Sri Lanka Bans Burqas In Response To Easter Bombings

Authored by Areeb Ullah via MiddleEastEye.net,

Muslim women in Sri Lanka have been banned from wearing the face veil in response to the Easter Sunday attacks that killed at least 250 people and wounded hundreds more. 

Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena introduced the face-covering ban on Monday and said it was part of an emergency law to ensure national security in the country. 

Sirisena’s office added that any face garment which “hindered identification” would be banned automatically.  

Critics of the ban, however, have said the ban disproportionately targets Muslim women in the South Asian country, where a small minority wear the face veil, or niqab.

Sinthujan Varatharajah, an analyst at the democracy advocacy group Open Society Foundation, said the ban made no sense as none of the Easter Sunday attackers wore face veils during the attacks. 

According to Varatharajah, the Sinhalese community, which makes up the majority of the Sri Lankan population, fear suicide bombers, who were used by the Tamil insurgency between 1980 and 2000.

“This is a shortcut response because practically speaking, none of the attackers wore a niqab,” Varatharajah told Middle East Eye. 

“Why would you criminalise the most obvious manifestation of Muslim identity? To calm the public. But this seeps into a bigger attempt by the state to control Muslim identity formation.”

Backlash feared

Following the Eastern Sunday attacks, security has been heightened across the country, as authorities fear further attacks will take place on the island. 

Analysts also fear a backlash could take place against Sri Lanka’s Muslim community in the wake of the attacks.

Varatharajah noted that in the last few years, Sri Lankan Muslims have been attacked by Sinhalese.

“There is a growing sense of tension towards Muslims being more outwardly Muslim, like wearing the hijab, which is quite a recent development,” Varatharajah said.

“This boils down to economic concerns and resentment from the Sinhalese community towards minorities. The anger geared towards Tamil businesses is now shifting towards Muslims.”

Last month, the Sri Lankan government declared a nationwide state of emergency to quell anti-Muslim riots that killed at least three people and damaged dozens of mosques and homes. 

via ZeroHedge News http://bit.ly/2Y1iVx1 Tyler Durden

License To Krill: Russian Black-Ops Spy Whale Found In Barents Sea

Norwegian fisherman encountered what appears to be a Russian-trained beluga whale in the Barents Sea off the northeast coast of Norway on April 25. 

Fitted with a camera harness that had Russian markings, the whale kept approaching the fishing boat and “rubbed up against it,” according to NRK and Ars Technica

The harness was reportedly marked with the label “Equipment St. Petersburg” and had an attachment point for a GoPro camera. Audun Rikardsen, a professor at the Norwegian Arctic University in Tromsø (UiT), told Norway’s VG that neither Norwegian nor Russian academic researchers put harnesses on whales. “I have been in contact with some Russian researchers,” Rikardsen said. “They can confirm that it is nothing they are doing. They tell me that most likely is the Russian Navy in Murmansk.” –Ars Technica

“We were going to put out our nets when we saw a whale whale swimming between the boats,” said fisherman Joar Heston, who added “It came over to us, and as it approached, we saw that it had some sort of harness on it.”

After several failed attempts to remove the harness themselves, the fisherman sent photos to Norway’s Directorate of Fisheries, and reported that the whale was in distress. A fisheries boat in the area responded, and noted that “after a little lure with cod fillets, and with the fisherman Joar Hesten getting into the water wearing a survival suit, the inspectors Jørgen Ree Wiig and Yngve Larsen from the Marine Service and the Horse managed to release the whale,” according to a post on Facebook. 

Military use of marine mammals goes back decades – with the United States’ program going back to at least the 1960s. 

The Navy’s Marine Mammal Program began in 1960 with two goals. First, the Navy wanted to study the underwater sonar capabilities of dolphins and beluga whales to learn how to design more efficient methods of detecting objects underwater, and to improve the speed of their boats and submarines by researching how dolphins are able to swim so fast and dive so deep. In addition to this research component, the Navy also trained dolphins, beluga whales, sea lions and other marine mammals to perform various underwater tasks, including delivering equipment to divers underwater, locating and retrieving lost objects, guarding boats and submarines, and doing underwater surveillance using a camera held in their mouths.  –PBS

A timeline of research via PBS: 

1960’s    navy begins use of marine mammals

1965    sea lab II
In 1965, the Marine Mammal Program began its first military project: Sea Lab II. Working in the waters off La Jolla, California, a bottlenosed dolphin named Tuffy completed the first successful open ocean military exercise. He repeatedly dove 200 feet to the Sea Lab II installation, carrying mail and tools to navy personnel. He was also trained to guide lost divers to safety.

1965-75    dolphins used in vietnam
The Navy sent five dolphins to Cam Ranh Bay to perform underwater surveillance and guard military boats from enemy swimmers. Although during this era rumors circulated about a “swimmer nullification program” through which dolphins were trained to attack and kill enemy swimmer, the Navy denies such a program ever existed.

1975    introduction of sea lions and beluga whales
With the success of the dolphin program, the Navy began working with sea lions, training them to recover military hardware or weaponry fired and dropped in the ocean. The sea lions could dive and recover objects at depths of up to 650 feet.

The Navy also began exploring the use of beluga whales, which, like dolphins, use sonar to navigate. Beluga whales could operate at much colder temperatures and deeper depths than either dolphins or sea lions.

1965-75    navy builds up collection of dolphins
The Marine Mammal Program reached its heyday in the 1980’s, with an expanded budget and increased number of dolphins. In 1986, Congress partially repealed the 1972 Marine Mammal Protection Act by letting the Navy collect wild dolphins from for “national defense purposes.” The Navy planned to use the dolphins to expand its mine disposal units and to stock a breeding program.

1986-88    dolphins in the persian gulf
The navy sent six dolphins to the Persian Gulf, where they patrolled the harbor in Bahrain to protect US flagships from enemy swimmers and mines, and escorted Kuwaiti oil tankers through potentially dangerous waters. One of the dolphins, “Skippy,” died of a bacterial infection.

1986-88    missile guarding project in bangor abandoned
In the late 1980’s the Navy began a project through which dolphins would act as guards at the Bangor Washington Trident Missile Base. Animal activists opposed the project, and filed suit against the Navy under the National Environmental Protection Act claiming that the Navy must do an environmental evaluation to determine whether deployment in the cold northern waters off Bangor would harm dolphins originally captured in the Gulf of Mexico. A judge ruled that such a study must be completed before the project could continue. The Navy abandoned the project.

By 1994, the Navy policy on moving dolphins to environments with radically different water temperatures changed; a spokesperson said that in general, the Navy would only move dolphins between environments with a 20 degree difference in temperature, except in emergency situations.

1990s    downsizing, declassification, retirement
With the end of the Cold War, the Navy’s budget for the marine mammal program was drastically reduced, and all but one of its training centers were closed down. Of the 103 dolphins remaining in the program, the Navy decided it needed only 70 to maintain its downsized operations. Much of the project was declassified, although certain details remain protected.

This raised the question of what to do with the remaining dolphins. In the 1992 Defense Appropriations Act, Congress alloted a half million dollars to the Navy to “to develop training procedures which will allow mammals which are no longer required for this project to be released into their natural habitat.” The Navy held two conferences of researchers and experts and determined that a reintroduction program would not be cost effective.

In an attempt to downsize its dolphin troops, the Navy offered to give its surplus trained dolphins to marine parks. However, interest in the free dolphins was low because many marine parks by this time had developed successful in-house breeding programs. The Navy only got only four requests, but pledged to care for the unclaimed dolphins until their deaths.

Later in 1994, the Navy agreed to send three dolphins to Sugarloaf sanctuary, near Key West in Florida, a rehabilitation facility run by Ric O’Barry. O’Barry planned to reeducate the dolphins so they could be safely released into the wild, once the necessary federal permits were granted.

1996    illegal release of Luther and Buck
Two of the dolphins being held at the Sugarloaf Sanctuary, Luther and Buck, were being prepared for life in the wild while awaiting federal permits for their release. In May, before the permits had been issued, O’Barry released the dolphins into the Gulf of Mexico. He believed that the dolphins were ready for release and that the bureaucratric requirements for a permit were designed to prevent the release of the Navy dolphins. He thought that to wait any longer before letting them go would jeopardize their chances of successful adaptation to the wild.

read O’Barry’s defense of his actions, and criticism of the release from Naomi Rose

The dolphins were recaptured less than two weeks later and returned to the Navy. All three of these dolphins are now back with the Navy. One of them is still in Florida;the other two are back in San Diego in the Navy facility there.

1997    Ukrainian dolphins trained by the Soviet Navy for military operations are now being used for therapy with autistic and emotionally disturbed children.

***

And it looks like it didn’t end there. In 2000, it was reported that the Soviet Navy sold their killer dolphins to Iran – while in 2005, there were reports that some of the US military’s trained dolphins based on Lake Pontchartrain escaped during the Hurricane Katrina flooding. In 2007, the US Navy spent $14 million on marine animal weapons research

In 2014, it was reported that Russia stole Ukraine’s “killer dolphin army” during the annexation of Crimean naval bases. 

As you may have heard in the past, the Ukrainian navy has a group of around ten dolphins in Sevastopol that are on active military duty. The dolphins partake in “training exercises for counter-combat swimmer tasks in order to defend ships in port and on raids.” And how exactly do they defend ships? With the knives and pistols attached to their adorable dolphin heads, of course. –The Atlantic

In March of 2013, three of Russia’s killer dolphins allegedly escaped the military base in Sevastopol. According to former Soviet Naval anti-sabotage officer Yury Plyachenko, “there were repeatedly cases in the 1980s when control was lost over dolphins. If a male dolphin saw a female dolphin during the mating season, he would immediately set off after her and would no longer obey any commands. But in a week or so he’d come back.”

We wonder if the Beluga whale (which doesn’t eat Krill, by the way), was similarly looking for love?

Only one question remains; who was flipper working for?

via ZeroHedge News http://bit.ly/2PCbV6L Tyler Durden

Peter Schiff: The Bigger The Boom, The Bigger The Bust

Via SchiffGold.com,

During the New Orleans Investment Conference, Peter Schiff participated in a panel discussion with Ben Hunt and Mike Larson. They talked about bubbles, booms and busts.

Hunt called it the “bubble of everything.” But he said the “gravitational force” created by all of the assets central banks have purchased over the last year have changed the “bubble-popping process.” That makes it hard to predict when things will actually start to deflate. He said it will take something the undermines the market confidence that central banks can bail us out. Hunt said inflation was possibly the pin that could prick the bubble.

Larson called it the “uber-bubble,” and he said he already sees some of the background concerns that have been simmering for  a long time are starting to “bubble over.” (Pun intended.) He said the last two bubbles were high in amplitude, but limited to certain parts of the economy (dot-coms and housing). The current bubble isn’t as high in amplitude, but it’s broader-based. We see bubbles in stocks, high-yield bonds, housing (again), and commercial real estate, along with a lot of other assets you don’t hear as much about – such as art and comic books.

I think the process of unwinding this is already beginning.”

Peter focused in on the cause of the bubbles.

When you see rampant, wide-scale bad decisions, generally a central banker is behind it, and they have made a bad decision to create too much money and to artificially manipulate interest rates down.”

This creates distortions in the economy because interest rates are really nothing more than price signals.

And like all prices, they need to be determined by the free market.”

Whenever the government – and central banks are really an extension of governments – price fixes something, it creates big distortions and malinvestments.

We have had artificially low interest rates for an unprecedented number of years at an unprecedented low rate. So, the mistakes that have been made during this time period dwarf the mistakes that have ever been made in any bubble in the past because the bubble is so much bigger.

When a bubble finally bursts, it’s really just the free market trying to clean up the mess created by the intervention. The bigger the boom, the bigger the bust.

The problem now is that the boom is so big that the bust will be catastrophic. And what’s going to make this bust different is that there is no bailout. There is no stimulus. It is impossible to reflate this bubble, because, as has been said, this is a bubble of everything. They can’t make a bubble go someplace else. It already is everyplace.”

Peter said the only place there isn’t a bubble is in gold. That means there is also a bubble in complacency and optimism.

People are so drunk on all this cheap money, they think nothing can go wrong.”

As far as what pin will prick the bubble, Peter said there are all kinds of pins out there. The problem is that when you’re in a bubble, you can’t see the pins.

The panel goes on to discuss some of the specific manifestations of the bubbles and where they see trouble spots.

And Peter makes a pitch for gold, saying his 24 karat gold cufflinks will outperform the S&P 500 over the next five years. He pointed out that when they started popping the dot-com bubble, gold was under $300. It got as high as $1,900 in 2011.

This game is not over. The fat lady hasn’t sung yet. When this final bubble pops, gold is going through the roof –I do think that by the time this bubble has run its course, you’ll be able to buy the Dow Jones for an ounce of gold.”

via ZeroHedge News http://bit.ly/2vurfsN Tyler Durden

Sri Lankan Suicide Bomber Trained With ISIS In Syria, Investigators Say

Despite President Trump heralding the destruction of ISIS at the hands of US and Syrian forces, one of the justifications he cited for ordering US troops to leave Syria (though the administration quietly pivoted and decided to keep some troops on the ground after all), in the wake of the Easter Sunday suicide bombings in Sri Lanka, the group has made its presence felt once again – this time as a decentralized guerilla organization similar to Al Qaeda.

On Monday, the group released a video of its founder, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, who delivered a call-to-arms and declared the Sri Lankan bombings to be vengeance for the fall of the caliphate. Al-Baghdadi had reportedly been killed several times over the past few years, but intelligence officials were never able to confirm his demise, and apparently, those reports were all premature.

ISIS

And as Sri Lanka remains in a state of high alert following a gun-battle with terrorists on Friday that left 15 terrorists dead, the Wall Street Journal reported Monday afternoon that investigators have determined that at least one of the suicide bombers who carried out the Easter attacks had trained with ISIS in Syria. Others may have traveled to Syria, but are still being investigated.

At least one suicide bomber in the Easter attacks in Sri Lanka trained with Islamic State in Syria, people with knowledge of the investigations said, reflecting the extremist group’s continued reach even after the collapse of its self-declared caliphate.

Investigators said Jameel Mohammed Abdul Latheef had planned to blow himself up at a luxury hotel, Taj Samudra, in the capital Colombo around the same time Easter morning that other attackers detonated explosives strapped to their bodies at three other top-end hotels and three churches.

But they believe Mr. Latheef’s device malfunctioned. He blew himself up outside a small inn, killing himself and two other people.

As many as four bombers are being investigated for travels to Turkey, Syria or Iraq, where they are believed to have come into contact with Islamic State operatives, an adviser to the government who was briefed on the investigations said. They learned bomb-making and communications skills and were sent home to Sri Lanka to start local operations for the group, this person said.

Latheef is believed to have traveled to Syria in 2014, at the height of ISIS’s power. He is said to have trained with Mohammed Emwazi, the terrorist known as “Jihadi John” (before he was killed in a drone strike). But most unusually, Latheef is said to have studied abroad in the UK and Australia, and earned a degree in aeronautical engineering. He trained with ISIS for 3-6 months.

Mr. Latheef, who studied in the U.K. and Australia, earning a degree in aeronautical engineering, is believed to have trained with Islamic State for three to six months, the person said. He was then dispatched to Sri Lanka, his home country, to recruit others and carry out attacks.

Meanwhile, WSJ reported that the bombers had used encrypted chat apps to communicate with each other.

Investigators have found that the Sri Lanka bombers used encrypted messaging apps Telegram and Threema to communicate with one another and with their Islamic State points of contact, the adviser and an intelligence official in Sri Lanka said. They also used explosives made from TATP, or Triacetone Triperoxide, which Islamic State often utilizes and can be prepared with easily available substances like drain-cleaning liquid, nail-polish remover and ball bearings.

The determination of Latheef’s involvement is the latest in a troubling trend of wealthy young people in Sri Lanka joining jihadi groups. For example, two of the bombers were sons of a wealthy spice merchant. When police showed up at the family’s compound to detain their father, one of their wives blew herself, and two of her children, up, rather than surrender.

The bottom line: ISIS might have lost its territory in Syria, but it’s still recruiting and building cells around the world.

via ZeroHedge News http://bit.ly/2V6oOf6 Tyler Durden

Wisconsin Dairy Farmers Going Bankrupt In Record Numbers, Blame Trump Tariffs

Authored by Mike Shedlock via MishTalk,

A perfect storm hit Wisconsin dairy farms: Overproduction, Bad Decisions, Trump’s Tariffs

A trio of major errors hit Wisconsin dairy farmers, but the last one, Trump’s tariffs, was the final straw threw many Wisconsin farmers into bankruptcy.

Please consider Stung by Trump’s Trade Wars, Wisconsin’s Milk Farmers Face Extinction.

For decades, Denise and Tom Murray rose before 5 a.m. and shuffled through mud and snow to milk cows on the farm that has been in their family since 1939. This month, after years of falling milk prices and mounting debt, the Murrays sold their last milk cow, taking pictures while holding back tears as the final one was loaded onto a truck and taken away.

“It’s awful hard to see them go out the last time,” said Ms. Murray, 53. “It’s scary because you don’t know what your next paycheck is going to be.”

Over the past two years, nearly 1,200 of the state’s dairy farms have stopped milking cows and so far this year, another 212 have disappeared, with many shifting production to beef or vegetables. The total number of herds in Wisconsin is now below 8,000 — about half as many as 15 years ago. In 2018, 49 Wisconsin farms filed for bankruptcy — the highest of any state in the country, according to the American Farm Bureau Federation.

Short-Term Pain Nonsense

Trump pleads that it’s short-term pain for long-term gain. But it’s tough to see any long-term gain when the intermediate term is bankruptcy.

The Murray’s received all of $400 from Trump’s farm aid package. “In every aspect, it’s not worth it — it’s not worth the fight,” said Mr. Murray.

Price of Milk

The price of milk is about where it was in mid-2010. The price has gone essentially nowhere since late-2014.

The price of new equipment and services and have gone up.

Final Straw

Trump’s the trade wars were the final straw.

  • The new North American trade deal, which is supposed to give dairy farmers more access to Canada’s tightly controlled market, has yet to be ratified by Congress and may never be approved given Democratic opposition.

  • Mr. Trump has yet to remove his metal tariffs on trading partners like Europe, Canada and Mexico, which refuse to lift their retaliatory tariffs [on agricultural goods] until those levies come off.

Overproduction

In 2012, Mr. Walker put into place a program to encourage dairy farmers to step up production with the goal of producing 30 billion pounds of milk a year by 2020. That was easily accomplished by 2016, but the oversupply crippled the industry.

“He wanted to put Wisconsin back into the lead in milk production over California,” said Joel Greeno, a dairy farmer and the president of the Wisconsin advocacy group Family Farm Defenders. “It was more an example of arrogance than practicality.”

Supply Management

Many farmers favor the idea of a supply management program for dairy like the one Canada uses, but the Trump administration has not supported such a program.

Stop the Meddling!

  1. Trump’s tariffs and the counter-tariffs have killed farmers. End the tariffs.

  2. Stop production goals.

  3. Stop worrying about which state is number one.

  4. Stop nonsense about supply management programs.

If some farmers still go under, well too bad.

Nobody guarantees programmers a job. Nobody should guarantee farmers a job either.

Let’s not turn the US into France in a misguided effort to save the family farm.

via ZeroHedge News http://bit.ly/2J0P7fu Tyler Durden

Deputy AG Rosenstein Submits Resignation Letter: “Our Nation Is Safer”

While long-expected, amid two chaos-ridden years as the Justice Department’s No.2, the day has finally come when Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein has reportedly sent his resignation letter to President Donald Trump, will leave post May 11.

“I am grateful to you for the opportunity to serve; for the courtesy and humor you often display in our personal conversations; and for the goals you set in your inaugural address: patriotism, unity, safety, education and prosperity,” Mr. Rosenstein wrote in the letter, which was reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.

In his letter, Mr. Rosenstein cited the Justice Department’s progress in executing the Trump administration’s agenda: fighting violent crime, combating the nation’s drug abuse crisis, toughening immigration enforcement and supporting local law enforcement. “Productivity rose, and crime fell,” he wrote.

“Our nation is safer, our elections are more secure and our citizens are better informed about covert foreign efforts and schemes to commit fraud, steal intellectual property, and launch cyberattacks,” he wrote.

“We also pursued illegal leaks, investigated credible allegations of employee misconduct and accommodated congressional oversight without compromising law enforcement interests.”

Mr. Rosenstein made no mention of the special counsel in his resignation letter, but instead, as WSJ reports, wrote of the Justice Department’s responsibility to avoid partisanship.

“Political considerations may influence policy choices, but neutral principals must drive decisions about individual cases,” he wrote.

“We enforce the law without fear or favor because credible evidence is not partisan, and truth is not determined by opinion polls. We ignore fleeting distractions and focus our attention on the things that matter, because a republic that endures is not governed by the news cycle.”

On Monday Mr. Barr said he appreciated the opportunity to work closely with Mr. Rosenstein and wished him well.

Mr. Rosenstein’s successor, Jeffrey Rosen, currently the No. 2 official at the Transportation Department, is awaiting a likely confirmation by the Senate.

Developing…

via ZeroHedge News http://bit.ly/2PCWfA2 Tyler Durden

Ocasio-Cortez: ‘I Don’t Care If You’re Documented Or Undocumented’

Democratic Socialist Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has gone full Soros, telling an audience at a Saturday town hall event in New York that America’s immigration system is “completely unjust,” and that a person’s immigration status doesn’t matter to her. 

The New York Rep. also said that President Trump is “creating” populations of illegal immigrants by “grinding all of the agencies to a halt that process the legal forms of immigration,” which she says is “forcing people into the shadows.” 

“First of all I believe in human rights,” AOC continued. “I don’t care if you’re documented or you’re undocumented.”

Ocasio-Cortez has awkwardly thrust herself into the immigration debate, suggesting last month to an astonished House Financial Services Committee that Wells Fargo was involved in the ‘caging of children and financing the caging of children,” because the bank has loaned money to private detention companies CoreCivic and the Geo Group. 

AOC has also repeatedly called for the abolishment of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), claiming the agency is racist and has “systematically violated human rights.” 

“The president should not be asking for more money to an agency that has systematically violated human rights. The president should be really defending why we are funding such an agency at all because right now what we are seeing is death,” she told MSNBC‘s Rachel Maddow in January, adding: “The president should be really defending why we are funding such an agency at all. Right now, what we are seeing is death. Right now, what we are seeing is the violation of human rights.

via ZeroHedge News http://bit.ly/2vq8lTO Tyler Durden

“The Fed Owns The Next Crash”

Authored by Sven Henrich via NorthmanTrader.com,

Occam’s Razor: The simplest explanation is often the best explanation.

In this case: The Fed panicked in December and by caving to markets reignited the bubble in a major way and now they are losing control as they are trapped and twisted in their own narratives. No rate hikes until 2020 but markets are printing new all time highs less than 4 months following Powell’s famous balance sheet flexibility cave on January 4th, just a couple weeks after President Trump told him “to stop the 50Bs” on twitter.

And markets have done nothing but gone up since then:

But this appears to be only act one of the drama. Now a mere weeks after a constant drum roll by Kudlow and Trump demanding the Fed to cut rates by 50bp the Fed may actually do just that according to Nomura.

Such a move would surely end whatever may be left of the Fed’s “independence” credibility which one can critically question already following the December cave. Loss of credibility being ironically one of the key risk factors Deutsche sees as a threat to the expansion:

Whether they will cut rates at this meeting or not is speculative, but fact is global growth is slowing still and markets are pricing in a rate cut:

The Fed has already made itself the market’s play thing and hence can’t ill afford to disappoint markets this year and consequently the Fed faces a perhaps impossible choice this week:

Cut rates here by 50bp could only exacerbate the bubble and set markets onto their combustion path following a total credibility loss.

But disappointing markets this year could well set the stage for a larger selloff the Fed is so desperate to prevent at every turn, especially now that the Fed has fueled the most vertical rally in this cycle:

So now they’re trapped. Inside the bubble the Fed itself helped create. No, the market is not the bubble. The Fed is the bubble and they’ve blown up markets all around them.

And as a result:

But no worries, The Fed is already tinkering on the next version of QE.

*  *  *

For the latest public analysis please visit NorthmanTrader. To subscribe to our market products please visit Services.

via ZeroHedge News http://bit.ly/2GSLEOL Tyler Durden

WeWork Unveils Plans For ‘Community-Adjusted’ Public Offering As Revenues, Losses Double

In an announcement that will no doubt be interpreted as broadly bullish for the unstoppable US equity rally, WeWork (or rather, “the We Company”, as its CEO has promised to rebrand it) said Monday that it is planning a public offering in the near future, and that it had already filed its registration paperwork with the SEC back in December.

It’s the clearest indication yet that Lyft’s post-IPO troubles (the stock is trading more than 30% below its IPO price, and has inspired a flurry of lawsuits) haven’t deterred other companies that boast both growing revenues and growing losses.

In a stunning acknowledgement of just how parlous WeWork’s business model is, a person close to the company reportedly told Axios that it could become the second most-shorted stock, behind Tesla.

WeWork

Critics of the company have pointed out several overarching flaws in its business model: For one, it’s heavily indebted, and Moody’s last year suspended its rating due to a ‘lack of information’, with its bonds frequently trading at a double-digit spread to Treasuries.

With this heavy debt load, the company would be poised to toppled into bankruptcy during an economic downturn due to the fundamental dislocation between its long-term debt obligations and its short-term leases (though the company insists that it’s working to sign up more long-term clients like IBM). And let’s not forget the allegations of self-dealing by the company’s CEO that have been raised in the business press.

Even Soft Bank, the global marginal buyer when it comes to investing in overhyped Silicon Valley startups, cut back on plans for an investment in WeWork, eventually committing just $2 billion to the company, well short of the $16 billion it had initially been eyeing.

As we’ve pointed out time and time again, WeWork has relied on accounting gimmicks to try and win over bond investors. As we have reportedly pointed out, thanks to its reliance on “community-adjusted EBITDA”, WeWork’s EBITDA is, basically, whatever you want it to be.

Community EBITDA

Here, for the first time we saw not just one adjustment to adjusted EBITDA, but an adjustment to the adjustment to the adjustment, and it was called “Community Adjusted EBITDA”, which by the miracles of non-GAAP “accounting”, pushed the company’s EBITDA from negative $193 million in 2017 to positive $233 million.

According to an investor presentation from last year, the company revealed that it doubled both revenues and losses last year (well, unless you go by the ‘Community Adjusted EBITDA’ figure).

WeWork

Looks like a sound business model to us.

via ZeroHedge News http://bit.ly/2XWXaxZ Tyler Durden

Will Americans Ever Recover From This Excursion Into Unreality?

Authored by James Howard Kunstler via Kunstler.com,

How to account for Americans being the most anxious, fearful, and stressed-out people among the supposedly advanced nations? Do we not live in the world’s greatest democratic utopia where dreams come true?

What if the dreaming part is actually driving us insane? What if we have engineered a society in which fantasy has so grotesquely over-run reality that coping with daily life is nearly impossible. What if an existence mediated by pixel screens large and small presents a virtual world more compelling than the real world and turns out to be a kind of contagious avoidance behavior — until reality is so fugitive that we can barely discern its colors and outlines beyond the screens?

You end up in a virtual world of advertising and agit-prop where manipulation is the primary driver of human activity. That is, a world where the idea of personal liberty (including any act of free thought) becomes a philosophical sick joke, whether you believe in the possibility of free will or not. You get a land full of college kids trained to think that coercion of others is the highest-and-best use of their time on earth — and that it represents “inclusion.” You get a news industry that makes its own reality, churning out narratives (i.e. constructed psychodramas) to excite numbed minds. You get politics that play out like a Deputy Dawg cartoon. You get a corporate tyranny of racketeering that herds spellbound citizens like so many sheep into chutes for shearing, not only of their money, but their autonomy, dignity, and finally their will to live.

Can a people recover from such an excursion into unreality? The USA’s sojourn into an alternative universe of the mind accelerated sharply after Wall Street nearly detonated the global financial system in 2008. That debacle was only one manifestation of an array of accumulating threats to the postmodern order, including the burdens of empire, onerous global debt, population overshoot, fracturing globalism, worries about energy, disruptive technologies, ecological havoc, and the specter of climate change — things that hurt to think about.

The sense of gathering crisis persists. It is systemic and existential. It calls into question our ability to carry on “normal” life much farther into this century, and all the anxiety that attends it is so hard for the public to process that a dismaying number of citizens opt for suicide. There is no coherent consensus about what is happening and no coherent proposals to do anything about it. Bad ideas flourish in this nutrient medium of unresolved crisis. Lately, they dominate the scene on every side.

A species of wishful thinking that resembles a primitive cargo cult grips the technocratic class, awaiting magical rescue remedies to extend the regime of Happy Motoring, consumerism, and suburbia that make up the crumbling armature of “normal” life in the USA. The political Right seeks to Make America Great Again, as though we might return to a 1962 heyday of industrial mass production by wishing hard enough. The Left seeks the equivalent of an extended childhood for all, lived out in a universal safe space, where all goods and services come magically free from a kindly parent-like government, and the sunny days are spent training unicorns to find rainbows.

The decade-long “recovery” from the Great Financial Crisis of 2008 amounted to ten years of fake-it-til-you-make-it — with the prospect nil of actually making it to something like economic and cultural soundness. Are we too far gone now? Some kind of shock therapy is surely in the offing, and probably in the form of a violent financial readjustment that will alter the terms of getting and spending so drastically as to topple the matrix of rackets that masquerades as the nation’s business.

That financial shock has been coiling and coiling in the fantasyland that banking has become in the new zero interest rate regime where notions that pretend to be money get levered into new ways of destroying life on earth and the human project with it. At some cognitive level the people of this land sense what is coming and the wait for it is driving them crazy. Tom Petty was right: the waiting is the hardest part, and a hard way to learn that a virtual life is not an adequate substitute for an authentic one.

via ZeroHedge News http://bit.ly/2GRE2Mf Tyler Durden