the money they earn and let them spend it as they choose. (2) Provide a tax-free spending haven for medical expenses with a no limit (time or money) CSA.

The next part (step #3) of the New Year resolution involves turning Medicaid into a functional and sustainable medical safety net, which it most certainly is not.

Deane Waldman, M.D., MBA is Professor Emeritus of Pediatrics, Pathology, and Decision Science; former Director of Center for Healthcare Policy at Texas Public Policy Foundation; former Director of New Mexico Health Insurance Exchange; and author of 12 books, including multi-award winning, Curing the Cancer in U.S. HealthcareStatesCare and Market-Based Medicine.  Follow him on X.com @DrDeaneW or contact via www.deanewaldman.com

Vance Ginn, Ph.D., is president of Ginn Economic Consulting, host of the Let People Prosper Show, and previously chief economist of the Trump White House's Office of Management and Budget. Follow him on X.com at @VanceGinn.

https://www.realclearpolicy.com/articles/2025/01/01/new_years_resolution__to_cure_healthcare_1081921.html

HUTCHMED in US$608 million Divestment of Non-Core Joint Venture

 — HUTCHMED continues to deliver on its strategy outlined in November 2022 to create value, prioritize its portfolio and bring innovative medicines to patients globally —

— Divestment proceeds to advance HUTCHMED’s pipeline and core innovative medicines business —

— Focused R&D investment includes HUTCHMED’s proprietary antibody-targeted therapy conjugate platform, with first candidates expected to enter clinical trials in the second half of 2025 —

https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2025/01/01/3003243/0/en/HUTCHMED-Announces-US-608-million-Divestment-of-Non-Core-Joint-Venture.html

'New California law takes aim at homework burden on students'

 Many Californians can look back at their time growing up and remember spending hours after school bogged down in homework, but one lawmaker hopes to change that for the next generation.

When the bell rings and the school day is over, for students like Sofia Johnson, the day is nowhere near over. The sixth-grader blames that on hours spent doing homework.

“Homework is exhausting. It’s overwhelming,” Johnson said. “It’s depressing that my whole day from when I wake up to when I go to bed is taken up doing school work.”

That’s why Johnson’s mother, assemblymember Pilar Schiavo (D-Santa Clara) says she authored AB 2999, also known as “The Healthy Homework Act.” It was signed into law by Governor Gavin Newsom earlier this year to take effect in 2025.

The legislation will not ban homework, but it formally encourages local school boards and educational agencies to establish homework policies that consider impacts on students’ physical and mental health all with input from parents, teachers, and students themselves.

“It’s addressing homework, which is the top stressor for kids,” Schiavo said. “It’s often number one.”

The new law comes as a survey of more than 300,000 American students conducted by Stanford University and the nonprofit organization Challenge Success found that 45% of students say workload and homework are their number one source of stress. The average time spent on homework each night was 2.5 hours across the 13,000 California high school students who took the survey.

“I just toured a school in my district where they talked about how they are trying to reduce the kids who are missing school or dropping out of school. The top reason they hear is because kids are getting behind,” Schiavo said. “They just get into a hole when you miss homework. You have homework the next day, you are trying to catch up from the old homework – too much homework can overwhelm them.”

Schiavo said the bill was also tailored around equity – something California teacher of the year Casy Cuny believes is crucial, noting students from lower socioeconomic backgrounds may not have access to resources at home like high-speed internet.

“A child’s grade should not be dependent on the resources they have at home to do the homework,” Cuny said. “I truly believe the resources should be dependent on the learning that takes space in the classroom with the professional. That’s why I support this bill – because in the end, it will be what’s best for kids.”

The legislation calls for the California Department of Education to put homework guidelines on its website for the upcoming year. It also requires school districts to come up with a homework policy by the start of the 2027 school year. It has no formal opposition.

https://thehill.com/homenews/5061334-new-california-law-takes-aim-at-homework-burden-on-students/

Swiss central bank faces call to hold bitcoin in reserves

 A proposal to oblige the Swiss National Bank (SNB) to hold bitcoin was set in motion in an initiative published by the Swiss federal chancellery on Tuesday.

The initiative proposes changing the law to make the Swiss central back hold part of its reserves in gold and bitcoin.

Put forward by a group of 10 people including a number of Swiss cryptocurrency advocates, the initiative has 18 months to collect the 100,000 signatures necessary for it to be put to a public referendum.

The SNB has expressed skepticism about bitcoin previously. The central bank's chairman said last month he was wary about cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin and ether.

Switzerland holds regular referendums on legislative initiatives to change federal law.

https://www.marketscreener.com/quote/cryptocurrency/BITCOIN-BTC-USD-45553945/news/Swiss-central-bank-faces-call-to-hold-bitcoin-in-reserves-48669260/

Putin orders Russian government and top bank to develop AI cooperation with China

 President Vladimir Putin has ordered Russia's government and the country's biggest bank, Sberbank, to build cooperation with China in artificial intelligence.

Putin's instructions were published on the Kremlin's website on Wednesday, three weeks after he announced that Russia would team up with BRICS partners and other countries to develop AI.

He told the government and Sberbank, which is spearheading Russia's AI efforts, to "ensure further co-operation with the People's Republic of China in technological research and development in the field of artificial intelligence".

Western sanctions intended to restrict Moscow's access to the technologies it needs to sustain its war against Ukraine have resulted in the world's major producers of microchips halting exports to Russia, severely limiting its AI ambitions.

Sberbank CEO German Gref acknowledged in 2023 that graphics processing units (GPUs), the microchips that underpin AI development, were the trickiest hardware for Russia to replace.

By partnering with non-Western countries, Russia is seeking to challenge the dominance of the United States in one of the most promising and crucial technologies of the 21st century.

Putin said on Dec. 11 that a new AI Alliance Network would bring together specialists from BRICS countries and other interested states.

Russia currently ranks 31st of 83 countries by AI implementation, innovation and investment on UK-based Tortoise Media's Global AI Index, well behind not only the United States and China but also fellow BRICS members India and Brazil.

https://www.marketscreener.com/quote/stock/SBERBANK-OF-RUSSIA-6494829/news/Putin-orders-Russian-government-and-top-bank-to-develop-AI-cooperation-with-China-48670606/