The Nail In The Petrodollar Coffin: Gazprom Begins Accepting Payment For Oil In Ruble, Yuan

Several months ago, when Russia announced the much anticipated “Holy Grail” energy deal with China, some were disappointed that despite this symbolic agreement meant to break the petrodollar’s stranglehold on the rest of the world, neither Russia nor China announced payment terms to be in anything but dollars. In doing so they admitted that while both nations are eager to move away from a US Dollar reserve currency, neither is yet able to provide an alternative.

This changed in late June when first Gazprom’s CFO announced the gas giant was ready to settle China contracts in Yuan or Rubles, and at the same time the People’s Bank of China announced that its Assistant Governor Jin Qi and Russian central bank Deputy Chairman Dmitry Skobelkin held a meeting in which they discussed cooperating on project and trade financing using local currencies. The meeting discussed cooperation in bank card, insurance and financial supervision sectors.

And yet, while both sides declared their operational readiness and eagerness to bypass the dollar entirely, such plans remained purely in the arena of monetary foreplay and the long awaited first shot across the Petrodollar bow was absent.

Until now.

According to Russia’s RIA Novosti, citing business daily Kommersant, Gazprom Neft has agreed to export 80,000 tons of oil from Novoportovskoye field in the Arctic; it will accept payment in rubles, and will also deliver oil via the Eastern Siberia-Pacific Ocean pipeline (ESPO), accepting payment in Chinese yuan for the transfers. Meaning Russia will export energy to either Europe or China, and receive payment in either Rubles or Yuan, in effect making the two currencies equivalent as far as the Eurasian axis is conerned, but most importantly, transact completely away from the US dollar thus, finally putin'(sic) in action the move for a Petrodollar-free world.

More on this long awaited first nail in the petrodollar coffin from RIA:

The Russian government and several of the country’s largest exporters have widely discussed the possibility of accepting payments in rubles for oil exports. Last week, Russia began to ship oil from the Novoportovskoye field to Europe by sea. Two oil tankers are expected to arrive in Europe in September.

 

According to Kommersant, the payment for these shipments will be received in rubles.

 

Gazprom Neft will not only accept payments in rubles; subsequent transfers via the ESPO may be paid for in yuan, the newspaper reported.

 

According to the newspaper, the change in currency was made because of the Western sanctions against Russia.

 

As a protective measure, Russia decided to avoid making its payments in US dollars, which can be tracked and controlled by the United States government, Kommersant reported.

“Protective measure” meaning that it was the US which managed to Plaxico itself by pushing Russia to transact away from the US Dollar, in the process showing the world it can be done, and slamming the first nail in the petrodollar’s coffin.

This is not surprising to anyone who has been following our forecast of the next steps in the transition from the Petrodollar to the Gas-O-Yuan. Recall from April:

The New New Normal flow of funds:

  1. Gazprom delivering gas to China.
  2. China Gazprom paying in Yuan (convertible into Rubles)
  3. Gazprom funding itself increasingly in Yuan.
  4. Russia buying Chinese goods and services in Yuan (convertible into Rubles)

And all of this with the US banker cartel completely disintermediated courtesy of the glaring absence of the USD in any of the above listed steps, or as some may call it: from the Petrodollar to the Gas-o-yuan (something 40 central banks have already figured out… just not the Fed).

Still confused? Then read “90% Of Gazprom Clients Have “De-Dollarized”, Will Transact In Euro & Renminbi” for just how Gazprom set the stage for the day it finally would push the button to skip the dollar entirely. Which it just did.

In conclusion we will merely say what we have said previously, and it touches on what will be the most remarkable aspect of Obama’s legacy, because while the hypocrite “progressive” president who even his own people have accused of being a “brown-faced Clinton” after selling out to Wall Street and totally  wrecking US foreign policy abroad, is already the worst president in a century of US history according to public polls, the fitting epitaph will come when the president’s policies put an end to dollar hegemony and end the reserve currency status of the dollar once and for all, thereby starting the rapid, and uncontrolled, collapse of the US empire. To wit:

In retrospect it will be very fitting that the crowning legacy of Obama’s disastrous reign, both domestically and certainly internationally, will be to force the world’s key ascendent superpowers (we certainly don’t envision broke, insolvent Europe among them) to drop the Petrodollar and end the reserve status of the US currency.

As of this moment, both Russia and China have shown not on that it can be done, but it is done. Expect everyone to jump onboard the new superpower axis bandwagon soon enough.




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

Argentina – Sliding Down A Slippery Slope

Update: The official and black-market Peso has collapsed further today to new record lows.

  • *ARGENTINA'S BLACK MARKET PESO WEAKENS 1.7% TO 14.45/USD: AMBITO

which can mean only one thing…

  • *ARGENTINA'S MERVAL INDEX OF LEADING SHARES RISES 3.7%

Submitted by Pater Tenebrarum of Acting-Man blog,

Planned Bond Exchange Declared Illegal

You bet it is illegal – in its continued attempt to welsh on its creditors, Argentina's  government has attempted to move its debt out of the reach of US courts by swapping its debt for new debt issued under local law. The problem is of course that “local law” can be made up to the government's liking. Simply put, investors would never have lent the government money in the first place if these bonds had not been issued under US law. By entering clauses that determined that New York would be the relevant jurisdiction, Argentina's government enticed investors to lend a lot of money to it at what were then quite favorable terms.

Obviously, for the government to attempt to alter these clauses retroactively by means of a swap makes a complete mockery of these contractual agreements. Hence, judge Griesa's determination that such action would be illegal is perfectly justified and correct (for details on the legal backdrop, we refer you to our previous article  “Argentina – Deadbeat State Goes on the Attack”). In the interest of achieving a settlement, the judge wisely refrained from issuing a contempt of court finding (he can't very well throw Argentina into jail anyway). It is obvious that judge Griesa just wishes the issue would go away, but to his credit, he continues to stand firm on the law.

According to a recent Bloomberg report:

“Argentina’s plan to pay its restructured debt beyond the reach of U.S. courts is illegal, said the judge overseeing litigation stemming from the nation’s 2001 default, while declining to hold the country in contempt.

 

U.S. District Judge Thomas Griesa said in Manhattan federal court today that the proposal, announced Aug. 19 by Argentina President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, is “invalid, illegal and in violation of current court orders and injunctions.”

 

Griesa declined a request by lawyers representing investors holding Argentina’s defaulted bonds that he find the nation in contempt of court. The judge told lawyers for both sides that a contempt finding wouldn’t add to the prospects of a settlement between Argentina and its creditors.

 

“The thing that is of paramount necessity is to have a settlement,” Griesa said. “There must be a settlement.”

(emphasis added)

We must once again emphasize here that it does not matter that many of the current owners of Argentine debt that comprise the so-called “hold-outs” are denounced as “vulture funds” because they have bought the defaulted debt cheaply. It is completely immaterial to the legal questions at hand whether some of the original creditors have capitulated and sold their claims in the secondary market. Anyone who becomes a bondholder inherits all the rights connected with the bonds.

We must stress once again that we are a bit torn on the issue for the reason that we believe that lending money to governments is somewhat dubious per se. After all, those who lend to governments do so in the knowledge that the State is the only entity in the market economy that legally obtains its income by coercion. Certainly investors would benefit from being taught the lesson that lending to governments is not as risk-free an activity as is widely assumed. The fact that Argentina's tax payers will pay the price for their government's folly is undoubtedly deplorable.

On the other hand, we are talking about a government here that has just raised its spending by 56% in a single year, is hell-bent on destroying the country's economy and is abridging the economic liberty of its citizens ever more. As a result, there may actually be unexpected benefits for Argentina's citizens from the action of the hold-outs as well, as it is likely to restrict the government's room to maneuver.

 

Next “Official” Peso Devaluation Imminent

The renewed default is actually a sideshow to the ongoing economic catastrophe induced by the government's policies in Argentina. Its economy minister is a declared central planner, who actually believes markets to be surplus to requirements. As Nicolas Cachanosky writes:

“Argentina’s economic minister, Axel Kicillof, has become famous for his assertion that it is possible to centrally manage the economy now because we have spreadsheets such as Microsoft Excel. This assertion comes from the mistaken view that the cost of production determines final prices, and it reveals a profound misunderstanding of the market process.

 

This issue, however, is not new. The first half of the twentieth century witnessed the debate over economic calculation under socialism. Apparently, Argentine officials have much to learn from this old debate. The problem is not whether or not we have powerful spreadsheets at our disposal; the problem is the impossibility of successfully creating a centrally-planned market.”

(emphasis added)

 

CFK and Kicillof

Argentina's president Christina Fernadez-Kirchner and her economy minister Axel Kicillof.

(Photo credit: DyN)

 

Indeed, Mises showed already in his 1920 monograph “Economic Calculation in the Socialist Commonwealth” that there was a fundamental problem all central planners were confronted with that could not possibly be overcome. Without markets and market-determined prices, economic calculation becomes impossible – therefore no rational economic choices are possible either. As the debate between Marxists, Mises and Hayek in the decades following the publication of Mises' article showed, none of the attempts to rescue central economic planning from this fundamental challenge were successful. In fact, it often seemed that Mises' and Hayek's opponents did not even fully grasp what the nature of the problem was. How powerful one's computers are is for instance completely irrelevant to the issue. As Mises noted later in Human Action:

The paradox of "planning" is that it cannot plan, because of the absence of economic calculation. What is called a planned economy is no economy at all. It is just a system of groping about in the dark.

 

There is no question of a rational choice of means for the best possible attainment of the ultimate ends sought. What is called conscious planning is precisely the elimination of conscious purposive action.”

(emphasis added)

All socialist economic planning schemes presuppose the existence of the fictional state of equilibrium (which is merely a mental tool, but has no counterpart in reality) and a static, unchanging economy, which is just as unrealistic. Even if one were to simply attempt to preserve all existing economic processes and end all economic and technological progress, change would still occur (population numbers will change, the weather will be different from year to year, mineral deposits will run out, etc.). Almost needless to say, even if such a fictional “equilibrium economy” were attainable, it wouldn't be worth having. It would be completely contrary to the human spirit.

Argentina's “economy minister” has something in common with France's Arnaud Montebourg – he is economically illiterate, to put it bluntly. In fact, the entire Argentinian government is apparently laboring under the misconception that it can successfully “plan” the economy.

For instance, deputy economy minister Emanuel Alvarez Agis believes he knows what the “correct” exchange rate for the Argentine peso is (note that the currency has lost as much of its value in the past ten years as the US dollar in an entire century). As rumors about an imminent devaluation begin to circulate – which is undoubtedly unavoidable, not only due to the renewed default, but simply due to the combination of enormous government spending and unbridled money printing that characterizes Argentina's economic policy – Agis asserts that this is “not the plan”. Of course his vehement denial essentially cinches it, based on the “never believe anything until it is officially denied” principle.

“Argentina’s deputy economy minister, Emanuel Alvarez Agis, rejected the idea that the country is heading for another devaluation.

 

“We won’t apply that program,” Alvarez Agis said in an interview with Radio Del Plata yesterday. “The exchange rate has to be competitive enough to benefit regional economies, but not so high that it makes imports too expensive.”

 

Economy Ministry spokeswoman Jesica Rey didn’t respond to an e-mail and telephone call seeking comment about another possible devaluation this year.

 

Argentina’s central bank controls the peso rate by buying and selling dollars in the spot and futures markets almost daily, as well as limiting foreign exchange purchases. Yesterday the bank sold $10 million, according to preliminary data.

 

The peso is poised for further declines, Alan Ruskin, the global head of Deutsche Bank AG’s Group of 10 foreign exchange in New York, said in an interview on “Bloomberg Surveillance.”

 

“Guys like ourselves are saying the currency could still lose something like 25 percent,” Ruskin said. “It still is one of the big shorts on the currency side.”

(emphasis added)

Argentina's citizens meanwhile are buying as many dollars as is legally possible for them. Citizens may exchange up to 20% of their salary or income into dollars, provided they leave the dollars on deposit with a bank for a minimum of one year. Otherwise, a 20% tax is imposed on the purchase (i.e., if the dollars are taken out in the form of cash currency). Dollars that are kept on deposit remain of course easily accessible for the government, which is not exactly a paragon of regime certainty, to put it mildly. Argentinians have lost their savings more times than we care to count, whether by inflation or by confiscatory deflation. They evidently know what is coming next:

“People have seen this before and they know there will be fewer and fewer dollars, while more pesos flow into the economy as the government increases spending,” Buscaglia said in an interview from Buenos Aires. “The natural reaction is to buy more dollars.” Government spending surged 56.5 percent in June from a year earlier.

 

Peso forwards showing trader expectations for the currency in three months declined 2.2 percent this week to 9.3 pesos per dollar.

 

The perception that Fernandez is radicalizing her policies is also driving investors to the dollar on concern she’ll tighten existing currency controls, according to Olaiz.

(emphasis added)

 

ARG peso-ann

The official (green line) and black market (blue line) peso rates, via dolarblu.net. The gap between the two continues to widen, a sure sign that the official rate will soon “catch up” a bit – click to enlarge.

 

The Argentine government meanwhile once again demonstrated its contempt for property rights by suing the subsidiary of a US company for daring to declare bankruptcy after having been ruined by the government's very own policies. The government is using an “anti-terrorism law” to attempt to reverse the bankruptcy. What is there to reverse one wonders? The company is insolvent. As an aside to this, it seems that the government also wants to introduce price controls and begin to “regulate profit margins” on a broad basis:

“Since defaulting, Fernandez has said she will use an anti-terrorism law to file a legal case against the local unit of Chicago-based RR Donnelley & Sons Co. (RRD) for “upsetting economic and financial order” after the printing company filed for bankruptcy and wrote off its assets in Argentina.

 

RR Donnelley said in a statement on Aug. 16 distributed by Globe Newswire that its Argentine unit wasn’t solvent and faced rising labor costs, inflation, materials price increases, devaluation, inability to pay debts and other issues that led to its decision to file for bankruptcy.

 

After Fernandez’s speech, securities regulator Alejandro Vanoli later said Argentina would seek to reverse the bankruptcy using a law against economic crimes.

Fernandez is also attempting to change a supply law that would seek to regulate prices and profit margins of goods.

(emphasis added)

In short, Argentina now has all the hallmarks of a full-blown Zwangswirtschaft based on the fascist model. Private property still exists on paper, but what may be done with it is decided by government bureaucrats. Ms. Kirchner's economic policy ideas obviously still had some room to get even worse than they already were. 

 

Conclusion:

It is actually quite sad to watch the continued downfall of Argentina's economy under the inept ministrations of its government. The only good thing that can possibly come from this is that it will set yet another example for others so they may avoid making similar mistakes. Unfortunately the example is being set on the backs of the country's citizens, who are seemingly forced to live from crisis to crisis. Politicians rarely pay the price for their atrocious policies, and we are quite sure Ms. Kirchner and her cronies have feathered their nests in ways the average citizen cannot even dream of (most recently, corruption allegations have caught up with Ms. Kirchner's vice president. Rampant government corruption has long been a hot topic in Argentina under Ms. Kirchner's rule). It is not as though Argentina didn't have great potential. If only politicians would leave its economy alone and stopped inflating the currency into oblivion, the country could easily and quickly regain its former prosperity.




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1pHSN5J Tyler Durden

California DMV Not Cool with Google’s Steering Wheel-Free Car

In May Google
unveiled a car unlike any other: Built in-house, it had no steering
wheel or brake or acceleration pedals. Although hype continues to
build about the possibilities of a bold redesign, California’s
Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) is officially not cool with this
breed of autonomous automobile.


From CNet
:

The California Department of Motor Vehicles has issued rules
that say a driver must be capable of “immediate physical control”
of a vehicle. So, the search giant’s prototype cars for now will
include steering wheels and a brake-pedal system.

The company said it would comply with the state’s regulations,
which will go into effect in mid-September. “During our testing we
are equipping the vehicles with manual controls such as a steering
wheel, brake pedal, and accelerator pedal,” said a Google
spokesperson. “With these additions, our safety drivers can test
the self-driving features while having the ability to take control
of the vehicle if necessary.”

Testing on private roads will begin next month, in prototypes
that will include a steering wheel and pedals. The California DMV
is expected to issue another regulation later this year that will
let manufacturers apply for permits to operate driverless
cars—without steering wheels, brakes or accelerators—in public
roads.

So, that kind of defeats the purpose of having a totally
driverless car. And, it’s not like Google slapped the thing
together without any safety and self-regulatory considerations. In
fact, greater safety is a big part of the push for self-driving
cars.  As I
wrote
when the vehicle debuted:

Google has long been seeking to
reduce human error in driving— 90
percent of road accidents are the result of human error
—so it
removed the human-controlled components. … The prototypes are
loaded with sensors that can deal with railroad
crossings, indecisive cyclists, and construction congestion
. In
case of failure, it has “redundant
systems for steering and braking.” Unlike Google’s other cars,
which can handle highway speeds, the prototype (for now) tops out
at 25 miles per hour, so it will do minimal damage if it bumps
somebody with its plastic windshield and thick foam
front-end. 

The cars could also mean cleaner, more efficient driving, fewer
cops on the roads, fewer licensing requirements (who needs a
driver’s license when you’re not actually driving?), less money
spent on insurance, and even the obsolescence of speed limits.

What the effects, positive or negative, will be of the DMV’s
interference in the work of one of the world’s most reputable
businesses are yet unknown, but as has been previously
pointed out
:

Policy makers must remember that their actions can produce harm.
If automated vehicles are demonstrated to be significantly safer
than manually driven vehicles, any misstep, convoluted law, or rule
that leads to unnecessary higher costs or delays translates to
increased injury and death.

For a different Reason perspective on self-driving cars
and the potential privacy pitfalls, click
here

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Omaha Police Fire More Than 30 Rounds at Robber With Pellet Gun, Killing Him and a Cops Crew Member

In June,
explaining
why he decided to let a TV crew
from Cops tag along with his officers, Omaha
Police Chief Todd Schmaderer said, “I’m proud of the department and
want the professionalism of our officers on display for the city
and the world to see.” Last night some of those officers,
accompanied by the Cops crew, stumbled upon a
robbery in progress at a Wendy’s in midtown Omaha. More than 30
rounds later, the suspect was dead, and a member of the TV crew was
dying.

The Omaha World-Herald reports
that the robber, who was armed only with an Airsoft pellet gun, did
not fire any of the rounds, all of which came from the police. “No
officers were injured and no suspects were considered at large
after the shooting,” the paper says.

Since Airsoft guns can
look a lot like the real thing, it may have been reasonable to view
the robber as armed and dangerous. Yet the number of rounds in the
absence of return fire seems excessive, and images from the scene
(not to mention the death of a bystander) suggest they were not
aimed very carefully. More information is expected at a press
conference this afternoon.

[Thanks to Citizen Nothing for the tip.]

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Elizabeth Nolan Brown Discusses Millennials on Fox Business

I had the opportunity to go
on Opening Bell with Maria Bartiromo this morning
and
discuss millennials, hipsters, and entrepreneurs—three subjects I
covered in a piece for Reason’s October issue titled
Rise
of the Hipster Capitalists
“. It was fun and mildly infuriating.
Host Sandra Smith quoted me as saying that millennials are
“doomed”; when I protested that doomed was my characterization
of what other people say about millennials, not personal analysis,
Smith told me I “should look back at my piece.” Okay,
fine. Here’s the paragraph in question: 

Popular wisdom about millennials seems to come in two varieties:
They are either an entitled, narcissistic group of
basement-dwellers, gazing at their selfies while the world burns,
or they’re a perfectly upstanding young cohort who got a raw deal
from the recession economy. Millennials make awful employees
because their boomer parents gave them too many soccer trophies; or
maybe they can’t find jobs because those same boomer parents aren’t
exiting the workforce. The one thing everyone can agree on is that
millennials are probably screwed.

I think it’s pretty clear that everything following from that
first line is meant as an example of “popular wisdom” about
millennials, not my own opinion. And in case there’s any doubt, I
spend the rest of the piece (the above is the opening
paragraph) making a case for the exact opposite. But after telling
me to re-read my own work, Smith went on to “quote” me,
context-free, saying millennials make awful employees because their
parents gave them too many trophies. Then she cut to the other
guests before I could respond. 

The other guests, Newedge Director of Market Strategy Robbert
van Batenburg and Value Advisory Founder Howard
Rosencrans, mostly just wanted to yell about how millennials
are the worst. They and Smith all seemed to have outsourced their
opinions to the Generic Millennial Crit playbook—we listen to
iPods! and drink Starbucks! and are lazy, and entitled, and “less
educated” (demonstrably untrue), and… well, see for
yourself: 

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LA Schools’ $1 Billion iPad Fiasco Ends After Corruption Revelations

Technology

Los Angeles Unified School District is
ending its billion-dollar iPad program
, which has drawn
widespread criticism for distributing expensive devices to teachers
who didn’t know what to do with them and students who kept losing
or breaking them.

The costly program was considered a total failure, and it’s
little surprise that district officials have finally relented and
scaled back. More surprising, however, are revelations that
District Superintendent John Deasy may have engaged in some crooked
bargaining to arrange the deal in the first place.

According to
The Los Angeles Times
, Deasy’s previous connections to
Apple and Pearson—the companies contracted to supply the iPads and
instructional materials for them, respectively—amount to a conflict
of interest. In hindsight, the bidding process that Apple and
Pearson won to score the contracts seems biased in those companies’
favor, The LA Times notes:

Last week, a draft report of a district technology committee,
obtained by The Times, was strongly critical of the bidding
process.

Among the findings was that the initial rules for winning the
contract appeared to be tailored to the products of the eventual
winners — Apple and Pearson — rather than to demonstrated district
needs. The report found that key changes to the bidding rules were
made after most of the competition had been eliminated under the
original specifications.

In addition, the report said that past comments or associations
with vendors, including Deasy, created an appearance of conflict
even if no ethics rules were violated.

Emails obtained by The LA Times show Jaime Aquino,
Deasy’s deputy superintendent, advising Pearson officials on how to
win the bid.

I should not that this isn’t the first Pearson has been
accused of something like this
. Pearson, a British company, is
the largest publisher of education materials in the world, and its
efforts to lockdown contracts for Common Core-aligned testing
material have drawn scrutiny.

Still, the iPad fiasco hasn’t dampened the district’s enthusiasm
for forcing costly new technology on unprepared students and
teachers. Select LA schools will be trying out other devices this
fall (some of which are actually more expensive), and Deasy is
fairly pleased with that:

“We will incorporate the lessons learned from the original
procurement process,” he said.

“We look forward to refining our processes and ultimately
achieve our vision to equip every one of our students with a
personal computing device to help them succeed in the 21st
century.”

I don’t run a bunch of schools, but this sounds like the exact
opposite of learning our lesson to me.

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Letter Reveals Tony Blair Advised Kazakhstan’s President on How to Spin Massacre of Innocent, Unarmed Protesters

Screen Shot 2014-08-27 at 11.35.49 AMIt doesn’t matter who pays Tony Blair, as long as Tony Blair gets paid. When he’s not busy committing war crimes or advising JP Morgan, the former UK Prime Minister (who has amassed a fortune estimated at over $115 million) can be found doing public relations work for some of the world’s most autocratic rulers, such as Kazakhstan’s Nursultan Nazarbayev.

There’s nothing warm and fuzzy about Kazakhstan. In its latest global corruption index, Transparency International ranked Kazakhstan as one of the most corrupt countries on earth in its latest report, 140 out of 177 to be precise (the higher your rank the more corrupt). The oil and gas rich former Soviet Republic has a horrible record when it comes to human rights, but that doesn’t stop Tony Blair from advising the country’s leadership in exchange for millions of dollars per year.


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Forget “Peak Oil” and “Peak Credit” … Are We On the Downslope of “Peak Intelligence”?

Scientists say that we have much smaller brains than our ancestors had 20,000 years ago … and we might have gotten stupider since agriculture became widespread.

Huffington Post reports that we've probably gotten dumber than even our Victorian ancestors:

A provocative new study suggests human intelligence is on the decline. In fact, it indicates that Westerners have lost 14 I.Q. points on average since the Victorian Era.

 

******

 

As for Dr. te Nijenhuis and colleagues, they analyzed the results of 14 intelligence studies conducted between 1884 to 2004, including one by Sir Francis Galton, an English anthropologist and a cousin of Charles Darwin. Each study gauged participants' so-called visual reaction times — how long it took them to press a button in response to seeing a stimulus. Reaction time reflects a person's mental processing speed, and so is considered an indication of general intelligence.

 

***

 

In the late 19th Century, visual reaction times averaged around 194 milliseconds, the analysis showed. In 2004 that time had grown to 275 milliseconds. Even though the machine gauging reaction time in the late 19th Century was less sophisticated than that used in recent years, Dr. te Nijenhuis told The Huffington Post that the old data is directly comparable to modern data.

 

***

 

This new research was published in the April 13 issue of Intelligence.

The Daily Mail notes that we've gotten dumber since the 1950s:

Richard Lynn, a psychologist at the University of Ulster, calculated the decline in humans’ genetic potential.

 

He used data on average IQs around the world in 1950 and 2000 to discover that our collective intelligence has dropped by one IQ point.

 

Dr Lynn predicts that if this trend continues, we could lose another 1.3 IQ points by 2050.

What's Making Us Dumber?

There are several theories for why we are getting dumber, including the following:

(1) Toxic chemicals in the environment can reduce intelligence.

Modern man is surrounded by toxic chemicals which have been shown to reduce intelligence.   Examples include flame retardant, lead (found in many lipsticks), certain pesticides (and see this and this),  fluoride (more).

Radiation can also reduce intelligence.  For example, radiation can reduce brain size.

Brian Moench, MD notes:

Many epidemiologic studies show that extremely low doses of radiation increase the incidence of  … diminished intelligence.

And a very well-established resource for doctors (the Merck Manuals) state:

The fetus is sensitive to damage from radiation because fetal cells are dividing very quickly and also differentiating from immature into mature cells. In the fetus, exposure in excess of 300 mGy during 8 to 25 weeks after conception may cause reduced intelligence and poor school performance.

(2) Humans evolved to eat a lot of Omega 3s:

Wild game animals have much higher levels of essential Omega 3 fatty acids than domesticated animals. Indeed, leading nutritionists say that humans evolved to consume a lot of Omega 3 fatty acids in the wild game and fish which they ate (more), and that a low Omega 3 diet is a very new trend within the last 100 years or so.

 

In other words, while omega 3s have just now been discovered by modern science, we evolved to get a lot of omega 3s … and if we just eat a modern, fast food diet without getting enough omega 3s, it can cause all sorts of health problems.

 

So something just discovered by science can be a central fuel which our bodies evolved to use.

Omega 3s – in turn – boost intelligence and help prevent cognitive decline.

(3) Similarly, Science Daily notes:

Exposure to specific bacteria in the environment, already believed to have antidepressant qualities, could increase learning behavior, according to research presented at the 110th General Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology in San Diego.

 

"Mycobacterium vaccae is a natural soil bacterium which people likely ingest or breath in when they spend time in nature," says Dorothy Matthews of The Sage Colleges in Troy, New York, who conducted the research with her colleague Susan Jenks.

 

***

 

"We found that mice that were fed live M. vaccae navigated the maze twice as fast and with less demonstrated anxiety behaviors as control mice," says Matthews.

 

In a second experiment the bacteria were removed from the diet of the experimental mice and they were retested. While the mice ran the maze slower than they did when they were ingesting the bacteria, on average they were still faster than the controls.

Obviously, we don't get in as much soil as our ancestors did.

(In addition, some bacteria in our gut greatly influence brain function. Most native cultures ate fermented foods containing healthy bacteria.)

(4) Exercise boosts intelligence … and our ancestors got a lot more exercise than we do!

"Even our most highly trained athletes pale in comparison to" farmers  7,000 years ago.

(5) In addition, high levels of cortisol – the chemical released when one is under continuous, unrelenting stress – and poverty can physically impair the brain and people’s ability to learn.

Hunter-gatherers had more leisure time – and a more playful attitude – than we do today.

(6) [For this and the next theory, we quote from HuffPost.] Dr. Jan te Nijenhuis points to the fact that women of high intelligence tend to have fewer children than do women of lower intelligence. This negative association between I.Q. and fertility has been demonstrated time and again in research over the last century.

(7) "The reduction in human intelligence … would have begun at the time that genetic selection became more relaxed," Dr. Gerald Crabtree, professor of pathology and developmental biology at Stanford University, told The Huffington Post in an email. "I projected this occurred as our ancestors began to live in more supportive high density societies (cities) and had access to a steady supply of food. Both of these might have resulted from the invention of agriculture, which occurred about 5,000 to 12,000 years ago."

Postscript:  Relaxing activities like meditation and prayer have been shown to increase brain mass and connectivity in certain areas of the brain.  And sex makes you smarter and causes brain growth.




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1zFzoU1 George Washington

2nd American ISIS Fighter Killed In Syria, CNN Reports

The anti-ISIS operation, Naharawan al-Sham, who distributed images of the first American to be killed fighting for ISIS yesterday, has according to CNN announced a second American was killed in battle representing ISIS. So far, neither ISIS (which often comments on death of its “martyrs”) or Naharawan al-Sham has released any images or evidence of the second death.

 

As CNN reports,

Douglas McAuthur McCain is not the only American who has been killed while fighting for ISIS, a coalition of Syrian opposition groups said Wednesday.

 

A second American was killed in a battle with rival opposition groups as well, said the coalition, which calls itself the Nahrawan of Syria.

 

But while the coalition released photos of McCain’s body and his passport, it did not offer any evidence of a second American’s death.

 

ISIS, which sometimes comments on the death of its “martyrs,” has made no official mention of the death of any American fighters.

 

 

Attorney General Eric Holder estimated this summer that there are 7,000 foreign fighters in the war-ravaged Middle Eastern nation.

 

More than 100 Americans are among those who have tried to join various militant groups in Syria, U.S. officials say. While some are aligned with ISIS, the fighters shift allegiance and it’s difficult to pin down a specific number, officials say. 

Naharawn al-Sham reported via Facebook:

Operation Room of Nahrwan Al Sham battle announced that the fighters managed to free four villages in the northern countryside of Aleppo. These villages are Al Adlieh, Al Zahrieh, Al Said Ali and Al Hasbeh

 

They added that 43 ISIS members were killed in the clashes and three others were captured.

 

Some of the killed members have American nationality.

 

They will be shown later

And Naharawan al-Sham preparing for the battle….

 

 

 

*  *  *

So are these the US-sponsored moderate terrorists?




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

Merkel Slams US Hegemony? “America Can’t Solve All The World’s Problems Anymore”

First Russia and China, then UAE, Egypt, and Turkey… and now it appears Germany (following a phone call with Putin) is pulling the rug out from under US hegemony – just as Obama’s warmongery ramps up…

  • *MERKEL SAYS U.S. CAN’T SOLVE ALL THE WORLD’S PROBLEMS ANYMORE

Which is odd because just yesterday, President Obama (who never lies) stated The United States is and will remain the one indispensable nation in the world… adding that “no other nation can do what we do.” Perhaps he is wrong?

“Even a superpower can’t solve all of the problems alone anymore,” German Chancellor Angela Merkel says.

Merkel did not stop there…

  • *PUTIN, MERKEL URGE DE-ESCALATION IN UKRAINE, KREMLIN SAYS
  • *PUTIN, MERKEL DISCUSSED GAS TRANSIT VIA UKRAINE, KREMLIN SAYS
  • *PUTIN INFORMED MERKEL OF NEW EAST UKRAINE AID PLAN: KREMLIN
  • *MERKEL URGES HOLLANDE TO CONTINUE REFORMS IN FRANCE
  • *MERKEL SAYS HOLLANDE HAS CHANCE TO REVIVE FRENCH ECONOMIC POWER

Seems like she is returning to the offensive from the defensive…




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