The Malaysian Terminal
In the 2004 film “The Terminal,” Tom Hanks plays an immigrant from the fictional country of Krakozhia who becomes stateless and is stranded in New York’s JFK airport after a civil war erupts in his nation.
Similarly, Hassan al-Kontar, a Syrian refugee, has been stuck in the Kuala Lumpur International Airport since March of this year, the BBC reported.
Spending his day reading and surfing the net, Hassan has been documenting his journey on social media and campaigning for asylum.
His troubles started back in 2011, when he refused to join the Syrian civil war, while working in the United Arab Emirates.
“I refused to join the fight because I don’t believe in war,” he told the BBC. “So I became wanted by the Syrian government.”
The Emirati authorities allowed him to travel to Malaysia, which provided him a three-month visa but didn’t accept him as a refugee.
Three months later, he tried his luck with Cambodia and Ecuador. But Cambodia rebuffed him, and he was not allowed to board his flight to Ecuador. So he got stuck in Kuala Lumpur.
Activists are now petitioning the Canadian government to allow him to enter that country.
Hassan remains hopeful about his case. “Dignity, human rights, love, peace, a place to work and be legal is all what I’m asking for,” he said, echoing the wish of tens of thousands of refugees from Syria and elsewhere.
Still, his case has spotlighted the grim situation. Click here to seehis story.
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Tuesday, July 31, 2018
The Malaysian Terminal
Monday, July 30, 2018
Flat Bread 14,000 Years Ago
Hunter Bakers
At some point, the prehistoric Natufians decided that hunting and gathering were not all that great, so they decided to dabble with local cereals to make something edible.
Recently, more than 14,000 years later, archaeologists discovered remains of the ancient people’s burnt flatbread leftovers at a site in Jordan’s Black Desert, CNN reported.
Researchers consider the charred remains among the oldest evidence of bread production. And this bread was baked more than 4,000 years before the advent of farming.
In all, the researchers discovered 24 bread-like samples, all made from domesticated cereals and tubers, according to their study.
Lead author Amaia Arranz Otaegui tasted the tubers the ancient bakers used. “They were a little sweet and a bit salty and had a gritty texture,” she said, “but maybe that’s because we didn’t clean them well enough.”
According to historians, the Natufians – a semi-sedentary culture – found flatbreads to be a better option than other breads since they were easier to bake and transport.
“Flatbread presents numerous advantages over ‘high’ and voluminous bread loaves,” food scientist Antonella Pasqualone, who was not involved in the study, told CNN. “In my opinion, a plausible hypothesis is that this kind of bread could be a perfect bridge between hunter-gatherers and stable farmers.”
Wednesday, July 25, 2018
Two Auschwitz Survivors Found After Almost 60 Years
Almost 60 years ago, I went to Alcott Elementary School with a nice young lady named Betty Gluckman. She had two extraordinary parents-Jacob and Sylvie. Both had survived the horrors of the Auschwitz death camp. Both had suffered all the indignities of getting a life started again. Someway, some how, they made it to Houston. Jacob opened a shoe repair shop. Sylvie gave him two beautiful daughters.
When my father was in the US Army in World War II, he was with General George S. Patton on the day that he walked through a liberated death camp. My dad could only discuss that day when he was, shall we say "dead drunk."
Dad talked to me about what the Nazis had done. It led me to have great empathy for Jewish people and their suffering. When Betty told me the story of her mom and dad, I was touched. I wanted to get to know them.
What I discovered were (and are ) two extraordinary people. On the coldest and wettest winter day, they were not depressed.They were happy to be alive each day. They were happy to still be with one another. They had no hate or bitterness toward the Nazis. They never felt that life had been unfair to them.
I last saw the family in 1961. They made a profound impact on me for the rest of my life. When I was facing hopeless situations all over the world, I thought of the Gluckman family and their wonderful spirits. When friends or family members were depressed or feeling hopeless, I told them the story of the Gluckman family.
This morning I found them after 57 years. Jacob and Sylvie are still alive and in their 90's. They live with Betty and her husband Jay in a nice home in Bellaire, Texas.
I shall be sending them a most-kind note in the next day or so.
Jack's Prediction Day
OK it's Jack Prediction Day. BREXIT will not happen. Our utility grid was hacked by the Russians, Iranians and North Koreans. It was to scare us. These actors had no intention of taking down the grid. We are, as the saying goes, "worth more to them alive than dead."
The Democrats will recapture the House of Representatives and win a lot of state offices. The US Senate is "anyone's guess."
Trump's former lawyer will be indicted. He will "sing like a bird." Get ready for several other indictments including Carter Paige right before or right after congressional elections in November. Paul Manafort will be found guilty in both Federal trials. He will get around 15 years for a $16 million plus bank fraud and 20 years for the money laundering, illegal lobbying, and tax matters. Even if the second judge runs her sentence concurrent with Judge Ellis's sentence, he is in prison for the rest of his life. A Trump pardon for him will be like one's chances of winning the lottery. Once the reality of his situation sinks in, he will talk. History in on Trump's side. No former US president was convicted of a felony (Bill Clinton got some misdemeanor conviction) or sent to prison. When things get too hot, Trump will not be impeached. His own party will insist that he resign. He and his family will get total immunity from civil and criminal prosecution.
Bill Cosby will get some sort of custodial sentence with most of it being home confinement. He will get a huge fine (Perhaps $100 million.)
Some miscalculation could lead to Iran closing the Straits of Hormuz with devastating consequences for the world's oil market.
What we were not told is that Kim Jong-Un got a deal for secret payoffs from the US (Perhaps billions of dollars) to "cool it" and act in a responsible manner. Money for this payoff comes from one of several "black budgets" with no congressional or OMB oversight.
Tuesday, July 24, 2018
New Revelations On Amelia Earhart
My readers I have a passionate love for this lady's courage and her story. She is a role model for women all over the world.
Was she captured by the Japanese and held in custody and executed as a spy? If that had happened, the records would have surfaced during the post-war US occupation of Japan. There was one US Navy officer sent on an exploration mission to Japanese-held islands. He was captured and quickly executed as a spy with a warning telling Roosevelt not to do it again. Earhart would have been held hostage and used as a bargaining chip to get big concessions out of the USA.
Did she crash in the open Pacific? That is still a possibility. Frankly her navigator was not the most competent. But this is not my favorite theory.
I believe that she got lucky and landed on the Nikumaroro Islands. She eventually died of thirst or starvation.
Here is an article from USA Today:
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2018/07/24/amelia-earhart-birthday-distress-call/782617002/
Was she captured by the Japanese and held in custody and executed as a spy? If that had happened, the records would have surfaced during the post-war US occupation of Japan. There was one US Navy officer sent on an exploration mission to Japanese-held islands. He was captured and quickly executed as a spy with a warning telling Roosevelt not to do it again. Earhart would have been held hostage and used as a bargaining chip to get big concessions out of the USA.
Did she crash in the open Pacific? That is still a possibility. Frankly her navigator was not the most competent. But this is not my favorite theory.
I believe that she got lucky and landed on the Nikumaroro Islands. She eventually died of thirst or starvation.
Here is an article from USA Today:
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2018/07/24/amelia-earhart-birthday-distress-call/782617002/
Monday, July 23, 2018
Friday, July 20, 2018
When It Comes To Slavery, North Korea Is The World Champion
NORTH KOREA
In Bad Company
North Korea is the world’s worst offender when it comes to modern-day slavery. But the phenomenon is also surprisingly prevalent in “highly developed, high-income countries,” according to the latest report from the Walk Free Foundation – which has tracked slavery worldwide since 2013.
Some 2.6 million forced laborers – or one out of 10 citizens – in North Korea are effectively slaves, the New York Daily News citedthe 2018 Global Index Survey as saying. Such government-imposed labor is also common in Eritrea and Burundi, which come in second and third on the list.
Based on 71,000 interviews in 48 countries, the report estimated that some 40.3 million people – including 15 million in forced marriages – were living under modern slavery in 2016. The top 10 worst offenders indicated a link between slavery and repressive political regimes. But Walk Free also estimated that in the United States 403,000 people – or 1 in every 800 – are living in modern slavery, seven-times higher than it previously believed, CNN reported.
Thursday, July 19, 2018
Had John F. Kennedy Acted Like Trump During The 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis
Elena made a brilliant comment last night. Imagine it's 1962 and the CIA had detected Russian missiles in Cuba. What if Kennedy had told his intelligence agencies that they were wrong and made the comment:"My good friend Nakita tells me that he has no missiles in Cuba."
Tuesday, July 17, 2018
South Korea's Brutal Work Culture
SOUTH KOREA
Hard Day’s Night
Last year, the Singapore newspaper, the Straits Times, followed a few young professionals in South Korea whose accounts of the nation’s backbreaking work culture are enough to fatigue even the most tireless of Western workaholics.
Corporate culture in South Korea values obedience over productivity. That means that low-level workers clock 17-hour shifts since employees are discouraged from leaving before the boss – even if they’ve already finished their work, the newspaper reported.
Others said that dinner meetings with superiors followed by late-night drinking sessions are anything but optional, leaving workers no time for family and with monstrous headaches the following day.
It’s part of the reason why South Koreans work the third-longesthours of all countries in the OECD, yet remain one of the least productive societies in the bloc, the Wall Street Journal reported.
But all that’s about to change thanks to a new work law spearheaded by President Moon Jae-in that took effect July 1.
According to the law, which will roll out gradually over the next six months, work hours per week plus overtime cannot exceed 52 hours, down from 68 hours previously, CNN reported.
More than simply providing employees a reprieve from burning the midnight oil, the law is supposed to encourage companies to hire more employees and improve their working conditions, all while allowing families to have more children, wrote the Washington Post.
South Korea may be one of the globe’s most successful economies in one of the most hypercompetitive regions in the world. But it comes with the cost of a dwindling population. South Korea’s fertility rate is one of the lowest in the world, with only 1.2 children born to every woman on average, according to OECD statistics.
Without a fresh labor pool, companies are more prone to hold on to veteran employees. That contributes to a “labor shock” in which working conditions worsen and job growth stagnates, Chinese news agency Xinhua reported.
That’s led to an exodus of new entrants into the labor market to Japan and elsewhere, putting even more pressure on existing workers to perform – especially since South Korea, a largely homogenous society, is unwilling to accept immigrant labor, NPR reported.
Most would applaud a cut to working hours, especially given the nexus of problems that South Korea faces.
But not everyone is so optimistic about the new regulations. While some fear that the regulations could mean less pay, others see the rigid Korean work culture as impossible to change.
“Impossible. Fifty-two hours?” Hyun-Soo, a 26-year-old accounts assistant at a major telecommunications company, told the Washington Post.
“A law on work hours is just a piece of paper,” he said. “The reality in Korea is that we will work and work and work.”
Monday, July 16, 2018
Russia Friends And Foes
RUSSIA
Friends and Foes
Before he left for Europe, President Donald Trump reflected on his busy agenda for the upcoming week: meeting British politicians amid the Brexit crisis, NATO leaders whom he berated for paying too little for their defense and Russian President Vladimir Putin.
“Frankly, Putin might be the easiest of them all – who would think,” said Trump, according to Radio Free Europe. Notably, the US president also described the European Union as a trade “foe” on the eve of meeting his Russian counterpart, the New York Times reported.
The Financial Times, however, disagreed Putin won’t pose a challenge, saying Trump’s meeting with the Kremlin’s head honcho on Monday was by far his most perilous rendezvous on the continent.
The British newspaper wrote that American policy toward Russia under Trump has been “contradictory and at times incoherent” because Trump appears to like Putin personally, while many administration officials and Republican leaders in Congress are suspicious of the Russian leader.
The tension between the two perspectives prompted many publications to issue Cassandra-like predictions for Trump’s sit-down with Putin.
“Putin is about to con Trump in Helsinki,” read the headline of a Washington Post opinion piece by David Kramer, a senior fellow in diplomacy at Florida International University and a former assistant secretary of state under ex-President George W. Bush.
Kramer argued that Putin, a former KGB agent, will flatter and manipulate Trump into doing his bidding: dismantling NATO, giving the Russian military free reign in Syria and easing sanctions imposed on Moscow after the annexation of Crimea from Ukraine.
Trump appears to be undercutting NATO regardless of Russian desires. “How Trump and Putin could kill NATO,” wrote Politico Europe, noting how Trump has said for decades that America’s foreign alliances are a burden rather than a strength.
Because of the special investigation into Russia’s meddling in the 2016 presidential election that resulted in Trump’s victory, the American president is somewhat constrained in changing American policy except in the case of Syria, wrote Middle East expert Joe Macaron in Al Jazeera.
“Trump will give up Syria to Putin the way Gorbachev left Iraq to Bush in 1990,” Macaron forecast, in return for Putin’s help in isolating Iran – a concession Putin could make and then ignore because he has little influence over the mullahs of Tehran.
That scenario led Russian maven Anna Arutunyan to declare that “Putin has already won” even before the summit took place. Putin is interested in optics, wrote Arutunyan. Sitting down with Trump makes him look good, especially if Trump badmouths NATO or suggests Crimea belongs to Russia.
That’s a lot of speculation, for sure. But for now, it’s the best the world can do.
"When It rains It Pours" My Trials Over The Last Three Months
There is an old saying: "When it rains it pours." For the last three months I have been inundated with problems that had to be solved. Let us go down the list as follows:
1) Our Samsung 4-door refrigerator failed. The compressor stopped work and the freezing compartment was a mess. After spending $500 in technicians and getting no support from Samsung Electronics, I went out and bought a new LG Refrigerator that cost us almost $3,000.
2) The guest bathroom suffered a major plumbing failure with the tub not draining and water oozing out from the base of the toilet. Dan B. Underhill got the assignment to fix the plumbing. It turned out that the plumbing had been installed wrong 40-50 years ago. The drain pipe was the tub had fallen apart. Dan had to tear up part of the bathroom floor. A second crew had to dig a deep hole to get access to the pipes. This took three days of work. Dan then had a really rough job to fix the piping. He truly earned his salary. We then had to fill in the big hole in the bathroom and pour concrete over it. Today new tiles are delivered by Loew's and need to be installed. Dan can then do the final plumbing work. The hole int he wall can be patched by our handy man.
3) Elena became the victim of a frivolous lawsuit over a tenant/landlord issue in Buenos Aires. Some broke and desperate person is demanding a large sum of money. We finally got an excellent lawyer working on this case. A solution is in sight.
4) My Leica camera fell on a bathroom floor and would not work. Leica could not get the parts needed to fix it. They gave me a new camera free of charge.
5) My Omega wristwatch suffered mechanical problems and had to have a complete overhaul.
6) Elena's Shinola watch was not waterproof and got water damage. Shinola fixed it free of charge.
7) As one ages, the body deteriorates. My gums have started to decline and lose a good grip on my teeth. I have to have expensive laser surgeries to repair them. Dental insurance will pay half the bill.
8) Elena suffered a fall on the stairs leading up to our deck. Repairs had to be made. Barry Nadell Concrete did an excellent job.
Friday, July 13, 2018
Monday, July 9, 2018
Samsung Sold Me A Lemon refrigerator And Failed To Honor Their Warranty
Dear Geoff and Alan:
In September of 2016, Elena and I paid over $2,500 for a Samsung fridge (4 doors, icemaker, etc. In June of 2018 after the one-year warranty had expired, it started to make a loud noise. The freezing compartment partially failed.
A very reliable appliance repair company came out to look and spent 5 hours tearing it apart and examining it in detail. As a matter of interest, the tech was a Russian man who had once taught engineering in Russia. The conclusion was that the compressor motor in the back of the fridge had failed. The estimated repair bill was $2,000-$3,000. The good news was that it was covered under a five-year warranty.
What happened next was a nightmare of 800-number calls (some lasting 1.5 hours), obstructions, lying and game playing. A Samsung-approved tech came out. He told me reassuringly that the compressor motor was only short of freon. He told me to contact a freon company to get it charged up. I was charged $240.00 for this consultation. I contacted another company. A technician came out and charged up the freon. The compressor in the back of the fridge failed. It partially came back to life later. This tech agreed with the first company that the compressor had failed and needed to be repaired or replaced.
A decent company would have honored their warranty. They would have decided that the repair was too expensive and sent us a new fridge. Instead I knew that I was facing another round of 800-number calls, obstructions,and lies. I sent a report to Samsung about this on a customer satisfaction survey. I never got a response.
I had to buy a new fridge from LG. It cost Elena and I close to $3,000. I feel that legal action in California Superior Court or US District Court is warranted. You are the experts.
With kindest regards,
Friday, July 6, 2018
Singapore Emerges As A Key Player On The World Stage
SINGAPORE
Cutting the Strings
The small yet wealthy city-state of Singapore was in the international spotlight last month for hosting the historic summitbetween American President Donald Trump and North Korea’s Supreme Leader Kim Jong-un.
It was the perfect venue for such an event, commented the Council on Foreign Relations.
Singapore has long served as a neutral arbiter of interests between East and West, and its security and intelligence apparatuses are highly regarded in both the United States and North Korea.
By some measures, Singapore is leaps and bounds ahead of other Asian countries in terms of societal and economic development as well.
Gallup ranked Singapore as the safest country in the world for the fifth year in a row last month, and its economic model, which prioritizes foreign investment over protectionist policies, has catapulted its GDP per capita to one of the highest rates in the world, according to World Bank data.
Meanwhile, the city-state of almost six million people now has the most sophisticated digital economy in Asia, and Reuters recently reported that, despite ongoing issues with trash exports, Singapore is a world leader in waste sustainability.
Still, Singapore’s impressive achievements since it declared independence from Malaysia in 1965 don’t mean it won’t face steep political and societal challenges in the coming years.
For one, the political philosophy of Singapore’s founding father, Lee Kuan Yew, to tightly control and micromanage society has earned the country the moniker of a “soft authoritarian state,” wrote the Council on Foreign Relations. Lee was known to jail dissenters and prioritize communal and economic prosperity ahead of civil liberties.
While that led to de jure affirmative-action policies that reach into the highest ranks of government, it also means that free speech is highly constrained and corporal punishment a common occurrence. The 2018 World Press Freedom Index, for example, ranks Singapore at 151 out of 180 countries.
Lee also established a political dynasty. His People’s Action Party has never lost an election and retains 83 of 89 seats in parliament. His eldest son, Lee Hsien Loong, has served as prime minister since 2004.
The elder Lee’s puppet-master tactics may have been enough to launch Singapore into orbit with the rest of the industrialized world, but reforms are needed to keep up the progress, given an increased “appetite for greater democracy,” Al Jazeera reported in a telling documentary about the Lee dynasty.
There’s been movement on that front from the nation’s only two viable political parties, writes the South China Morning Post. Both parties are gearing up for general elections in 2021 by putting forward new, young successors who may shift the status quo built by the nation’s founding father.
After all, if Singapore is to take real strides into the future, it has to cut the strings of the puppet master sooner or later.
Thursday, July 5, 2018
How China Is Muscling In On Lithium Ion Battery Production
https://worldview.stratfor.com/article/how-china-muscling-lithium-ion-batteries
Wednesday, July 4, 2018
Listening To The Echoes Of The American Revolution
https://worldview.stratfor.com/article/listening-echoes-american-revolution?id=743c2bc617&e=1bd154cf7d&uuid=0f49d252-4c9e-4175-962b-5eec8083d946&utm_source=Topics%2C+Themes+and+Regions&utm_campaign=5af0859d45-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2018_07_04_02_07&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_743c2bc617-5af0859d45-53655957&mc_cid=5af0859d45&mc_eid=[UNIQID]
Some Thoughtful Words On The 4th of July
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Tuesday, July 3, 2018
The Incredible Beauty of Iceland
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/07/03/travel/iceland-52-places.html?hp&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&clickSource=story-heading&module=photo-spot-region®ion=top-news&WT.nav=top-news
Monday, July 2, 2018
Why Atul Gawande Will Soon Be The Most-Feared CEO In Healthcare
Why Atul Gawande Will Soon Be The Most Feared CEO In Healthcare
When news broke that Dr. Atul Gawande had been named CEO of the Amazon-Berkshire-JPMorgan Chase healthcare partnership, industry insiders were quick to raise doubts about his credentials.
Some pointed to his limited administrative experience, questioning how someone who has never managed a hospital or health system could oversee the care of some 1 million patient-employees. They also noted that the surgeon and bestselling author doesn’t know much about running an insurance company or contracting with providers or wading through the murky waters of benefit reimbursements, either. How, then, will he navigate the industry’s complex regulations and requirements?
Contrary to his critics’ intentions, these kinds of questions do not reveal Dr. Gawande’s shortcomings. They reveal an industry ripe for disruption. Asking how Dr. Gawande will function within the current healthcare system assumes that Dr. Gawande wishes to maintain the current system. He does not. And neither do his new bosses.
Jeff Bezos, Warren Buffett and Jamie Dimon did not hire a big-thinking industry outsider to set up a conventional insurance system or haggle with doctors and hospitals over prices. Dr. Gawande was selected to fundamentally change how healthcare is structured, paid for and provided. He was hired to disrupt the industry, to make traditional health plans obsolete, and to create a bold new future for American healthcare.
And from that perspective, Atul Gawande is an excellent choice.
I met Atul more than a decade ago. After reading his first book, Complications, I invited him to speak with the board of the nation’s largest physician organization, The Permanente Medical Group. There, the rising surgeon explained his vision for making operating rooms safer.
By following a checklist of steps, he said, surgeons could reduce medical errors and complications. Many in the room that day weren’t sold on the idea that “cookbook” medicine would save more lives. They were wrong. Today, Dr. Gawande’s approach is standard in one-third of all operating rooms worldwide. His writing, research and tireless patient advocacy has, by my estimation, saved tens of thousands of lives.
Over the years, Atul and I have continued to exchange ideas and perspectives on healthcare. And having straddled the dual roles of surgeon and CEO, myself, I am continually amazed by the clarity of his vision, and his ability to change people’s actions by changing their perceptions.
Last Thursday, for example, the day after his new role was announced, Dr. Gawande made a scheduled appearance at the annual meeting of America’s Health Insurance Plans (AHIP). He was there to speak about his latest bestseller, Being Mortal, but Dr. Gawande also used the opportunity to reframe how members of the nation’s largest health insurance association perceive aging, end-of-life care and the excesses of treatment so pervasive in medical practice today. I expect him to do much more of this—altering expectations and improving behaviors—in the future.
So, what will the future of Dr. Gawande’s high-profile healthcare venture look like? It’s too early to be sure exactly what steps he will take. And, just like with his operating-room reforms, we shouldn’t expect immediate, widespread changes. But I’m confident he will pursue at least three major reforms. Each will radically improve how care is paid for and provided—and each will radically alter how healthcare providers must function to survive in the future:
- Taking out the trash. It’s estimated that 25 percent of all U.S. healthcare spending (about $765 billion each year) is wasted. From arthroscopic knee surgeries for chronic cartilaginous injuries to chemotherapy administered in the last month of life, insurers have long reimbursed unnecessary claims and perpetuated a fee-for-service model that rewards doctors for providing more (not better) care. Dr. Gawande has witnessed the excesses of modern medical treatment first-hand, cataloging in his essays the toll wasteful care takes on patients, including his own friends and family. I believe one of his first operational goals will be to root out wasteful spending and services, not as way to ration care, but as a tool to improve clinical outcomes.
- Creating a checklist. Gawande earned national acclaim with his 2009 bestseller, The Checklist Manifesto, inspiring an entire industry to double down on evidence-based medicine. From the exam room to the operating room, doctors today follow a clear set of protocols that Dr. Gawande helped establish. He’s currently focused on extending these successes to other areas, including maternity care and the treatment of patients with complex and chronic diseases. For example, the doctor has observed how the best healthcare providers can help 90 percent or more of their patients control high blood pressure. And yet the national control rate is just 55 percent. Left to their own devices, physicians prefer to follow their guts when diagnosing and treating patients. Dr. Gawande knows that, most of the time, science (not intuition) saves more lives, raises the quality of care and lowers costs.
- Being human. In Being Mortal, Dr. Gawande shines an unflattering light on end-of-life care in America, revealing that treatment for our nation’s elderly is often expensive, ineffective and inhumane. He has long been an advocate for the model of clinician as counselor, not as technician, and for the power of palliative care to make end-of-life treatment more compassionate and personal. His stories about his own father and mother are moving, and underscore the emotions driving his desire to improve care for our nation’s sickest patients.
Right now, the biggest mistake anyone in healthcare could make—be they the traditional health plans at the AHIP annual meeting or those deriding the new CEO’s credentials—is to assume Dr. Gawande and his bosses will be satisfied with the status quo.
We shouldn't expect the new venture to stop or stall once it has figured out how to deliver excellent, low-cost care to 1 million employees. In time, this high-powered team will master the nuances of healthcare’s rules and regulations and, once they're able to turn theory into operational excellence, the future of healthcare will begin.
I predict the Bezos-Buffett-Dimon cooperative will become a for-profit company that sells its expertise to dozens, possibly hundreds, of large corporations, each of them eager to offer their employees better healthcare at a lower cost. And once smaller companies see 30 percent improvements in both quality and cost, they too will prefer the new model to the old. And when that happens, the traditional health insurers, hospitals and independent physicians who refuse to change will become obsolete. If you have any doubt, just ask the former CEOs of Kodak or Borders, or the current executives at Yellow Cab, or anyone who has faced the business end of disruptive innovation.
The good news for healthcare’s incumbents is that the change process will likely take five to 10 years to solidify. The bad news is that the clock just started ticking.
Dr. Robert Pearl is the bestselling author of "Mistreated: Why We Think We're Getting Good Health Care--And Why We're Usually Wrong" and a Stanford University professor. Follow him @RobertPearlMD
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