Friday, September 14, 2018

HOTDOG

It is another long weekend and the first thing that came to my mind is to spend time with HOTDOG. She is a loving angel and half of my soul. I look forward to go home every day, give her hugs, kisses and a slow walk knowing that she has waited hours for my return.

She "trains" me how to love unconditionally, teaches me the value and importance of companionship, and that love and affection is actually contagious. I become more sensitive when dealing with HOTDOG, providing more hand gestures, talk to her with happy facial expression. Otherwise, her ears will pull back!

So now I wonder if pets are able to nurture a good lover. I believe so and hypothetically, I should date a dog owner (I'm picky and I prefer corgi)!!


Saturday, March 19, 2016

A number of employers, particularly tech companies, who claim they have a large number of unfilled positions and can’t find enough skilled American workers to fill all of their needs, and thus need to attract skilled foreign workers through an expanded H1B visa program.
In the opposite corner: Immigration skeptics, including probably every unemployed programmer in the country, who think tech companies simply prefer to hire cheaper imported labor rather than more expensive American workers. From this perspective, even one unemployed American tech worker is proof that the H1B program undermines citizen employment.
How shall we break this impasse and make progress on what should be one of the easiest incremental reforms in the immigration reform debate? A bipartisan commission likely to end in gridlock? Raw political “we won, you lost” power? Further inaction, which just exacerbates the problem?
Here’s a better idea—how about a market mechanism that would determine once and for all not only who is right, but that would determine what the market-clearing price for skilled immigrant labor actually is, informing future immigration policy formation?
Right now, H1B visas are issued on a first come, first served basis, for a flat fee, and the number is arbitrarily capped. Such a system tells nothing about how much an H1B visa (and thus a skilled immigrant worker) is actually worth to an employer. And because the number is capped and the fee low, the system actually encourages a lottery or jackpot approach—in other words, employers would apply for as many visas as possible, hoping to get enough. This is an irrational system.
It would make much more sense to allocate H1B visas via an auction process. If H1B visas were auctioned to employers each year in a sealed bid process, with the bids allocated from highest to lowest until the available permits were exhausted, supply and demand would establish the market-clearing price for the right to hire a skilled immigrant worker. Because of the likely higher fees resulting from the auction mechanism, employers would have no incentive to hire an immigrant worker if an equivalent American worker were available, which would lead to more accurately determining areas where shortages of American workers actually exist.
Additionally, it has been estimated that such a process could raise significant revenue, perhaps as much as $1 billion annually, which could be directed toward funding improvements in border control, a bio-metric entry and exit system, and other features of a modernized immigration system.
Further, these new, market-determined H1B visas should be transferable between employers, which would allow for further gathering of value information and market efficiency through a dynamic allocation of skilled immigrant workers.
Such a system would effectively price the value of skilled immigrant workers to the U.S. economy, informing immigration policy decisions, providing tech employers with more certainty, and particularly would serve to help determine how many H1B visas are made available based on market forces rather than the arbitrary fiat dictates of bureaucrats.
Of all the controversial elements of proposed immigration reform plans, the H1B visa impasse should be the easiest to solve. Moving the allocation decision from an arbitrary process to a market-clearing auction should settle the debate over our economy’s demand for skilled immigrant labor, and an incremental success in the highly controversial immigration debate might help to break the immigration reform impasse in other areas as well.

Saturday, September 26, 2015

There is a threshold one should not cross: when a mise en scรจne becomes, not a denunciation, but a bit of a theater.

Wednesday, August 19, 2015

So I found this interesting site that you might want to give it a shot. http://www.namespage.com/.

So, here it says about my name and if you think you know me well enough, tell me if this is true.

Chua Zie Chieh

Given Life Path Number: 7

Meaning of this life path number: Highly intelligent, sometimes philosophical and also imaginative! You have psychical talent and may enjoy your own solitude. Let's call this a loner quality. Since you find it hard to take anything at face value, your path will lead you to study, test, and analyze a great many things. Sometimes it would be beneficial to you to have more faith. Without faith you tend to become very cynical. You are a born searcher and seeker of truth. Attracted to all things spiritual and mystical. Loving natural beauty: ocean, green grass, plants, flowers. Always leaving an air of mystery of yourself to others.

You find it hard to open up with others. If your Life Path is seven then you are wise and studious. Having an perfectionist nature about yourself you are devoted to invetigating the unknown and amounting knowledge. Your field work wise should be someting related to analysis, deductive reasoning, scientific knowledge or technical ability.
I'm sorry I'm not sorry for believing that everything in life should be earned and I will never raise my expectations that I'm entitled to something just because I tried my best.

Monday, August 17, 2015

When you go into the woods and you look at the trees, you see all these different trees. Some of them are bent, some are straight, some are evergreen. You see why it is the way it is. You understand the nature of competition for sunlight. But you don't get all emotional about it; you just allow and appreciate it. The minute you get near humans, you lose all of that. You are constantly commenting and the judging mind comes in. So now, I should practice turning people into trees, which means allow and appreciate them just the way they are.