Brooklyn Man Interrupts SuperBowl Post Game Press Conference with “Investigate 9/11″ Comment

I have always maintained I have no idea what exactly happened on 9/11, but that the official story is the biggest bunch of bullshit I have ever heard. As time passes more and more people are coming to the same conclusion, and more and more disturbing facts are coming forward. Personally, it appears all roads lead to the Saudis and I would also assume certain factions within the “power elite” were also involved behind the scenes.

This video clip is simply incredible.

 

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Brooklyn Man Interrupts SuperBowl Post Game Press Conference with “Investigate 9/11″ Comment originally appeared on A Lightning War for Liberty on February 3, 2014.

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Past Time for Genetically Enhanced Wheat

GMO WheatAmericans and much of the rest of the world have
been safely and healthfully eating foods made from ingredients
derived from modern biotech corn and soybean varieties for more
than a decade. An
insightful op-ed
in today’s New York Times argues that
it is way past time for researchers to develop and farmers to plant
enhanced biotech wheat varieties. Like corn and soy, genetically
enhanced wheat would resist insects and herbicides. As Oklahoma
State University agricultural economist Jayson Lusk and physician
Henry Miller of Stanford University’s Hoover Institution point
out:

Today, it’s easy to see why corn and soybean farmers made the
switch. Crop yields have increased and farmers have been able to
reduce their use of chemical insecticides and shift to less toxic
herbicides to control weeds. They’ve also made more money. Over the
same period, the amount of land planted in wheat has dropped by
about 20 percent, and although yields have increased, productivity
growth has been lower than for the crops genetically engineered
with molecular techniques….

The scientific consensus is that existing genetically engineered
crops are as safe as the non-genetically engineered hybrid plants
that are a mainstay of our diet. The government should be
encouraging and promoting these technologies.

Besides endowing wheat with now-standard enhancements,
researchers can also add drought resistance characteristics. For
example, Egyptian researchers reported ten years ago that they had

dramatically increased drought resistance
in wheat by adding a
specific gene from barley to wheat:

The researchers, at Cairo’s Agricultural Genetic Engineering
Research Institute (AGERI), say their technique reduces the number
of irrigations needed from eight to one, and that the wheat could
be cultivated with rainfall alone in some desert areas.

The Times op-ed concludes:

Given the importance of wheat and the confluence of tightening
water supplies, drought, a growing world population and competition
from other crops, we need to regain the lost momentum. To do that,
we need to acquire more technological ingenuity and to end
unscientific, excessive and discriminatory government
regulation.

Yes indeed.

For more background, see my article, “The
Top 5 Lies About Biotech Crops
.”

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30Y Treasury Yield Tumbles To 7-Month Lows As Nasdaq Loses 4,000

US equities are pressing fresh lows of the day as USDJPY tests 101. The Nasdaq just broke 4,000 – its worst drop in 8 months; The Dow trading back under its 200DMA; and now every major index is in negative territory from the December Taper. Most notably though, Treasury yields are tumbling as weak data and safe-haven flows have pressed 30-year yields to their lowest sicen July 5th 2013. VIX is trading 20.7% – its highest in 4 months.

 

All major indices now red from the December Taper…

 

As Nasdaq loses 4000 and drops by the most since June..

 

as Bond yields collapse to 7 month lows…

 

Charts: Bloomberg

Bonus Chart – WTF in financials…


    



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Possible meth-making trash removed from Hip Pocket roadway Sun.

A not-so-simple 2 liter bottle found by a woman on Hip Pocket Road late Sunday morning led to a hazardous material team collecting the bottle and other ingredients found in the street that may have been used to produce methamphetamine drugs, Peachtree City police said.

The woman found the trash on the northern section of the road inside a bag at about 11:20 a.m., police said. After picking it up, she noticed a suspicious substance inside the bottle and called 911, police said.

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Consumers are Switching to Cash in the Wake of Recent Credit Card Data Breaches

“We aren’t releasing that data,” said a Visa spokeswoman in response to a query about whether the company had noticed a recent dip in card use. A MasterCard spokesman declined to comment.

– From yesterday’s New York Times article: Newly Wary, Shoppers Trust Cash 

A very interesting article was published yesterday by the New York Times. It highlighted the fact that according to an Associated Press poll, 37% of Americans “had made an effort to use cash instead of credit or debit cards to pay for purchases as a result of the recent data thefts.” While I certainly agree with the assessment that people will likely only switch to cash temporarily and move back to plastic as soon as their low attention span minds allow, doubt regarding credit cards has been firmly planted in people’s minds. The more breaches we see in the future, the more people will look for alternatives.

Fortunately, we already have Bitcoin, and the more people learn about it, the more people will continue to adopt it. While the criticisms remain with people saying “but where can you spend them,” this is becoming an increasingly false critique. You can now buy airfare with Bitcoin, all the items on Overstock.com as well as also precious metals. In fact, the precious metals part has me particularly excited, and Amagi Metals is a local company that has led the way in BTC payments for PMs. They are also running a series of specials on silver all of February which you should definitely check out.

Now from the New York Times:

Like dieters vowing to trade cupcakes for carrots, a number of American shoppers are making a new pledge: cash only.

The drumbeat of disclosures about credit and debit card breaches at major retailers (and hints of more to come) has unnerved consumers to the point where chatter online and at the water cooler is filled with people promising to curb their plastic habits.

“This is CRAZY. First my Target card, now this,” wrote Lorraine McCullough on the Michaels Stores Facebook page last week after the arts and crafts chain said that it was investigating whether customer data had been exposed. “I am going to pay cash from now on.”

A poll released last week by The Associated Press and GfK Public Affairs & Corporate Communications found that 37 percent of Americans had made an effort to use cash instead of credit or debit cards to pay for purchases as a result of the recent data thefts — almost as many as those who checked personal credit reports because of the thefts. (Just 29 percent said they had changed passwords or requested new cards.)

Screen Shot 2014-02-03 at 10.30.05 AM

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Dude, "It's Going To Be A Bloodbath": Newly Private Dell To Fire 15,000

Curious why Michael Dell was so eager to take the company he founded private? So he could do stuff like this without attracting too much attention. According to the Channel Register, the recently LBOed company is “starting the expected huge layoff program this week, claiming numbers will be north of 15,000.” Of course, with a private sponsor in charge of the recently public company, the only thing that matters now is maximizing cash flows in an environment of falling PC sales, a commoditisation of the server market and a perceived need to better serve enterprises with their ever-increasing mobile and cloud-focused IT requirements – things that do not bode well for Dell’s EBITDA – and the result is perhaps the largest axing round in the company’s history. But at least the shareholders cashed out while they could.

More on the upcoming layoffs:

We heard from people close to the Round Rock Dell HQ area that Dell management has every conference room booked, and every HR person and security staff member is at work. There are cuts in all departments, according to one of our sources, who says some of these have already been downsized and are now being told to cut 15 per cent more heads.

We hear the worldwide layoff number is now greater than 15,000 people.

Our insider commented: “It’s going to be a bloodbath.”

So what can those on the receiving end of said bloodbath expect? Not much. “The severance package is two months’ pay plus an extra week of pay for each year of service, a bonus at 75 per cent, obligated COBRA health insurance for 18 months in the United States, and outplacement services (in the US at least).”

The internal justification for th move:

… Dell has started its Stateside layoffs this week. Internal company
emails seen by The Reg mention “simplifying client support structure –
both basic and up sell,” “client support structure combined – Consumer
and Commercial come under one umbrella,” and “Up sell offers will align
with Pro Support and will “evolve”. The “evolve” word could mean that
further changes are coming.

Also known as trying to remain cash flow positive in a world that has long since moved on and left Dell in the dust. We wish the company’s billionaire founder well as he progresses with the bloodbathing, just as we wish the BLS the best of luck in the coming weeks as they use every seasonal adjustment gimmick known under the sun to make the 15,000 mass termination disappear.


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1cNR2xv Tyler Durden

Dude, “It’s Going To Be A Bloodbath”: Newly Private Dell To Fire 15,000

Curious why Michael Dell was so eager to take the company he founded private? So he could do stuff like this without attracting too much attention. According to the Channel Register, the recently LBOed company is “starting the expected huge layoff program this week, claiming numbers will be north of 15,000.” Of course, with a private sponsor in charge of the recently public company, the only thing that matters now is maximizing cash flows in an environment of falling PC sales, a commoditisation of the server market and a perceived need to better serve enterprises with their ever-increasing mobile and cloud-focused IT requirements – things that do not bode well for Dell’s EBITDA – and the result is perhaps the largest axing round in the company’s history. But at least the shareholders cashed out while they could.

More on the upcoming layoffs:

We heard from people close to the Round Rock Dell HQ area that Dell management has every conference room booked, and every HR person and security staff member is at work. There are cuts in all departments, according to one of our sources, who says some of these have already been downsized and are now being told to cut 15 per cent more heads.

We hear the worldwide layoff number is now greater than 15,000 people.

Our insider commented: “It’s going to be a bloodbath.”

So what can those on the receiving end of said bloodbath expect? Not much. “The severance package is two months’ pay plus an extra week of pay for each year of service, a bonus at 75 per cent, obligated COBRA health insurance for 18 months in the United States, and outplacement services (in the US at least).”

The internal justification for th move:

… Dell has started its Stateside layoffs this week. Internal company
emails seen by The Reg mention “simplifying client support structure –
both basic and up sell,” “client support structure combined – Consumer
and Commercial come under one umbrella,” and “Up sell offers will align
with Pro Support and will “evolve”. The “evolve” word could mean that
further changes are coming.

Also known as trying to remain cash flow positive in a world that has long since moved on and left Dell in the dust. We wish the company’s billionaire founder well as he progresses with the bloodbathing, just as we wish the BLS the best of luck in the coming weeks as they use every seasonal adjustment gimmick known under the sun to make the 15,000 mass termination disappear.


    



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Our Two Most Onerous Taxes: College Tuition And Healthcare Insurance

Submitted by Charles Hugh-Smith of OfTwoMinds blog,

It is not coincidence that these two unofficial taxes–healthcare and college tuition–are soaring in cost, outpacing all other household expenses.

I have long argued that to make an apples-to-apples comparison of real tax rates in the U.S. and other equivalently developed advanced democracies, we have to include two enormous expenses that are funded by the central state in countries such as Denmark and France: healthcare and college tuition/fees.

In The Real-World Middle Class Tax Rate: 75% (July 5, 2012), I estimated that healthcare insurance (if paid out of gross income, as we self-employed workers do) in the U.S. is roughly equivalent to a 15% tax.

Now that the Orwellian-named Affordable Care Act (ACA) is raising costs and deductibles, the true cost of healthcare (a.k.a. sickcare, because being chronically sick is so darned profitable for the cartels) is more like 20% in America.

Correspondent Tim L. (whose daughter is attending a prestigious STEM–science, technology, engineering, math–university) recently called $40-$50,000 per year college tuition what it really is: a tax:

College tuition is just another tax. If you can afford to pay it, you have to. If you cannot, you do not. Anytime you have to pay more for something because you can, you are paying a tax. Between traditional taxes, the college tuition tax, and the health insurance tax (also paid only by those who can afford to), I figure this year and the next three I'm in a 100+% tax bracket.

Middle-class Scandinavians famously pay around 65% to 75% of their gross incomes in taxes, but these taxes fund national healthcare for all and nearly free college tuition and fees. Add $200,000 (four years of tuition/fees at $50,000/year) in tax to the already-high U.S. real tax rate, and the real tax rate for middle-class households exceeds 100% of gross income.

Since only those with significant savings can possibly afford to pay a $200,000 tuition tax, the average-income household is left with one choice: the debt-serfdom of student loans. This is the acme of a morally bankrupt system of higher education: you need a college degree to have any hope of succeeding in America, but the only way to get that degree is to enter debt servitude, with no guarantees of future income needed to pay off the debt.

It is not coincidence that these two unofficial taxes–healthcare and college tuition–are soaring in cost, outpacing all other household expenses. The only other household item that is skyrocketing is debt:



The two unofficial taxes–paid by debt, either student loans, or Federal deficits– have no restraints: if you can't pay, then the upper-middle class taxpayers who are paying most of the Federal tax will, one way or another:



Meanwhile, guess what's been flat to down for the past 40 years–yup, the earned income of the bottom 90%:



With an unofficial tax rate for healthcare and college tuition that makes Scandinavian countries look like low-tax havens, no wonder the middle class in America is vanishing like mist in Death Valley. The political class is now bleating about the erosion of the middle class and rising wealth inequality. There are two primary sources of rising inequality in America: the Federal Reserve and the higher-education and healthcare cartels that so generously fund the campaigns of the bleating politicos.

Want to Reduce Income/Wealth Inequality? Abolish the Engine of Inequality, the Federal Reserve (January 28, 2014)

Healthcare "Reform": the State and Plutocracy Stripmine the Middle Class (Again)(November 9, 2009)

Higher education needn't be a bloated, ineffective, obsolete, morally bankrupt cartel: we could have a Nearly Free University system that is available to all.


    



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Crazy Abenomics Orgy In Japan Is Ending Already – Pounding Hangover Next

Wolf Richter   http://ift.tt/NCxwUy   http://ift.tt/Wz5XCn

Kudos to the Bank of Japan. Its heroic campaign to water down the yen has borne fruit. The Japanese may not have noticed it because it is not indicated in bold red kanji on their bank and brokerage statements, and so they might not give their Bank of Japandemonium full credit for it, but about 20% of their magnificent wealth has gone up in smoke in 2013. And in 2014, more of it will go up in smoke – according to the plan of Abenomics.

What folks do notice is that goods and services keep getting more expensive. Inflation has become reality. The scourge that has so successfully hallowed out the American middle class has arrived in Japan. The consumer price index rose 1.6% in December from a year earlier. While prices of services edged up 0.6%, prices of goods jumped 2.6%.

It’s hitting households. In December, their average income was up 0.3% in nominal terms from a year earlier. But adjusted for inflation – this is where the full benefits of Abenomics kick in – average income dropped 1.7%. Real disposable income dropped 2.1%.

Abenomics is tightening their belts. But hey, they voted for this illustrious program. So they’re not revolting just yet. But they’re thinking twice before they extract with infinite care their pristine and beloved 10,000-yen notes from their wallets. And inflation-adjusted consumption expenditures – excluding housing, purchase of vehicles, money gifts, and remittances – dropped 2.3%.

But purchases of durable goods have been soaring. Everyone is front-loading big ticket items ahead of April 1, when the very broad-based consumption tax will be hiked from 5% to 8%. Pulling major expenditures forward a few months or even a year or so is the equivalent of obtaining a guaranteed 3% tax-free return on investment. That’s huge in a country where interest rates on CDs are so close to zero that you can’t tell the difference and where even crappy 10-year Japanese Government Bonds yield 0.62%. It’s a powerful motivation.

And it has turned into a frenzy. In December, households purchased 32.2% more in durable goods than the same month a year earlier, in November 25.2%, in October 40.4%. These front-loaded purchases have been goosing the economy in late 2013. But shortly before April 1, they will grind to a halt. The Japanese have been through this before.

In 1996, after the consumption tax hike from 3% to 5% was passed and scheduled to take effect on April 1, 1997, consumers and businesses went on a buying binge of big-ticket items to dodge the extra 2% in taxes. The economy boomed. But it ended in an enormous hangover. In the spring 1997, as the tax hike took effect, business and consumer spending ground to a halt, and the economy skittered into a nasty recession that lasted a year and a half!

First indications of a repeat performance are already visible. The Japan Automobile Manufacturers Association (JAMA) forecast last week that sales of automobiles, after an already lousy 2013, would plunge 9.8% this year to 4.85 million units, the lowest since 2011 when the earthquake and tsunami laid waste to car purchases.

In response, automakers will curtail production for domestic sales. Other makers of durable goods – those that still manufacture in Japan – will prepare for the hangover in a similar manner. Housing and construction will get hit. Retailers will get hit too. During the last consumption tax hike, many large retailers tried to keep their chin above water by not passing the 2% tax hike on to their customers but shove it backwards up the pipeline to their suppliers. This time, having learned its lesson, the government is insisting on inflation, and it passed legislation last year that would force retailers to stick their customers with an across-the-board 3% price increase.

In 2014, the hangover will be even worse than in 1997. Businesses and consumers are dodging a hike of three percentage points, not two percentage points. Hence, the motivation to front-load is even stronger, the payoff greater, and the subsequent falloff steeper. This, on top of the already toxic concoction of stagnant wages and rising prices. Oh, and the plight of the retirees, whose savings and income streams are gradually getting eaten up by inflation. The glories of Abenomics.

But there are beneficiaries. Japan Inc. benefits from lower cost of labor. The government, without having to reform its drunken ways, might somehow be able to keep its out-of-control deficits and its mountain of debt from blowing up in the immediate future. Throughout, the Bank of Japan, which is buying up enough government bonds to monetize the entire deficit plus part of the mountain of existing debt, will remain in control of the government bond market, what little is left of it – even if it has to buy the last bond that isn’t totally nailed down. But for the real economy the party is now ending, and by spring, a pounding hangover will set in. 

According to Japan’s state religion of Abenomics, devaluing the yen would boost exports and cut imports. The resulting trade surplus would jumpstart the economy and induce Japan Inc. to invest at home. It would save Japan. But the opposite is happening. Read…. Why Japan’s Trade Fiasco Worries Me So Much


    



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Connecticut Pols Blame Underwhelming Gun Registration Figures on Postal Glitches, Propose Amnesty

AR-15Even before the Connecticut deadline passed for
registering semi-automatic so-called “assault weapons” and
high-capacity magazines that can hold more than ten rounds, it was

pretty obvious
that noncompliance would be high. That’s no
shocker, since
noncompliance with gun registration laws and other restrictions
tends to be very high
, in the U.S. and abroad. But if you
needed any further confirmation that state officials are a little
disapponted with the turnout, try this on for size: Blaming postal
snafus,
Governor Malloy
and
state lawmakers
are already calling for an amnesty for
scofflaws and a do-over on the effort to register scary-looking
firearms and their magazines.

According to counts conducted at the close of registration
period with the end of 2013, Connecticut gun owners
registered 50,016 “assault weapons” and 38,290 high-capacity
magazines
. Swell. But how does that compare to the number that
were supposed to be registered under the law?

As it turns out, the Connecticut Office of Legislative Research
looked
into just that issue in 2011
. The numbers they came up with
were guesstimates, at best, but those guesstimates … ummm …
somewhat overshadow the number of registrations. Drawing on figures
from the National Shooting Sports Foundation, the trade association
for the firearms industry, the OLR says that the number of
high-capacity magazines “could be in the tens of millions” with
“over 2.4 million large capacity magazines in Connecticut that
originated at the retail level.”

Those magazines are a mix of handgun and rifle accessories, and
largely extrapolated from relatively firm gun numbers based on
National Instant Criminal Background Check System
records
. In terms of rifles that use high-capacity
magazines—the sort of long guns likely to be classified as “assault
weapons”—the OLR came up with 372,000.

That’s millions of magazines, against 38,000 registrations, and
almost 400,000 rifles, with 50,000 bits of paperwork filed. Hence,
calls for an amnesty and extended registration period. The U.S.
Postal Service must have really dropped the ball. Or,
maybe, people are just tired of control-freak politiicans who

build on and abuse every intrusive policy they impose
.

Amnesty. Yeah, good luck with that.

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