Monday, July 27, 2020

America Earns Worst Ranking

     Days ago, the New York Post reiterated a recent study about which "wealthy" countries are suitable to raise a family in.  The United States of America got the second-to-worst ranking, out of 35 nations.  Knowing that Lewis and I intend to relocate to Europe, friends of mine (from college) forwarded it to me as encouragement.  Tap on any of the images to make them clearer.  The statistics should galvanize people into action.









Many European nations had the lowest homicide rate and the highest rating for Law & Order.  Naturally (and unlike America), there were no school shootings.  


America (which costs more and has the most expensive police/military) was at the bottom of the rating.  The only country that was worse was Mexico (due to drug cartels).  America suffers from 6 murders per 100,000 people.  Between 2009 and 2018, it had 288 school shootings.  Almost every single other nation had none.  Despite advertising itself as "Land of the Free", the USA is the fourth-worst for Human Rights.

Speaking of money, the costs of living in America make it the absolute worst country to live in.  Northern European nations won the top ratings.



American families spend 30% of their incomes on childcare.  Scandinavian nations spend less than 10% because costs are lower.  Compared to Canada, American mothers are twice as likely to die in childbirth... even though American families pay three-times as much to deliver a baby.  America's for-profit medical system and burgeoning pharmaceuticals industry (which prefers drugs instead of curative/preventive methods) are other contributing factors.  
     Americans consume 80% of the global opioid supply and 99% of the world's hydrocodone supply... as well as two-thirds of the world's illegal drugs (despite America's costly War On Drugs).  Nearly half of the population is exposed to air pollution that exceeds the World Health Organization's limits.


Everyone knows how most American students do poorly on global test scores, but it was surprising to see that Slovenian and Dutch students are in the top ranks. 


Alas, Massachusetts--the "best" state in America for public school education--had a meager 49% of 8th graders who could score proficient in reading exams.  California was sued for its failure to provide good education; less than half of its students met minimum standards of literacy!  (That explains why the American public is easily duped and conned by its politicians and corporations).

     That impacts the cost of living in America, since urban families who want to avoid the substandard public school system must pay $40,000+ per year for private/parochial high schools (while still paying their exorbitant school taxes).  
     Unchanged since the robber-barons manipulated the Industrial Revolution, income disparities in America are vast.  The top 10% earns as much as the rest of the 90%.  Since 1999, the suicide rate increase by 33%, while it decreased in most other countries.  

For "Amount of Free Time", America got the worst rating.  It notoriously has the least amount of vacation time (two third-world countries are in the same category).  The USA is the only country in the list without government-mandated "paid leave" of any kind!  It's one of the few countries that has no paid maternity leave.  Only 38% of American organizations offer paid parental leave for childbirth.  The ones who do get a paltry average of only 3 weeks.  Even with its efficient work ethic, Germany still gives 42 weeks.  Similarly, Japan gives 36 weeks.  South Korea and Italy give 25, and France gives 19.
     Compared to how much "paid time off" workers get in other countries, American employees are woefully under compensated.  America is the only first-world nation that doesn't mandate its workers any paid vacation time.  The United Kingdom guarantees 28 days, France gives 25, Germany gives 20, Chile gives 15, Israel gives 11, and Mexico gives 6.  America gives 0.  Even America's public holidays are not guaranteed to be paid.  For most American employers, it's customary to get 15 days of vacation per year.  That's not even the minimum amount required by law in 19 of the world's wealthy countries.  

     The test-maker--who is American--summed it up nicely...



Lewis and I agree: America's system doesn't align with its self-promoted ideology.  Only a fool would keep paying for something that's not working.  

My friends replied:
"I don't think my grandparents thought that when they immigrated from Europe to the U.S. that Europe would be the better option in their lifetimes."  

"My Italian grandmother regrets coming here because her friends in Italy have a healthier retirement, affordable doctors, and higher-quality food."

"It's tragic what greed has done to our country, which once held such promise.  My grandpa fought wars for this country, but his friends who returned to Japan have better lives."

"My ancestry is from Germany, and those relatives lived through the incineration bombardments of World War II.  Despite that, their city--which is poorer than Chicago--rebuilt itself nicer than before and has infrastructure that surpasses Chicago, Detroit, Los Angeles, and New York City--while costing much less to reside in."

"This does not surprise me.  I thought about emigrating America many times.  I truly feel my family will be better off somewhere else.  The only thing that keeps me here is my parents."


To my friends, I say: Don't be afraid of change; go out and find ways to improve your life and contribute to an upstanding society.


Friday, July 17, 2020

The Passion of Teamwork

     For the King's birthday, the Concertgebouw Orchestra in Amsterdam performed via synchronized videos.  It expressed dedication, teamwork, passion, cohesion, and technology.  For America's "birthday" on July 4, none of the televised ceremonies included any effort by America's orchestras to do something similar.  Every TV channel merely reused recordings from previous years.  It would've been immensely better to see something like the Dutch did... even for one song.  Alas, Americans were either not coordinated or interested.  













That performance was almost magical.  
Such effort makes the world better.




*In August, I saw a jointly-made video of a summery mambo performed by different branches of the Dutch armed forces. Below are members of each military division, providing different instruments to the song.

The Royal Netherlands Marechausee 





Fanfare "Mounted Weapons" of the Royal Netherlands Army






The Military Band of the Royal Netherlands Army






Royal Netherlands Air Force Orchestra






National Reserve Corps Fanfare of the Army








Grenadiers and Rifles Guard of the Army




Rotterdam Marine Band of the Royal Netherlands Navy




Watch the video online and appreciate the technological teamwork to synchronize the song.


This kind of coordination/effort is immensely admirable.


Tuesday, July 14, 2020

Electrical Bill Rip-off


     Sadly, this is another rant about the rip-offs from Consolidated Edison, as seen in my recent electricity & gas bill.  

     On July 6, ConEd mailed me an invoice for my monthly charges = $158.22.  That might seem high (depending on where you live in the world), but be assured that I reduced my electricity usage from last year by half!  During this COVID pandemic, I have been unemployed, and Lewis and I strove to be thrifty.  Unlike other American households (with superfluous lightbulbs/accent lights/mood lighting, and multiple entertainment gadgets activated simultaneously), we are mindful and not wasteful of energy.  Nonetheless, on July 7, ConEd mailed an amended invoice, billing me for an additional $42.00... without any noticeable reason.

     Being a savvy consumer, I don't pay for things that I don't understand.  (I also don't buy $6 cupcakes just because everybody else does).  It's another reason that I don't use monthly auto-pay, because I prefer to double-check before paying.  Navigating ConEd's unhelpful telephone directory prompt-system, I finally got transferred to their (hidden) Customer Service Department.  Despite ConEd's gargantuan profits, it doesn't have enough Customer Service Agents, so I waited 15 minutes to speak with someone.  I was polite, but the man didn't want to help me and hung up while I was talking.  Dialing again, I waited another 10 minutes and finally spoke to someone who wanted to do their job... almost.

     I was informed that ConEd realized that their meter in my apartment building was outdated and malfunctioning, so they recently installed a new one.  They determined that I was undercharged for my electricity since February.  So, they wanted that back-owed amount.  I was flabbergasted.  I gave the metaphor that if I bought something in a store, paid, and left, it was improper for the merchant to say, "Oh, that price was incorrect, so please come back and pay me extra".  The Customer Service associate's script made her say "I'm sorry", yet she wasn't.  She didn't care; ConEd demanded that money.  She had the gall to say, "Be thankful that we're not charging you late fees for that amount."  I was angered!  But I had no option.  

     It is despicable that during this pandemic and economic downturn, such gluttonous conglomerates are penny-pinching their customers.  Naturally, that happens in New York City: the unruly epicenter of American capitalism.  I also realized that the timeframe of back-owed amount coincided with when I reduced my electricity intake further, in March.

     Years ago, a similar thing occurred when I downsized my electrical usage for several months.  ConEd billed me for a sudden extra amount, claiming it was a one-time surcharge for "providing the electricity".  Another time, they billed an extra amount claiming it was an "adjustment for miscellaneous costs from October to May for the effect of variation from normal weather".  What is that?  It's just like a mafia racketeering scheme.  They won't let you get away with paying them for using less electricity/gas.  

     Scrutinizing my bill further didn't help.  It is outrageous to see what they charge money for, and how they price-gouge their customers (since they are a power utility monopoly).    

     Before that additional $42.00, my monthly electrical charges were $47.  ConEd billed me an additional $1.50 of Supply Charges for "procuring that electricity and sustaining their Credit/Collections team".   What does that mean?  An amount of $1.18 was for "taxes on their gross receipts from sales of utilities".  Then, I was billed $16 as a Basic Service Charge "to maintain their infrastructure" (which has explosions several times each year).  Next, I was billed for $52.04 as "a charge for maintaining the system through which Con Edison delivers electricity to you".  Wasn't that covered in the other part?  When I asked what that fee specifically signified, the Customer Service team could not identify specifics; the fee merely went to an amalgamation of ConEd's costs.  A supervisor was not forthcoming with any more data.  It seems like that extra cost is bogus.  The charges for maintaining their substandard system were more than my electricity usage, and it tripled my monthly cost!

     The next month, that "charge for maintaining the system through which Con Edison delivers electricity to you" ballooned from $52 to $102!  That was like highway robbery!  They can hike up the price to whatever amount they want.  Recently they added $100 for no reason, yet we were required to pay that extra $100.  That's what you get in overpriced NYC America.  I suppose that whenever ConEd's greedy negligence gets pinpointed for power outages, blackouts, transformer fires, oil leaks, or gas pipe eruptions, they pass those costs to their overpaying customers.  It's utter nonsense.  But there's more.

     My monthly gas usage equalled only $1.98.  However, taxes and surcharges totaled $3.54.  Another hidden fee of $0.11 was for a System Benefit Charge to "recover costs associated with energy efficiency programs by the company and New York State Research & Development Authority".  What is that?  (If you add up $0.11 from 8.5 million customers, you get $935,000 per month!  Whose pocket does that go in?  The company is like a plaything to make money.)  Finally, sales tax added $5.57 on top of it.  Thus, the surcharges amount to more than my actual gas usage!

     Apathetic New Yorkers--who passively overpay for rent, frappuccinos, and parking--will pay it until infinity.  Lewis and I are making Life Changes and will be glad when we interact with companies that have integrity.   A wise person once said, "If you don't make plans for your life, then other people will... and guess what?  They don't have great plans for you."

*Due to unchanged greed, history repeats itself in NYC.  To see how I previously handled an unannounced surge in my cable television & internet bill, please use this link:

Thursday, July 2, 2020

Nap Time & Hat Time

     During the world's quarantine period, Lewis and I applied ourselves to many things.  Self-help learning, daily meditations, exercise, housecleaning (from top to bottom, and in every corner), creative recipes, clothing donations, and contacting people to stay in touch remotely.  Nonetheless, Lewis found opportunities for napping.  Unsuspectingly, he provided cute photographs!  




















He also had fun making creative hats.  Ha ha!























We hope that these images brought a smile to your day.