Trump’s Struggle To Win the Gary Johnson Vote

RandTrump2

President Donald Trump has been making some libertarian noises lately, and also some noises about libertarians. In the latter category, POTUS declared himself in an interview last week to be “somewhat libertarian,” and a likely recipient of ex-Libertarian votes.

“Jill Stein took, what? Half a percent?” Trumped mused innumerately to Fox News Channel’s Laura Ingraham. “Well, I have a Libertarian—I’m somewhat libertarian; I have to be honest with you; Rand Paul will tell you that—I have a Libertarian candidate on last time that got, what? Four and a half or so percent? Those are all Republican voters. They’re wasting their vote, because—they have to vote for us.”

Well, no, but that doesn’t mean we can’t talk about some of Trump’s most libertarian noises, such as calling out military brass and their enablers for backing “endless wars.” On today’s Reason Roundtable podcast, Nick Gillespie, Peter Suderman, Matt Welch, and Katherine Mangu-Ward discuss the president’s actual record on policies dear to libertarian hearts; critique Joe Biden on same, and also spend time on school reopening, teachers unions, Christopher Nolan’s filmography, and the true meaning of Labor Day.

Audio production by Ian Keyser and Regan Taylor.

Music: “Noisey” by ELPHNT.

Relevant links from the show:

Bridget Phetasy is Politically Homeless. You Probably Are Too.” By Nick Gillespie

Will-to-Power Conservatism and the Great Liberalism Schism,” by Stephanie Slade

You Have Libertarian Alternatives to Biden and Trump This November,” by John Stossel

This Labor Day, Police and Teachers Unions Are Making a Bad Year Worse,” by J.D. Tuccille

Teachers Unions Push Families Out of Public Schools,” by J.D. Tuccille

Hispanic Parents Want More Choices for School,” by Daniel Raisbeck

California’s Job-Killing A.B. 5 Scaled Back, but Only for Some Professions,” by Scott Shackford

California Police Unions Once Again Side With Bad Cops To Kill a Good Bill,” by Scott Shackford

School Calls Cops on 12-Year-Old Boy Who Held Toy Gun During Zoom Class,” by Robby Soave

Be Skeptical of Stories About TikTok ‘Benadryl Challenge’ Overdoses,” by Scott Shackford

Disney Thanks Chinese Labor Camp Authorities in Mulan Credits,” by Elizabeth Nolan Brown

Time May Not Exist Anymore, but Tenet Does, and It’s in Theaters Now,” by Peter Suderman

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AstraZeneca Shares Plunge As COVID Vaccine Study Put On Hold Due To “Adverse Reaction”

AstraZeneca Shares Plunge As COVID Vaccine Study Put On Hold Due To “Adverse Reaction”

Tyler Durden

Tue, 09/08/2020 – 17:29

Amid the biggest selloff in markets since March, we suspect news from AstraZeneca’s massive Phase 3 COVID-19 study will not help at all.

Stat News reports that the large, Phase 3 study testing a Covid-19 vaccine being developed by AstraZeneca and the University of Oxford at dozens of sites across the U.S. has been put on hold due to a suspected serious adverse reaction in a participant in the United Kingdom.

An individual familiar with the development said researchers had been told the hold was placed on the trial out of “an abundance of caution.”

AstraZeneca ADRs are down over 8% after hours…

Perhaps of even greater import, Stat News reports that a second individual familiar with the matter, who also spoke on condition of anonymity, said the finding is having an impact on other AstraZeneca vaccine trials underway — as well as on the clinical trials being conducted by other vaccine manufacturers.

Developing…

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/3m1Xf0d Tyler Durden

New York City Comptroller Vows To Hike Taxes On The Rich If Elected Mayor

New York City Comptroller Vows To Hike Taxes On The Rich If Elected Mayor

Tyler Durden

Tue, 09/08/2020 – 17:20

It’s as if New York City is trying to become a hellscape right out of the 1970s and in the process kick out all of its wealthiest residents.

Following such reports as “Escape From New York: Wealthy Residents Flee In Droves“, “Slammed NYC Movers Turning Away Business As Residents Flee City“, and of course “Murders Spike In NYC As Residents Flee For Suburbs“, it is clear that New York has not gotten the all too loud and clear message that after New Jersey, it has emerged as the second most hated state in the US…

… and worse, NYC is doing everything in its power to alienate any remaining wealth taxpayers, accelerating the city’s de-evolution.

In a move that can only be described as “surprising” if one wishes to avoid getting banned by some google censorship algo, New York City Comptroller Scott Stringer announced his candidacy for mayor Tuesday, and speaking directly to the city’s roving bands of “peacefully protesting” socialists, communists and marxists, vowed to reduce a projected $4.2 billion budget deficit next year by pushing the state to tax the rich.

“We will ask the most fortunate to pay a bit more in taxes,” Stringer said during a campaign announcement in northern Manhattan putting a bulls eye on the city’s wealthiest who already pay some of the highest state and local taxes across the country. “We asked our frontline workers to be heroes, and we are going to ask the wealthiest among us to do their part, as well.”

And so, just because the frontline workers are doing their job which, which as a reminder, is precisely to be “heroes” during a crisis, New York believes it has a right to demand heroism from all those others who through hard work have achieved some degree of wealth, and crush them with draconian socialist measures. Marx would be proud.

The announcement capped more than a year of Stringer expressing interest in a mayoral candidacy. He’s raised more than $1.3 million in the past two years, according to the city’s Campaign Finance Board.

As he prepared his candidacy over the past year, Bloomberg notes that Stringer has increasingly sparred with Mayor Bill de Blasio, his former ally, pressing for more budget reserves and criticizing the mayor’s performance.

“We needed decisive leadership when he had to close the schools, and we didn’t get it,” Stringer said Tuesday. “We needed decisive leadership when it was time to open the schools, and we didn’t get it.”

Looks like they were fighting over who is a bigger socialist.

Stringer, 60, a resident of Manhattan’s Upper West Side, previously served in the state Assembly from 1993 to 2005, and as Manhattan borough president for the next eight years.

He would compete in a June 2021 primary against a large and growing field of announced and potential Democratic candidates. It includes City Council Speaker Corey Johnson, Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams, former commissioner of Veteran Services Loree Sutton, former Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan, former city Sanitation Commissioner Kathryn Garcia and former counsel to the mayor Maya Wiley.

Stringer has $2.3 million in his campaign treasury. That’s more than any other announced or potential candidate, which probably means that he will be the city’s next socialist mayor.

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Documents Show Former Officials “In Real Trouble” In Durham Investigation: Meadows

Documents Show Former Officials “In Real Trouble” In Durham Investigation: Meadows

Tyler Durden

Tue, 09/08/2020 – 17:04

Authored by Zachary Steiber via The Epoch Times,

Newly reviewed documents show that former FBI agent Peter Strzok and other officials involved in the counter-intelligence probe against Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign are in trouble, White House chief of staff Mark Meadows said.

U.S. Attorney John Durham is reviewing the origins of that investigation and landed his first guilty plea last month.

While he doesn’t have visibility into the timeline of Durham’s probe, Meadows said he’s reviewed additional documents that “say that a number of the players, the Peter Strzoks, the Andy McCabes, the James Comeys – and even others in the administration previously – are in real trouble because of their willingness to participate in an unlawful act.”

“And I use the word unlawful at best, it broke all kinds of protocols and at worst people should go to jail as I mentioned previously,” Meadows said during a virtual appearance on Fox Business’ “Mornings With Maria” on Monday.

Strzok, McCabe, and Comey are former high-level FBI officials.

Strzok, best known for exchanging biased text messages about Trump with an FBI lawyer he was having an affair with, was fired by FBI officials in 2018.

White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows speaks to members of the press outside the West Wing of the White House in Washington on Aug. 28, 2020. (Alex Wong/Getty Images)

The former agent sat down for an interview with CBS that ran over the weekend. He insisted that the counter-intelligence probe, dubbed Crossfire Hurricane, was opened on a legitimate basis.

Meadows said it was easy for Strzok to make claims when not under oath.

“In all of his interview, I can tell you this: It’s not backed up by the facts. It’s not backed up by documents that I’ve seen. And ultimately his house of cards will come falling down,” Meadows said.

The facts that have come out show that officials treated Trump “very differently, in an inappropriate way, and they must be held accountable,” he added.

Durham’s criminal investigation is being kept under tight wraps, prompting much speculation about when another development will come, or even if any other people will be charged.

United States Attorney John Durham (L) (Department of Justice) and Attorney General William Barr. (R) (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Trey Gowdy, a Fox News contributor who used to serve in the House of Representatives, said over the weekend that there’s concern that Durham “is dragging his feet.”

Durham, he said, “is going to access documents that the FBI never shared with Congress and he’ll write the definitive accounting of what happened.”

“Whether or not there’ll be more indictments or not, I don’t know and I like to assume that there will not be,” he said, adding: “That puts me in a small minority, but I’m assuming that the Clinesmith indictment will be the only one.”

Kevin Clinesmith recently pleaded guilty to altering an email to say Carter Page, a former Trump campaign adviser, was not a CIA asset when the CIA had said the exact opposite.

The altered email was used to obtain spy warrants against Page, enabling the FBI to conduct surveillance against Page and people he was linked to in the future and past.

Meadows, meanwhile, said Trump supports the declassification of all documents, along with full transparency.

“He has nothing to hide,” he said.

Director of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe said last week that he’s coordinating with Durham to declassify more documents.

Meanwhile, more lies exposed

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“Historic” Wildfires Rage Across California As “Red Flag Warning” Declared 

“Historic” Wildfires Rage Across California As “Red Flag Warning” Declared 

Tyler Durden

Tue, 09/08/2020 – 16:40

California’s record-breaking fire season is becoming absolutely devastating with wildfires raging across the Golden State as a weekend heatwave sent temperatures soaring (Californians used 47K MW at peak over the weekend, versus the 38K summer average). Now, powerful winds could make things a whole lot worse in the coming days by stoking additional fires.

Gov. Gavin Newsom held a press conference on Tuesday afternoon, calling the wildfires “historic.” He said as many as 3,400 building structures have been destroyed with at least 2.3 million acres burned. 

Also on Tuesday afternoon, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (Cal Fire) issued a “Red Flag Warning” for much of the state through Wednesday as “strong winds, low humidity, and high temperatures” created the perfect conditions for wildfires to thrive. 

A Red Flag Warning is issued for weather events which may result in extreme fire behavior that will occur within 24 hours. A Fire Weather Watch is issued when weather conditions could exist in the next 12-72 hours. A Red Flag Warning is the highest alert. During these times extreme caution is urged by all residents, because a simple spark can cause a major wildfire. A Fire Weather Watch is one level below a warning, but fire danger is still high. 

The type of weather patterns that can cause a watch or warning include low relative humidity, strong winds, dry fuels, the possibility of dry lightning strikes, or any combination of the above.

During heightened fire danger, CAL FIRE will place additional firefighters on duty, staff more fire engines and keep more equipment on 24 hours a day to be able to respond to any new fires. CAL FIRE urges Californians to be extremely cautious, especially during periods of high fire danger. It’s important all residents and visitors take steps to prevent wildfires. One less spark could mean one less wildfire. See below for tips on preventing wildfires. – Cal Fire

Heaping on even more aggravation,  Pacific Gas & Electric announced Monday that 22 counties across Northern and Central California have had their power turned off, with the outages set to last several days.

Statewide, some 40,000 customers are without power. 

ANd the LATimes reports 39 fires are burning across the state. 

Here’s a partial list of all the active wildfires in the state (includes acres burned, how many days, and containment info): 

  • Scu Lightning Complex, 396,624 acres burned, Burning for 21 days, 94% contained
  • Lnu Lightning Complex, 375,209 acres burned, Burning for 22 days, 91% contained 
  • Creek, 143,929 acres burned, Burning for 4 days, 0% contained
  • Czu Lightning Complex, 86,509 acres burned, Burning for 23 days, 81% contained 
  • W-5 Cold Springs, 84,817 acres burned, Burning for 16 days, 98% contained 
  • Dolan, 73,089 acres burned, Burning for 20 days, 40% contained
  • Castle, 63,194 acres burned, Burning for 20 days, 1% contained 
  • Sqf Complex, 62,887 acres burned, Burning for 18 days, 7% contained
  • Red Salmon Complex, 47,934 acres burned, Burning for 21 days, 20% contained
  • North Complex, 40,843 acres burned, Burning for 21 days, 51% contained
  • Claremont-bear, 40,703 acres burned, Burning for 22 days, no data 
  • Apple, 33,424 acres burned, Burning for 39 days, 95% contained 
  • Lake, 31,089 acres burned, Burning for 27 days, 95% contained 
  • Sheep, 29,570 acres burned, Burning for 17 days, 90% contained 
  • Slink, 21,755 acres burned, Burning for 7 days, 36% contained 
  • Valley, 17,345 acres burned, Burning for 3 days, 3% contained 
  • El Dorado, 10,574 acres burned, Burning for 3 days, contained 16%
  • Bobcat, 8,553 acres burned, Burning for 2 days, no data 
  • Woodward, 4,835 acres burned, Burning for 21 days, 95% contained 
  • Butte/tehama/glenn Lightning Comple, 2,782 acres burned, Burning for 22 days, 80% contained 
  • Round, 2,570 acres burned, Burning for 23 days, 95% contained 
  • Ohlone, 1,897 acres burned, Burning for 23 days, 10% contained
  • Oak, 1,000 acres burned, Burning for 1 day, 0% contained 
  • Potters, 927 acres burned, Burning for 21 days, 98% contained 
  • Butte, Tehama, Glenn Lightning Complex, 926 acres burned, Burning for 22 days, 98% contained
  • Bluejay, 905 acres burned, Burning for 45 days, 15% contained 
  • Blue Jay, 850 acres burned, Burning for 21 days, 15% contained
  • Wolf, 599 acres burned, Burning for 28 days, no data
  • Shotgun, 497 acres burned, Burning for 20 days, no data
  • Rattlesnake, 497 acres burned, Burning for 5 days, 95% contained
  • Hobo, 413 acres burned, Burning for 7 days, 90% contained 
  • Coyote, 143 acres burned, Burning for 18 days, 20% contained
  • Doe, no data, Burning for 23 days, 23% contained 
  • Slater, Started today

The worst of the fire season doesn’t usually start until October, but so far, the state has seen more than 2 million acres burned, the largest amount on record. This figure surpasses all of 2018, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. 

“Existing fires are displaying extreme fire behavior … and we simply do not have enough resources to fully fight and contain every fire,” said Randy Moore, regional forester for the USDA Forest Service Pacific Southwest Region  

Here’s some footage of the wildfires burning across the state:

From the coronavirus pandemic to depressionary unemployment to wildfires, Californians have been grappling with the triple threat from hell this year. 

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/3jXRS0j Tyler Durden

Seattle and Washington State Are Being Sued Over Their Eviction Moratoriums

reason-apartment6

The Trump administration’s eviction moratorium goes into effect Friday, criminalizing rental property owners across the country from evicting tenants for the non-payment of rent. At the same time, legal controversies about similar state and local policies continue to flare up.

Last week, several landlords in Seattle, Washington filed suit against their city and state governments for imposing eviction bans, which the plaintiffs argue are an unconstitutional violation of their property rights.

Washington Gov. Jay Inslee (D) issued one of the country’s first, and most comprehensive, eviction moratoriums in late February in response to the early outbreak of coronavirus in that state, banning landlords from filing for eviction unless a tenant is creating a significant health and safety risk, or if the owner is planning on selling or moving into the property. That moratorium was extended in July and is currently set to expire in mid-October.

Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan issued her own eviction moratorium in March, which sunsets either at the end of the year or when the mayor calls an end to the city’s state of emergency.

This was followed by the Seattle City Council passing an ordinance that prevents evictions within six months of Durkan’s moratorium expiring. The council also passed an ordinance giving tenants a set amount of time to pay back rent that they owe. Like the state moratorium, Seattle’s eviction ban prevents all evictions save for cases where a tenant poses an imminent health or safety risk to other tenants.

The plaintiffs in last week’s lawsuit include two small rental property companies and one individual landlord.

One plaintiff, El Papel, LLC, alleges that two of its two tenants have refused to pay rent since April and that one of them has tried to get other renters in the building to engage in a rent strike. Another plaintiff, Karvell Li, has a tenant that has not paid rent consistently since June of last year, and who has refused to negotiate payment plans with Li.

A third plaintiff, Berman 2, LLC, owned by Osho Berman, has historically provided housing to lower-income and formerly homeless renters at below-market rates, according to the complaint. Berman has six tenants who are not paying rent and who have refused to negotiate any sort of payment plan.

“The blanket eviction ban puts landlords at the mercy of tenants who do not to pay rent, whether they face financial hardship or not,” reads the lawsuit, which has been filed by the Pacific Legal Foundation. “The eviction bans have upended lease obligations and stripped landlords of one of their most basic of property rights—the right of possession—leaving them with no bargaining power and no remedy against non-paying tenants.”

The lawsuit makes two constitutional claims against the state and city eviction bans, says Ethan Blevins, an attorney with the Pacific Legal Foundation. The first is that these policies violate the U.S. Constitution’s prohibition on states passing laws “impairing the obligation of contracts.”

“Eviction is the primary enforcement mechanism” for rental contracts, says Blevins. “When you remove the enforcement mechanism for a violation of the contract, as is the case here, you’ve impaired the contract.”

Preventing landlords from repossessing their property from non-paying tenants, argues Blevins, also amounts to a taking of property without just compensation in violation of the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

“When the government forces you to allow that person to continue to reside there and you can’t repossess it, that’s taking a valuable property right,” says Blevins.

In comments to The Seattle Times, spokespeople for both Durkan and Inslee defended their respective eviction moratoriums as legal emergency measures to prevent the pandemic from spawning an eviction and homelessness crisis.

So far during the pandemic, the number of people paying at least part of their rent has stayed pretty steady at around 90 percent at higher-end properties, which is only slightly less than where payment rates were last year. The percentage of people paying rent at is worse at lower-end buildings.

The lack of a huge surge in non-payment weakens the legal case against eviction moratoriums, Edmund Witter, managing attorney for the Housing Justice Project at the King County Bar Association in Washington, told The Seattle Times.

“Delinquency rates have not been horrible,” he said to the Times. “The reality is I don’t think [landlords] have too much to complain about right now.”

Blevins counters that there’s been no surge in evictions in places where moratoriums have expired. Data from Princeton University’s Eviction Lab shows eviction filings are below historic averages in almost every city.

In late June, a U.S. District Court in New York upheld that state’s eviction moratorium in the face of a legal challenge from landlords, ruling that the emergency created by the COVID-19 pandemic justified the moratorium and that limitations on when property owners could file for eviction don’t count as a taking.

The Pacific Legal Foundation had sued the California Judicial Council—the rule-making body for that state’s court system—over the council’s eviction moratorium on separation-of-powers grounds in June. The Judicial Council announced in mid-August that they’d let their ban to expire. The California legislature has since passed a statewide extension of that moratorium.

The fact that Seattle’s eviction moratorium expires six months after the emergency, and that both Washington and Seattle’s eviction moratoriums protect tenants who haven’t suffered pandemic-related financial hardship, makes them more vulnerable to lawsuits.

“It’s extending beyond what’s necessary to deal with the public health crisis or to deal with the economic fallout from the pandemic,” Blevins says. “If a law isn’t reasonably related or proportional to an emergency, then I think it’s more susceptible to legal challenge.”

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Jeff Gundlach Live Webcast: “Hey Kid, Want Some Candy?”

Jeff Gundlach Live Webcast: “Hey Kid, Want Some Candy?”

Tyler Durden

Tue, 09/08/2020 – 16:31

One month after shocking Wall Street with his latest prediction that Donald Trump would win the Nov election, similar to Gundlach’s contrarian and correct forecast made ahead of the 2016 election, the DoubleLine founder is holding his latest live webcast, this time titled, “Hey Kid, Want Some Candy?” a reference to something which while good in the short term, ends up being catastrophic in the long-run, similar to the current market situation.

“You can teach a child: Don’t take candy from strangers” Gundlach said, comparing this to the UBI unemployment benefits workers have depended on.

Among the topics covered in the early minutes of the slideshow are global trade volumes, the South Korean Kospi index as a real-time indicator of the export picture, the US Growth forecast (he thinks it should be stronger), and a focus on the disconnect between the economic forecast and stocks, noting that the global GDP forecast for the year is -3.9%, while in the U.S. It’s -5.0%. He finds this strange as the U.S. response has “really been one of the highest for the world.”

Gundlach also said that the economy was obviously deteriorating for two years before the recession, but looking ahead discusses the strong rebound in PMIs.

The DoubleLine CEO – who is flipping between slides at a furious pace- then points to the weekly hours worked as a recession indicator, which took a hit but has rebounded to its nearly 60-year average. At the same time, looking at consumer confidence, he says it fell off a cliff similar to the dot-com level.

Readers can access the live webcast at the following link (free registration required).

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Intolerance And Authoritarianism Accelerate Disunity And Collapse

Intolerance And Authoritarianism Accelerate Disunity And Collapse

Tyler Durden

Tue, 09/08/2020 – 16:20

Authored by Charles Hugh Smith via OfTwoMinds blog,

Scapegoating dissenters only hastens the disunity and disarray that accelerates the final collapse.

Authoritarianism is imposed on us, but its sibling intolerance is our own doing. Intolerance and authoritarianism are two sides of the same coin: as intolerance becomes the norm, the intolerant start demanding that the state enforce their intolerance by suppressing their enemies via increasingly heavy-handed authoritarian measures.

Intolerance and authoritarianism increase as instability takes hold and living standards decline. In good times, dissent and differences of opinion are not only tolerated but celebrated, as this freedom to hold a variety of beliefs serves to unify society.

In bad times, dissent and differences are viewed as mortal threats to the social order. Perhaps there is a human instinct when times become troubled to insist “we must all row together,” i.e. to seek a unity enforced by a rising intolerance that demands more authoritarian action by the state.

For example, in wartime, pacifist views that were previously tolerated become criminal offenses.

The irony here is this forced conformity doesn’t generate unity–it fractures society into bitterly warring camps as the middle ground vanishes into either/or extremism that sees authoritarianism (in support of our side, of course) as not just justified but essential.

Intolerance and authoritarianism undermine and ultimately destroy the unity that was generated by tolerance and a wide variety of beliefs and dissenting views. As our own insecurities increase, we fall all too willingly to the temptation to see others’ recalcitrant refusal to join our camp without reservations as the source of our insecurity.

In this mindset of insecurity, the “solution” is to force compliance by any means available so everyone is in our camp. And since some might be hiding the insincerity of their devotion to our righteous cause, the need for an Inquisition becomes pressing, so the insincere or closet traitors can be unmasked and punished.

But the Inquisitors themselves inevitably come under suspicion, and an Inquisition of the Inquisitors soon lays waste to those who hubristically held themselves as the arbiters of conformity. There is no way to escape this drive to dissipate insecurity by forcing conformity except the complete collapse of the social, political and economic orders.

This is the path to madness and complete social breakdown. But such is the power of insecurity and uncertainty that history records our self-destructive urgency to abandon the middle ground and a diversity of viewpoints and beliefs for the totalitarian uniformity of forced conformity.

But once rooted, intolerance knows no bounds and the snake of intolerant authoritarianism ends up eating its own tail. In an era of intolerance, ideological purity is a constantly shifting landscape of quicksand. Those at the top passing judgment on others’ ideological purity soon find their own purity is under attack.

Increasingly intolerant, repressive authoritarianism marked the final days of the Roman decline and fall. Rather than face the profound and novel crises directly and unify around the sacrifices needed to resolve the crises favorably, it is so much easier to blame everyone who doesn’t agree with our position as the source of the crises.

This is delusional, of course: crises have real-world sources, and scapegoating dissenters only hastens the disunity and disarray that accelerate the final collapse.

*  *  *

My recent books:

Will You Be Richer or Poorer?: Profit, Power, and AI in a Traumatized World ($13)

(Kindle $6.95, print $11.95) Read the first section for free (PDF).

Pathfinding our Destiny: Preventing the Final Fall of Our Democratic Republic ($6.95 (Kindle), $12 (print), $13.08 ( audiobook): Read the first section for free (PDF).

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*  *  *

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.

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Crude Crushed, Tech Wrecked, Banks Battered; Bonds & Bullion Bid

Crude Crushed, Tech Wrecked, Banks Battered; Bonds & Bullion Bid

Tyler Durden

Tue, 09/08/2020 – 16:01

Nasdaq futs are down 11% (correction from their highs last week), and the rest of the majors are down around 5%…

This is Nasdaq’s worst 3-day performance since March (3rd worst 3-day drop since 2001).

Turn the Softbank machines back on!!!!

From Friday’s close, Nasdaq was clubbed like a baby seal and when the 1430ET margin calls hit, stocks legged lower once again…

Small Caps and NASDAQ found support at their 50DMA…

Remember when the collapse/divergence of breadth meant nothing at all?

Source: Bloomberg

All the big momentum trades are reversing hard.

Big Tech…

Source: Bloomberg

FANG stocks…

Source: Bloomberg

TSLA (worst day since 2012) lost around $85bn in mkt cap (oe put another TSLA lost a BlackRock, or an Altria, or a Morgan Stanley)…

AAPL…

Banks…

Source: Bloomberg

“Work from Home” stocks plunged…

Source: Bloomberg

Semis…

Source: Bloomberg

Energy…

Source: Bloomberg

VIX was up today but trapped in a range…

WTI Crude…

But don’t sweat it – CNBC’s Bob Pisani said “We’ve got a healthy correction going on.”

Still a long way to go for stocks to catch down to bonds…

Source: Bloomberg

Not everything was down. Gold gained after rebounding from early weakness…

Bonds were bid all day with the long-end outperforming…

Source: Bloomberg

With 10Y Yields back below 70bps…

Source: Bloomberg

As Bloomberg noted, freshly-minted bond bears got a harsh lesson in market timing on Tuesday as a precipitous drop in technology shares sent investors in search of havens. Short interest as a percentage of shares outstanding on the $17.2 billion iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF, ticker TLT, jumped to 9.8% from about 4.4% from the start of last week, according to data from IHS Markit Ltd. That’s the highest level since 2018.

The dollar rallied for the 5th day in the last 6…

Source: Bloomberg

Bitcoin was flatish, hovering around the $10k mark…

Source: Bloomberg

Cable was weak for the 5th day in a row (worst day since March), back below 1.30 amid Brexit uncertainty…

Source: Bloomberg

As downbeat as it is, we give the last word to Liberty Blitzkrieg’s Mike Krieger, who tweeted the following ‘public service announcement’:

The worst thing you can do right now is assume Washington D.C. is going to help you in any way whatsoever. Not happening. The people there hate you and don’t care what happens to you. Focus on local and get your shit together. Nobody’s coming to save you.”

It can’t be that easy can it?

Source: Bloomberg

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Rochester Police Chief Suddenly Resigns Over “Attempt To Destroy My Character” – Entire Command Staff Joins

Rochester Police Chief Suddenly Resigns Over “Attempt To Destroy My Character” – Entire Command Staff Joins

Tyler Durden

Tue, 09/08/2020 – 15:45

Rochester, NY Police Chief La’Ron Singletary said in a surprise announcement on Tuesday that he will be retiring at the age of 40 after less than 18 months on the job, after controversy erupted over the March death of a black man while in police custody.

His deputy and the city’s entire command staff joined him in leaving, according to ABC News and Bloomberg.

Speaking via Zoom, Mayor Lovely Warren confirmed the moves, adding “The Chief was not asked to give his resignation.”

When asked who would be in charge of the police department this evening in the event of new protests, Warren said she didn’t know and asked for the briefing to be adjourned so that a replacement could be found. As of Sunday, a total of 37 people had been arrested and eight police officers hospitalized amid the unrest.  -Bloomberg

Singletary came under fire following news of the death of Daniel Prude, a mentally ill black man who died of asphyxiation after police attempted to take him into protective custody in March – two months before the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis, yet the incident didn’t become public until last week, according to the Democrat & Chronicle.

Prude, 41, had been suffering from a mental health episode and was running naked throughout the streets. Once officers caught him, a ‘spit hood’ was placed over his head after he began spitting. He was then held face down on the pavement for just over two minutes, after which he stopped breathing. Prude was pronounced DOA to the hospital from asphyxia.

On Monday, naked protesters wore ‘spit hoods’ outside the Rochester police headquarters in protest.

In a Tuesday statement, Chief Singletary said in part: “As a man of integrity, I will not sit idly by while outside entities attempt to destroy my character,” adding “The events over the past week are an attempt to destroy my character and integrity.

No successors have been announced.

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/32bnSZ2 Tyler Durden