Biden’s Red Rant: Are Conservatives Being Set Up As Scapegoats For Disaster?

Biden’s Red Rant: Are Conservatives Being Set Up As Scapegoats For Disaster?

Did the establishment just declare open war on conservatives?  It’s hard to determine what the point of Biden’s recent “Red Rant” is, but it does seem like a shot across the bow of anyone that doesn’t agree with the authoritarianism of the extreme political left.  

An important fact to remember is that these types of speeches are ALWAYS intricately planned.  Biden likely didn’t write that speech, a team of writers composed it for him.  Biden didn’t pick the totalitarian blood red lights as his backdrop, someone else planned that out.  The two Marines standing behind Biden were clearly meant as message of intimidation; it didn’t work but that’s besides the point.

The level of hostility in Biden’s rant was carefully calculated, it was not haphazard.  People like to say that Biden has dementia and is losing his mind, but in this case Biden had very little to do with the production.  He is a puppet reading from a teleprompter and everything he says is scientifically constructed by a host of puppeteers.

Biden’s statement that “Donald Trump and the MAGA Republicans represent an extremism that threatens the very foundation of our republic…” is about as inflammatory as it gets when it comes to presidential declarations.  The only step beyond that is to send brownshirts and jackboots door-to-door. 

So, what is the motivation of Biden’s handlers in this case?  

The speech seems to have divided his base voters.  Even CNN tried to change the blood red color in Biden’s backdrop to pink – The symbolism of death and tyranny was obvious.  It is unlikely that the Red Rant was designed to rally Democrats to the extreme leftist cause.

Furthermore, polls indicate severely diminishing confidence in Biden’s capacity even as a mascot, with 75% of Democrats hoping for anyone other than Sleepy Joe to run in 2024.  The mainstream media has been working overtime to implant the narrative that conservatives will lose in November because of their support for anti-abortion laws at the state level.  However, this message has not been shown to translate into anti “MAGA” sentiment.  Multiple MAGA candidates have won their primary elections showing no sign of public hostility over abortion laws, at least in the Republican side.

Surveys show that the top concerns of Americans are food security and the economy.  Only 8% to 9% of Americans bring up abortion laws as a top concern. 

Unless there is a significant improvement in the economic conditions of the US, the probability of a red sweep in November is high.  The establishment knows this well.  In fact, economic conditions could be considerably worse after November.

The issue here is one of optics, which is why Biden’s vitriolic speech against anti-establishment conservatives might be crafted in preparation for a faltering Democratic Party rather than an attempt to “rally the leftist troops.”  The US economy is headed for an even more substantial downturn as we head into 2023 as the Federal Reserve hikes interest rates into economic weakness and the EU faces energy shortages that could spill over into the global supply chain.  Biden’s team and the media have been trying to spin the stagflation crisis as if all is well, constantly citing high jobs number created by covid stimulus measures as proof of the strongest economy ever.  This spin is about to fall apart as companies advance towards more layoffs at the end of this year.

Biden has done nothing to prepare the public for this eventuality as prices on necessities continue to remain high and average income families are facing financial distress this winter.

It might be in the establishment’s best interest to set the stage now for blaming conservatives for disasters they KNOW will occur next year.   The message will be:  “Look at what happens when you let these right wing lunatics gain government power.  The economy crashes!”   

Another explanation is that potential election inconsistencies will arise in November and the establishment knows this; so they are building a narrative in advance to attack any conservatives that raise questions and accuse them of “working against democracy” or “insurrection.”    

In either case, Biden’s speech is not the mere dribblings of an old fool, there is intent and calculated propaganda behind it.  We may not know exactly what the true purpose is for months to come.  

Tyler Durden
Sun, 09/04/2022 – 14:00

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The Global Energy Crunch

The Global Energy Crunch

Authored by Charles Hugh Smith via OfTwoMinds blog,

If we insist on doing the transition the hard, slow, costly way rather than the easy, fast, cheap way, it’s going to be a needlessly arduous, soul-crushing slog.

Let’s cover a few common-sense points and ask a few questions about the Global Energy Crunch. Let’s start with the high-tech, super-costly solutions that many promote as the surefire source of abundant, affordable energy: thorium reactors, mini/modular-reactors, clean coal plants and fusion.

Every one of these may turn out to be a solution, but in the here and now they take many years to build and huge sums of money. Full-scale functioning examples of these technologies do not yet exist. Various prototypes are in development, but the timelines are long and uncertain.

For example, one modular nuclear reactor design recently gained approval, and the first prototype will hopefully be ready for testing in 2030. As for when we can expect the first full-scale modular nuclear reactor to start producing electricity, nobody knows. How many units can be manufactured per year is also unknown. Any practical guess is decades.

Nuclear reactors are costly to build, regardless of their fuel cycle. Cost and time over-runs are the norm. Five years becomes nine years and $1 billion becomes $3 billion. New technologies are especially prone to over-runs. There are about 440 functioning nuclear reactors on the planet and about 55 under construction in 19 countries. The existing reactors supply about 10% of global electricity–in other words, a fraction of total energy consumption.

As for everyone’s favorite solution, the so-called renewables of wind/solar–actually replaceables–we all know the problem: they’re intermittent. So you need a second power generation system to fill the gaps when the sun goes down and the wind dies. As for batteries– even mega-batteries only hold a tiny percentage of total energy consumption. And it’s already clear that there aren’t enough minerals to build hundreds of millions of high-tech batteries, which by the way, are also replaceable, i.e. must be replaced every decade or so. (See chart below.)

Common-sense suggests it is folly to shut down existing energy sources until a replacement system is up and running. Yet that seems to be official policy in many places. The idea that getting rid of undesirable energy sources will magically create desirable energy sources is delusional, yet that idea is apparently quite compelling.

Maintaining two energy generation systems–one intermittent and one for backup–is inherently more expensive than having one system. Whether the backup is battery or another energy source (or some of both), it doesn’t matter: the cost is greater regardless of the type of backup.

The global energy crunch is real and has no easy, cheap, quick fix. That doesn’t mean we’re powerless (heh).

Let’s ask a few questions of the planet’s largest energy consumers: Europe, North America, China and Japan.

1. What percentage of habitable structures are well-insulated or super-insulated to minimize the need for heating / cooling?

2. What percentage of habitable structures have geothermal heat pumps (GHPs) that use the ambient temperature of the Earth to reduce energy consumption?

3. How many empty rooms / spaces in these regions are heated / cooled?

4. How many of the millions of vehicles that are stuck in traffic jams are single-occupant?

You see where this is leading: conservation is the fastest, lowest-cost, lowest-technology way to reduce energy consumption by reducing waste. Rather than invest in universal conservation and incentives to reduce wasteful behaviors (heating empty spaces 24/7, etc.), we’ve squandered decades and trillions of dollars, yuan, yen and euros on bridges to nowhere, wars of choice, speculative excess, virtue-signaling and the mindless consumption of the waste is growth Landfill Economy.

We’ve squandered trillions that were borrowed and now we have to pay interest on the wasted money.

Many solutions are solely behavioral and require no new infrastructure at all. For example, everyone driving themselves to the city center could stop at a bus stop or equivalent gathering place and pick up three other commuters. Tollways could be reprogrammed to reward vehicles with four passengers.

There are many such behavioral solutions that conserve energy on a mass scale. For some mysterious reason, we seem collectively enamored of high-tech solutions that demand decades and trillions of dollars rather than solutions that are within reach.

Waste is not growth. This is the central delusion of the modern economic mindset and the global economy. Eliminating glaringly obvious waste and using basic technologies (geothermal heat exchange, insulation) are the common-sense first steps to the goal of maintaining energy supplies at affordable levels.

The technologies to radically reduce waste have been around since the late 1970s / early 1980s. Rocky Mountain Institute (RMI) (Wikipedia):

By 1978, experimental physicist Amory Lovins had published many books, consulted widely, and was active in energy affairs in some fifteen countries as synthesist and lobbyist. Lovins is a main proponent of the soft energy path.

At RMI’s headquarters the south-facing building complex is so energy-efficient that, even with local -40 °F (-40 °C) winter temperatures, the building interiors can maintain a comfortable temperature solely from the sunlight admitted plus the body heat of the people who work there. The environment can actually nurture semi-tropical and tropical indoor plants.

Rocky Mountain Institute (RMI)

If we insist on doing the transition the hard, slow, costly way rather than the easy, fast, cheap way, it’s going to be a needlessly arduous, soul-crushing slog. Perhaps we need some uncommon sense since common sense appears to be so scarce.

*  *  *

My new book is now available at a 10% discount this month: When You Can’t Go On: Burnout, Reckoning and Renewal. If you found value in this content, please join me in seeking solutions by becoming a $1/month patron of my work via patreon.com.

Tyler Durden
Sun, 09/04/2022 – 13:30

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Lightfoot: Texas Shipping Migrants to Sanctuary City Chicago Is “Racist”

Lightfoot: Texas Shipping Migrants to Sanctuary City Chicago Is “Racist”

Texas Governor Greg Abbott this week announced a new destination for migrants being bused out of the Lone Star State: Chicago, a self-proclaimed “sanctuary city.” 

Two buses filled with migrants who illegally entered the United States arrived in Chicago’s Union Station at 7:30 pm on Wednesday. There were more than 75 aboard, and various reports suggest most were from Venezuela. 

After the drop-off was complete, Abbott issued a statement in which he announced that Chicago would now join Washington, DC and New York City as a regular drop-off location as part of “Operation Lone Star”:  

“President Biden’s inaction at our southern border continues putting the lives of Texans—and Americans—at risk and is overwhelming our communities. 

Mayor Lightfoot loves to tout the responsibility of her city to welcome all regardless of legal status, and I look forward to seeing this responsibility in action as these migrants receive resources from a sanctuary city with the capacity to serve them.” 

Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot isn’t pleased. In a Thursday afternoon tirade, Lightfoot heaped scorn on Abbott: 

“Let me say loud and clear to Greg Abbott and his enablers in Texas with these continued political stunts, Gov. Abbott has confirmed what unfortunately many of us had known already, that he is a man without any morals, humanity or shame.

Gov. Abbott’s racist and xenophobic practices of expulsion have only amplified the challenges many of these migrants have experienced on their journey to find a safe place. The governor’s actions are not just inhumane, they are unpatriotic.”

Though Lightfoot calls the practice “expulsion,” Abbott’s office has said that those who board the buses do so voluntarily, signing a consent form that’s available in multiple languages and which indicates the final destination

What’s more, they’re free to hop off anywhere along the way, as explained by News Nation‘s Robert Sherman, who’s following a migrant bus along its path from Eagle Pass, Texas to Washington and reporting along the way: 

Despite the fact that migrants are benefitting from a free ride that takes them closer to their desired U.S. destination, Lightfoot even went after the bus company, saying the operators “frankly are just as complicit as being a part of this indignity.” 

According to the Texas Tribune, that company is Irving, Texas-headquartered Wynne Transportation, which has raked in nearly $13 million for its services so far.

The state has solicited donations to help cover the cost, but has only brought in $167,828 through Aug. 17. So far, the campaign has helped between and eight and nine thousand migrants move beyond Texas, implying a cost of at least $1,400 per migrant. It’s less clear how much the state would spend on them were they all to stay. 

Inspired by Texas, Arizona Governor Doug Ducey has launched a migrant-busing operation of his own, which has sent more than 1,500 migrants on a 40-hour ride to the country’s capital.  

Tyler Durden
Sun, 09/04/2022 – 13:00

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Protesters Decry ‘Saudi Blood Money’ At Kingdom’s Golf Tournament In Massachusetts

Protesters Decry ‘Saudi Blood Money’ At Kingdom’s Golf Tournament In Massachusetts

Authored by Brett Wilkins via Common Dreams,

Peace activists on Friday challenged what they called Saudi Arabia’s “sportswashing” of war crimes in Yemen and domestic human rights abuses by protesting outside—and over—a Massachusetts golf tournament funded by the repressive kingdom. Members of Massachusetts Peace Action and supporters rallied at the Bolton Fair Grounds in Lancaster, site of the shuttle bus to the LIV Golf tournament at The International golf club in Bolton.

The professional golf tour is financed by the Public Investment Fund, Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund. Demonstrators held signs with messages including “Saudi Money is Blood Money” and “Saudi Arabia Kills Journalists and Kids in Yemen” while an airplane circled over the event trailing a banner reading “Bolton Rejects Saudi Blood Money.”

Illustrative image, Getty

“The Saudi bombing and blockade of Yemen has brought devastation to the people of that country,” Paul Shannon, who chairs Massachusetts Peace Action’s Middle East Working Group, said in a statement. “That destruction has been enabled by our country’s support for the Saudi invasion and by bombs, planes, and missiles sold to the Saudis by U.S. military contractors like Lockheed, Boeing, and Raytheon,” he added.

Protester Alice Rennie of Bolton told WCVB: “I’m outraged that it’s my town that’s hosting a golf tournament that’s funded by the terrorists and murderous regime in Saudi Arabia.”

Another demonstrator, Paul Garver, asserted that “golf should not be used to promote a government like Saudi Arabia that is doing these things in the world to people.”

“We do not condone collaboration with a murderous dictator like the crown prince,” he added.

In addition to peace activists, relatives of people killed in the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States—which were possibly backed by some Saudi officials—have called out LIV golfers, as well as former President Donald Trump for hosting a LIV event at his golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey.

While campaigning in 2016, Trump blamed Saudi Arabia for 9/11. However, once elected, he behaved like every U.S. president by maintaining friendly relations with the oil-rich kingdom’s rulers and selling them hundreds of millions of dollars in arms for use in the U.S.-backed coalition war in Yemen, which has killed hundreds of thousands of people while displacing, starving, and sickening millions more.

At Friday’s protest, Massachusetts Peace Action also handed out pamphlets thanking the professional golfers who have eschewed the tournament “so as not to be associated with an event created with millions of dollars from one of the most repressive regimes on the face of the Earth.” One of those players, Northern Ireland’s Rory McIlroy, has been an outspoken critic of LIV Golf. Speaking to reporters in June, McIlroy accused younger players who join the tournament of “taking the easy way out.”

Citing “morality,” McIlroy joined Tiger Woods in turning down what is believed to have been $2.5 million payments to play in a 2019 tour in Saudi Arabia. “You could say that about so many countries, not just Saudi Arabia,” said McIlroy, then the world’s second-ranked golfer, “but a lot of countries that we play in that there’s a reason not to go, but for me, I just don’t want to go.”

In June, the PGA Tour suspended 17 golfers who are competing in the LIV series for “choosing to compete… without the proper conflicting event and media rights release.” The suspended players include six-time PGA major winner Phil Mickelson, who reportedly signed a $200 million contract with LIV, despite having recently made some strong comments about the Saudis.

“They’re scary motherfuckers to get involved with,” he told biographer Alan Shipnuck in February. “We know they killed Khashoggi and have a horrible record on human rights.”

“They execute people over there for being gay,” Mickelson added. “Knowing all of this, why would I even consider it? Because this is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to reshape how the PGA Tour operates.” LIV Golf last week joined 11 of its players, including Mickelson, in an antitrust lawsuit against the PGA Tour challenging their suspensions.

Tyler Durden
Sun, 09/04/2022 – 12:30

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NC, MS And Other States Set To Tax Biden Student Loan Forgiveness

NC, MS And Other States Set To Tax Biden Student Loan Forgiveness

The North Carolina Department of Revenue announced Wednesday that President Biden’s student-loan forgiveness will be considered taxable income in the Tar Heel State. 

Residents of some other states are in for a similar buzzkill, levying a max tax that could range from $300 to $1,100, depending on the jurisdiction. Mississippi also confirmed last week that it will impose a tax.

In August, Biden made a long-procrastinated decision to honor his 2020 debt-cancellation campaign pledge. Specifically, he’s forgiving up to $10,000 of federal student loan debt for those who make under $125,000 a year, and up to $20,000 for people who received Pell Grants, which target low-income students. 

While debt cancellation is typically taxable, the federal government specifically exempted student loan forgiveness from 2021 through 2025. 

However, 13 states have a tax code that doesn’t automatically follow the federal lead on this question: Arkansas, Hawaii, Idaho, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Mississippi, New York, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia and Wisconsin. 

Several of them have already clarified that they won’t tax student debt relief. On the other hand, in addition to North Carolina and Mississippi, Arkansas, Minnesota and Wisconsin also “appear to be on track” to do so, according to the Tax Foundation’s Jared Walczak. 

The fact that many states legislatures have recessed for the year complicates some officials’ interest in intervening on behalf of student loan debtors. 

Some people aren’t pleased with the situation…

 

Tyler Durden
Sun, 09/04/2022 – 12:00

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Data For Newly Authorized COVID-19 Boosters Based On Mice, Not Humans

Data For Newly Authorized COVID-19 Boosters Based On Mice, Not Humans

Authored by Zachary Stieber via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

The preclinical data for the just-authorized COVID-19 booster shots are based on just mice, not humans, because U.S. authorities believe waiting for human trial data would have made the updated boosters outdated.

A nurse holds a syringe that contains a dose of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine for children under 5 at UW Medical Center – Roosevelt in Seattle, Wash., on June 21, 2022. (David Ryder/Getty Images)

The data for Pfizer’s booster was based on just 8 mice, Pfizer scientists told the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) vaccine advisory panel in June. The data for Moderna’s booster was based on 16 to 20 mice, some of which received the original booster, according to a presentation slated to be delivered to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) advisory panel on Sept. 1.

The mice data show “substantial increases against all Omicron sublineages including BA.4/5 as well as the reference strain with the BA.4/5- modified vaccines,” Kena Swanson, Pfizer’s vice president for vaccine research and development, told the FDA panel.

BA.4 and BA.5 are both subvariants of the Omicron variant of the virus that causes COVID-19.

Both Moderna and Pfizer developed boosters containing parts of the original COVID-19 virus and the BA.1 subvariant, but the FDA after the June meeting asked the vaccine makers to switch out the BA.1 component for a component targeting BA.4 and BA.5, the latter of which is the dominant strain in the United States.

The FDA declined to require human trial data for authorization, and granted authorization for both updated boosters on Aug. 31.

The mice data “demonstrate that these vaccines successfully evoke an immune response in the same way previous versions of the vaccine have,” Dr. Peter Marks, a top FDA vaccine official, told reporters on a call.

CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky also signaled support for the path.

If we wait for those data to emerge in human data, not just mice data, we will be using what I would consider to be a potentially outdated vaccine,” Walensky said on “Conversations on Health Care” during a segment broadcast on Aug. 29.

Unprecedented

Dr. Monica Gandhi, a professor of medicine at University of California, San Francisco, said that she thinks the updated booster “has the potential to increase antibodies in humans to the circulating subvariant (mainly BA.5 at this point), but to be fair, we need to note that we only have data in mice of increased antibodies at this point.”

We do not have human data on this new booster, either antibody data or clinical data. However, there is biological plausibility that these updated boosters will curb cases by increasing antibodies as we enter the winter,” Gandhi told The Epoch Times in an email.

Gandhi recommends all Americans 65 and older, or others who are immunocompromised, get the updated booster, especially in those who received their most recent shot more than 6 months ago, citing recent papers on vaccine effectiveness.

The FDA is advising all Americans 12 and older to get the updated booster just two months after their latest shot.

John Moore, a vaccine expert at Weill Cornell Medicine, told USA Today before the authorizations that relying on mouse data “would be unprecedented in my knowledge and would certainly raise eyebrows,” but told The Epoch Times in an email on Thursday that he’s not concerned about safety.

It’s still the same vaccine, just with a small tweak. The same strategy is used every year to adjust the composition of the standard flu vaccines. I’d draw an analogy to getting a new paint job on your car—that would not trigger the need for a full-service check into all the safety features. However, I think many members of the public may be concerned—particularly ones who have listened to the lies from anti-vaxxers,” he added, using a pejorative for people concerned about vaccine side effects and waning effectiveness.

Read more here…

Tyler Durden
Sun, 09/04/2022 – 11:30

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Erdogan Issues Threat Of Military Action Against Greece

Erdogan Issues Threat Of Military Action Against Greece

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has issued a thinly veiled threat of military action against fellow NATO member Greece in Saturday comments. Erdogan reiterated the Turkish government accusation that Greece is militarizing islands near Turkey’s post in contravention of a historic treaty and international agreements.

“You occupying the islands doesn’t bind us,” Erdogan said. “When the time comes, we’ll do what’s necessary. As we say, we may come down suddenly one night.” He added: “Look at history, if you go further, the price will be heavy.”

Image via AP

“We have one sentence to Greece: Don’t forget Izmir,” Erdogan said in reference to the 1922 battle which saw Greek forces expelled from the western city. He also more broadly referenced 1919-1922 Greco-Turkish war while provocatively stressing that Greece is “occupying” islands off Turkey.

The fiery words were spoken on the occasion of Turkey’s military unveiling a new prototype of an unmanned fighter jet in the city of Samsun, and further days after Ankara has lodged a formal complaint with NATO headquarters, saying that Greece last month achieved radar lock on its F-16s which had been flying over the Mediterranean.

Turkey’s Hurriyet Daily announced last week that the defense ministry “will send the radar traces and pictures of the Greek harassment of the Turkish jets by the S-300 air defense systems to NATO as well as to all 30 allied countries, according to sources.”

Turkey has also charged that Greek jets have violated its airspace over 250 times in harassing maneuvers. “The ministry also informed that the Greek warplanes violated the Turkish airspace 256 times since the beginning of 2022,” the Hurriyet report said. “In addition, they harassed the Turkish jets 158 times this year, the ministry said. On the sea, the Greek coastal guards violated the Turkish territorial waters 33 times, it added.”

Greece’s foreign ministry has responded by denouncing the “outrageous daily slide” of threats and hostile rhetoric coming out of Ankara. “We will inform our allies and partners on the content of the provocative statements… to make it clear who is setting dynamite to the cohesion of our alliance during a dangerous period,” the foreign ministry statement said.

For years, Turkey, Greece and Cyprus have been at odds over expanding Turkish oil and gas drilling rights in the eastern Mediterranean. Turkey is using its occupation of northern Cyprus to say that all waters encircling the island are fair game for its research and drilling vessels.

Other EU members, particularly France, have strongly supported EU-member Cyprus’ condemnation of incursions in its territorial waters. France has even conducted a series of joint exercises with Greece and Cyprus in solidarity. 

Tyler Durden
Sun, 09/04/2022 – 11:00

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Where’s The Outrage? America’s Leaders Are Fiddling While The Country Burns

Where’s The Outrage? America’s Leaders Are Fiddling While The Country Burns

Authored by J.Peder Zane via RealClearPolitics.com,

Where’s the outrage? Bob Dole asked in the middle of the scandal-plagued presidency of Bill Clinton scandals. Voters, it turned out, cared more about prosperity.

But as U.S. politics has descended into tribal warfare, that blinding emotion has become the default position of both major political parties. Each sees the other side as more than outrageous – as threats to self-government itself. Democrats are trumpeting the upcoming midterms as a battle for democracy against their “semi-fascist” enemies; Republicans are largely running on the promise to investigate and punish the Biden administration.

Lost in this Revenge Play politics is thoughtful discussion about how to address our nation’s pressing problems. Yes, politicians issue policy statements and even pass legislation, but where are their specific plans to reduce the national debt, tame brewing foreign threats, tackle crime, and whip inflation? We now know the Biden administration cynically used the name, “Inflation Reduction Act,” to drum up support for climate and health care initiatives it had failed to pass before and that had nothing to do with corralling price increases. At a time when about 70% of Americans believe the country is on the wrong track, does anyone believe either party knows how to set things right?

The GOP still pretends to be the party of small government and fiscal responsibility, but it has not only failed by any measure to achieve either, it no longer even tries. It’s just words, words, words.  

Democrats have long claimed that they know how to fix things through government action, but six decades of failed social policies have thoroughly undermined that notion. Joe Biden’s recent declaration that he will erase a massive tranche of student debt is remarkable for many reasons. His unilateral, probably unconstitutional, move is a sure sign of our broken government drift towards authoritarianism. The wildly different estimates of its costs, which range from $300 billion to nearly $1 trillion, are yet more evidence that nobody knows what they’re doing. Can you imagine running a business like that? The truly astonishing thing is that no one is claiming it addresses the immense and urgent problem of the high cost of college, which is strongly tied to wrongheaded federal loan policies. Democrats don’t even pretend to have the answer. They are raising the red flag, finally admitting they only know how to throw money at the issue (using taxpayer money to buy votes in the midterms).

Republicans are pointing this out, but where’s their plan?

Then, of course, there is the abject failure by both parties to deal with the COVID-19 crisis that has already taken more than 1 million American lives.

Recent studies show that the lockdowns that kneecapped our economy were not an effective deterrent against the spread of the disease. The closure of schools set back, perhaps irreparably, the education of millions of children. The trillions of dollars the federal government rushed out the door to mask the problems their policies created are now a case study of wastefraud, and abuse. In the Aug. 16 article, “Prosecutors Struggle to Catch Up to a Tidal Wave of Pandemic Fraud,” which detailed how “those dollars came with few strings and minimal oversight,” the New York Times reported:

In the midst of the pandemic, the government gave unemployment benefits to the incarcerated, the imaginary and the dead. It sent money to “farms” that turned out to be front yards. It paid people who were on the government’s “Do Not Pay List.” It gave loans to 342 people who said their name was “N/A.”

Those COVID failures, and myriad others, underscore the incompetence of our leaders. At bottom, the Democrats have mostly bad answers for our problems and Republicans have almost no answers at all.

In this context, the furious outrage that drives our politics is revealed as a cynical act of bipartisanship: It is the intentional effort by leaders from both parties to protect themselves. They have weaponized anger, keeping we the people’s eyes fixed on each other’s throats so that we don’t hold them to account for their failures. Don’t blame us, it’s your neighbor that’s the problemWhy worry about policy when we are battling existential threats to the nation’s soul?

The culture war is real and it is important. But our high-dudgeon focus on woke leftists and extreme elements on the right is also a top-down strategy aimed at drawing attention away from Washington’s ineptitude. Our leaders are fiddling while the country burns: When will we stop dancing to their outrageous tune?

Tyler Durden
Sun, 09/04/2022 – 10:30

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Apple Overtakes Android, Now Accounts For More Than Half Of All US Smartphones

Apple Overtakes Android, Now Accounts For More Than Half Of All US Smartphones

Apple set a new US milestone in June to account for more than half of the smartphones in use, while dozens of other mobile brands using Google’s Android made up the other half, according to Financial Times, quoting data from Counterpoint Research.

The active installed base of iPhones surpassed the 50% mark in the quarter ending June, while 150 other mobile brands using Google’s Android operating system, led by Samsung and Lenovo, accounted for the other half. 

“Operating systems are like religions — never significant changes. But over the past four years the flow has consistently been Android to iOS.

“This is a big milestone that we could see replicated in other affluent countries across the globe,” Counterpoint’s research director, Jeff Fieldhack, said. 

FT provided a chart that shows Apple’s market share has been steadily rising over the last five years. 

“It’s not that we are seeing a big year where Apple grows its market share 10 or 15%, but there’s this slow burn where they quietly just grab more share every year,” said Ben Wood, an analyst at CCS Insight. 

The figures are based on smartphones in use, which Apple finance chief Luca Maestri recently said is “the engine for our company.” 

CEO Tim Cook also noted that Apple had “set a June quarter record for switchers,” or people leaving Android for iOS.

Apple will unveil the next-generation iPhone 14 series next Wednesday. 

For those hoping the new iPhone will feature a USB-C connector. 9to5Mac reported Apple might not make the switch until USB-C is mandatory from 2024 and beyond in Europe. 

Tyler Durden
Sun, 09/04/2022 – 09:55

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Intervention, The ‘C’ Word, & The ‘F’ Word

Intervention, The ‘C’ Word, & The ‘F’ Word

Authored by Max Borders via The American Institute for Economic Research,

Wait For It…”It’s Capitalism’s Fault!”

Capitalism is the extraordinary belief that the nastiest of men, for the nastiest of reasons, will somehow work for the benefit of us all. 

– John Maynard Keynes

An economic crisis looms. When the brown matter hits the proverbial fan, the blue-check commentariat will blame “capitalism.” So we have to remain vigilant.

In fact, they’ve already started.

I use scare quotes because so few clearly define what “capitalism” is, and fewer still know how it works. Particularly when they use the F word.

As with neoliberalism, “capitalism” is more or less a smear used by those who hate that which they neither understand nor have a hand in creating. Ignorance as a rhetorical strategy works mainly because the masses have become more credulous and ignorant with each passing year. Critics simply have to indicate some socio-economic phenomenon they don’t like and blame the c-word.

Intervention, the C Word, and the F Word

When I use capitalism I have a specific set of features in my mind, as we’ll see. Because capitalism is Marx’s term, we could use other less loaded words, such as entrepreneurial markets. But these can come across as esoteric or imprecise. Detractors frequently have something else in their minds, and there is no incentive to determine any common reference frame. Sometimes their very identity is caught up in being anti-capitalist. It’s one thing to challenge their positions. It’s quite another to challenge their identity.

What’s worse, the politically powerful actively destroy the ideal features of an entrepreneurial market system, often to compromise with anti-capitalists. They then blame capitalism for every failure of intervention. This process began long ago. Now, the best we can say is interventionism creates ideal conditions under which corporations and authorities may collude. And boy they do. The extent to which entrepreneurs ally with government officials is the extent to which the system becomes less capitalist, less liberal, and more corrupted by degree. 

But what beast does this corruption spawn?

Intervention gives rise to either cronyism or fascism. The difference between cronyism and fascism lies only in the authorities’ objectives. Cronyism is designed to shore up the incumbency of individual politicians. Fascism is more about directing the interests of corporations to authority’s ends on behalf of the so-called national interest, and cronies benefit anyway.

Author David Boaz points out this inconvenient truth when he writes:

On May 7, 1933, just two months after the inauguration of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, the New York Times reporter Anne O’Hare McCormick wrote that the atmosphere in Washington was “strangely reminiscent of Rome in the first weeks after the march of the Blackshirts, of Moscow at the beginning of the Five-Year Plan.… America today literally asks for orders.” The Roosevelt administration, she added, “envisages a federation of industry, labor and government after the fashion of the corporative State as it exists in Italy.”

Don’t today’s progressives envisage a federation of industry, labor, and government? 

Ain’t it funny that those who are so quick to call others fascist are in full-throated support of authorities directing corporations to do the state’s bidding? Like Keynes, they justify this vaguely in terms of the “national interest” not the rights of the individual. And Mussolini agrees:

Anti-individualistic, the Fascist conception of life stresses the importance of the State and accepts the individual only in so far as his interests coincide with those of the State, which stands for the conscience and the universal, will of man as a historic entity. It is opposed to classical liberalism which arose as a reaction to absolutism and exhausted its historical function when the State became the expression of the conscience and will of the people. Liberalism denied the State in the name of the individual; Fascism reasserts The rights of the State as expressing the real essence of the individual. And if liberty is to he the attribute of living men and not of abstract dummies invented by individualistic liberalism, then Fascism stands for liberty, and for the only liberty worth having, the liberty of the State and of the individual within the State.

Whether that means threatening social media companies to silence dissent, mandating experimental vaccine products, or rewarding banks for their risky behavior, the real fascists get off scot-free.

If that weren’t enough:

Fascism entirely agrees with Mr. Maynard Keynes, despite the latter’s prominent position as a Liberal. In fact, Mr. Keynes’ excellent little book, The End of Laissez-Faire (1926) might, so far as it goes, serve as a useful introduction to fascist economics. There is scarcely anything to object to in it and there is much to applaud.

Thus, we can no longer allow people to blame capitalism for fascism, particularly when unwitting fascists advocate for these policies. So when it comes to playing the blame game for the next major crisis, we have to call a spade a spade—courageously, consistently, and unrelentingly.

A More Perfect Capitalism

But first, we need to identify some of the main features of capitalism. 

  1. Requires private ownership of the means of production, including extensive property rights in land, capital, and profits.

  2. Involves patterns of production and trade in which any collaborative venture (however organized) earns revenues in excess of costs due solely to customers’ willingness to pay.

  3. Includes legal agreements that allow founders, workers, and investors to cooperate in service of a mission. (Such agreements can include worker cooperatives.)

  4. Operates according to agreements between or among parties to exchanges.

  5. Includes arbitration systems based on the Common Law, in which parties settle disputes where injured parties can be made whole.

Capitalism also means a highly competitive system defined by the absence of state intervention.

  1. To the extent they exist at all, governments should function as referees neither subsidizing nor taxing organizations.

  2. To the extent they exist at all, governments leave individuals to pursue their associations freely, so long as those associations are peaceful.

  3. To the extent that government or private courts making rulings, their rulings should be restricted to adjudicating frictions between parties, identifying sources of injury or contract violation, and determining/enforcing fair recompense. 

  4. To the extent state regulations exist, these become the product of impartial courts who make decisions based on evidence and case law, not statutes nor fiat regulations.

  5. To the extent state-sanctioned central banks exist, their role should be limited to ensuring sound and relatively stable money.

Some will argue that the above list is too Utopian–that is, it’s not politically feasible to discard the topheavy layers of our intrusive bureaucracies and their corporate supplicants. That might be true but that also means the system we have ain’t capitalist.

That’s Not Capitalism

Remember, interventionists will blame capitalism for the problems of interventionism, especially if the intervention involves corporations.

  • When legislators shut down businesses for months based on COVID histrionics and then pass five pork-laden “emergency” spending bills with money the government doesn’t have, none of that has to do with capitalism.

  • When Marxist professors blame capitalism for inflation, we have to remind them that money printing causes inflation, which is not a feature of capitalism per se. Instead, central banking is the government’s legal counterfeiting scheme that benefits the powerful.

  • When Central Banks engage in quantitative easing, interest rate manipulations, capital controls, or yield curve inversions, that’s not capitalism. It’s been progressive technocracy since 1913.

  • When a President first tightens the screws on domestic energy production – all while blaming our enemies for “price hikes” compounded by the economic sanctions he ordered – that’s not capitalism. (Note Putin’s invasion of Ukraine is not capitalism either.)

  • When a President fails to reform a government sanctioned and subsidized student loan scheme, but forgives the debts of those adults who freely chose to avail themselves of that scheme (sending the rest of us the bill), that’s not capitalism.

The problems we must now face flow from politicians and central bankers trying to stick their (visible) hands into our economic ecosystems, which they refer to as interventionism—i.e.managing the mixed economy. (Keynesianism will also do.)

“These two systems, capitalism and collectivism,” writes economist Sandy Ikeda, “organized according to two diametrically opposite principles — spontaneous order and deliberate design — mix as well as oil and water.”

No wonder it’s hard for people to disentangle market failure from government failure.

“Trying to blend them,” adds Ikeda, “produces chaos because it’s impossible to combine two contradictory organizing principles into a coherent system.”

You can see how easy it is to blame the failures of the mixed economy on capitalism. Indeed, to the extent “neoliberalism” is the incoherent doctrine of the mixed economy, we might one day find common cause with those who bandy that term about unreflectively. 

But I doubt it. 

Most of what passes for commentary about economics today amounts to bleating from herds who think that the cure for every social ill is to tax more resources from the billionaires or the corporations. But as our friend, economist Antony Davies, reminds us, 

The 550 U.S. billionaires together are worth $2.5 trillion. If we confiscated 100% of their wealth, we’d raise enough to run the federal government for less than eight months. (Updated figures might get you to nine months, says Politifact.) 

Of course, if the state succeeded in such confiscation, it would be catastrophic.

Government Debt and Intervention

The problem isn’t capitalism. The problem isn’t greed per se–or maybe it is. Too many people want to live at others’ expense or charge the national credit card, which – at 138 percent of GDP plus unfunded liabilities – is maxed out. 

So when it comes to laying blame, we have to start getting more specific. Yes, there are bad individual actors, bad corporate actors, and bad government actors. But instead of blaming entrepreneurial capitalism, which is just a system for people sustainably to serve each other, it’s time to blame those who keep intervening to “save capitalism” or those who keep trying to save us from capitalism. And it’s time to blame those whose failures of imagination always end up in one of interventionism’s ideological ditches: regulation or redistribution

The trouble with interventionism is that you can’t have it in any form without bundling in some measure of fascism. That’s because these two ideologies are kissing cousins. Unless the people regulate the government and redistribute its power back to individuals, we will lurch from crisis to crisis that interventions cause. And our fascist/socialist enemies will just double down.

Tyler Durden
Sun, 09/04/2022 – 09:20

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/2gaZRxH Tyler Durden