The US Is Developing Two New Nuclear Weapons

As military suspicions between the US and Russia escalate to levels last seen during the Cold War, both countries are trying to bolster their defenses and their military readiness to hedge against a plethora of geopolitical risks, from nuclear war on the Korean peninsula to a direct military confrontation between China and the US, or possibly Russia and the US.

In September, Russian President Vladimir Putin was accused of provoking NATO by marshaling 10,000 Russian and Belarusian troops along Russia’s western border with the Baltic states for their “Zapad” military exercises – something that prompted an outcry from NATO.

Putin has vigorously defended  Russia’s right to carry out military exercises and ballistic missile tests, arguing that both the US and NATO have been “accelerating build-up of infrastructure in Europe” in violation of the 1987 treaty on the elimination of intermediate-range and shorter-range missiles. In a similar vein, the US has accused Russia of violating the same treaty with missile tests of its own.

Meanwhile, as the US and its allies have accused Russia of meddling in Western elections, the number of NATO troops deployed near the Russian border has tripled in recent years as tensions have percolated.

With tensions at a fever pitch, the Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday that the Pentagon is developing two new nuclear missiles that would be capable of deployment from a nuclear submarine.

 

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It’s also seeking to reauthorize a nuclear-tipped sea-launched cruise missile, a system that was retired from the American arsenal in 2010.

The development of the two weapons is among a broad range of recommendations in the Pentagon’s Nuclear Posture Review. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson allegedly made his “moron” comment about the president during a meeting at the Pentagon that was intended to review the US’s nuclear policy.

All of this is part of a major reassessment of US nuclear strategy and programs that was commissioned about a year ago by President Donald Trump. According to WSJ, the Pentagon is expected to formally unveil its comprehensive new plan later this month. But in the meantime, it has leaked some tantalizing details to the WSJ’s Pentagon reporter, even though the final draft of the policy hasn’t been approved by the president.

The Pentagon has dismissed an unclassified draft of the strategy that was published last week by HuffPost – which claimed that Trump wants to build a lot more nukes – as “predecisional.” Meanwhile more updated drafts are also circulating. But the plans to field the new nuclear systems have strong support in the Pentagon and are expected to go forward, according to people familiar with the review.

The plan as it stands represents a shift away from de-nuclearization and returning instead to a Soviet-era arms race mentality.

However, critics say that the development of low-power nukes is almost as dangerous as hydrogen bombs because they lower the threshold to possible use.

A major question at the heart of the Pentagon review is how to respond to military strategy and programs in Russia and China, which American officials say provide a more prominent role for nuclear weapons. In effect, the Pentagon argues that since adversaries have failed to follow the US in de-emphasizing the role of nuclear weapons, Washington needs a greater range of nuclear options to counter its potential foes, especially for carrying out limited strikes.

Russia’s decision to develop and deploy that system is described by the review as part of a Russian doctrine that calls for threatening the limited use of nuclear weapons, or perhaps even carrying out a limited nuclear strike, to end a conventional war on terms favorable to the Kremlin.

By developing a new American “low yield” system, the Pentagon review argues the US will have more credible options to respond to Russian threats without using more powerful strategic nuclear weapons, which the Kremlin may calculate Washington would be reluctant to use for fear of unleashing an all-out nuclear war. Because the new weapons it is proposing would be based at sea, the US wouldn’t need the permission of other nations to deploy them and their deployment wouldn’t violate existing arms-control agreements.

The draft doesn’t precisely define what “low yield” nuclear weapons might be, but the new Trident system might have a warhead of one or two kilotons, compared with the current system which has an explosive yield that ranges from 100 kilotons to 455 kilotons, depending on the warhead it carries. By comparison, the U.S. nuclear bomb dropped on Hiroshima, Japan, at the end of World War II was about 15 kilotons.

Critics of the Pentagon’s strategy claim that the adoption of “low-power” nuclear weapons could lower the threshold for launching a nuclear strike.

“We should be doing everything to reduce the risk that nuclear weapons are going to be used, not expanding the ambiguity of when we might use nuclear weapons,” said Jon Wolfsthal, who served as a senior official for arms control on President Barack Obama’s National Security Council.

Regardless, the review has drawn support from conservative lawmakers and pundits. “This is not about making weapons more usable; this is about strengthening deterrence so that nuclear weapons are not used in the first place,” said Robert Joseph, a senior national security official in the George W. Bush administration. “We have to think what would be credible in Russian eyes.”

According to the WSJ, the review makes clear that the US could suspend its plans to revamp its nuclear arsenal if Russia fixes alleged violation of the 1987 treaty banning U.S. and Russian land-based intermediate-range missiles and also reduce its formidable arsenal of tactical nuclear weapons.

Russia and China aren’t the only threats cited in the nuclear review. It also asserts that upgrading the US nuclear arsenal will add to the country’s ability to deter North Korean aggression.

 

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“North Korea relies on hardened and deeply buried facilities to secure the Kim regime and its key military and command and control capabilities,” the review says. “Consequently, the United States will continue to field a range of conventional and nuclear capabilities able to hold such targets at risk.”

Despite the debate over the proposed “low yield” Trident missile and sea-launched cruise missile, many of the other weapons recommended by the review also were advocated by the Obama administration, including the development of a new strategic bomber and an air-launched cruise missile.

But even if the plan is approved by Trump, carrying out the modernization will require 6.4% of the Defense Department budget, up from 2% to 3% today. If the Pentagon doesn’t secure the spending increases it anticipates – something that Republicans are fighting to include in a long-term spending bill – this could heighten the competition for funds.

But as Russia continues to test powerful ICBMs that it claims can overcome NATO’s missile-defense systems – and North Korea and Iran continuing ballistic missile tests of their own – the urgency to pass a plan to upgrade US weapons systems hasn’t been this intense in years.

 

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The Southern Poverty Law Center Scam: New at Reason

There are dangerous hate groups in America. So a group called the Southern Poverty Law Center promises to warn us about them. They release an annual list of hate groups in America.

The media cover it, but John Stossel says they shouldn’t. It’s a scam.

Click here for full text and downloadable versions.

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Bannon Subpoenaed By Mueller In Russia Probe

The bad news for Steve Bannon just keeps on coming.

Not long after Bannon was bounced from Breitbart following his feud with Trump over his comments in Michael Wolff’s book, moments ago the NYT reports that Trump’s former chief strategist was subpoenaed last week by the special counsel, Robert Mueller to testify before a grand jury as part of the investigation into possible links between Trump’s associates and Russia.

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And the reason why stocks dipped modestly and the VIX bounced on the news, is that the subpoena marks the first time Mueller is known to have used a grand jury subpoena to seek information from a member of Mr. Trump’s inner circle.

After excerpts from the book, “Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House,” were published this month, Mr. Trump derided Mr. Bannon publicly and threatened to sue him for defamation. Mr. Bannon was soon ousted as the executive chairman of the hard-right website Breitbart News.

Mueller reportedly issued the subpoena after Mr. Bannon was quoted in a new book criticizing Mr. Trump, saying that Donald Trump Jr.’s 2016 meeting with Russians was “treasonous” and predicting that the special counsel investigation would ultimately center on money laundering.

According to the NYT, the subpoena could be a negotiating tactic:

Mr. Mueller is likely to allow Mr. Bannon to forgo the grand jury appearance if he agrees to instead be questioned by investigators in the less formal setting of the special counsel’s offices in Washington, according to the person, who would not be named discussing the case. But it was not clear why Mr. Mueller treated Mr. Bannon differently than the dozen administration officials who were interviewed in the final months of last year and were never served with a subpoena.

Meanwhile, on Tuesday Bannon was testifying behind closed doors before the House Intelligence Committee, which is also investigating Russia’s meddling in the 2016 election and ties between the Trump campaign and Russia.

The NYT quotes legal experts who said the subpoena could be a sign that the investigation was intensifying, while others said it may simply have been a negotiating tactic to persuade Mr. Bannon to cooperate with the investigation. The experts also said it could be a signal to Mr. Bannon, who has tried to publicly patch up his falling-out with the president, that despite Mr. Trump’s legal threats, Mr. Bannon must be completely forthcoming with investigators.

Prosecutors generally prefer to interview witnesses before a grand jury when they believe they have information that the witnesses do not know or when they think they might catch the witnesses in a lie. It is much easier for a witness to stop the questioning or sidestep questions in an interview than during grand jury testimony, which is transcribed, and witnesses are required to answer every question.

The news will hardly come as a surprise to Trump: “the president appeared to ease his anger toward Mr. Bannon at the end of last week. When asked in an interview with The Wall Street Journal whether his break with Mr. Bannon was “permanent,” the president replied, “I don’t know what the word ‘permanent’ means.””

As a result, “people close to Mr. Bannon took the president’s comments as a signal that Mr. Trump was aware that his fired strategist would soon be contacted by investigators.”

Whether or not Bannon actually knows something that can help the Mueller probe, of course, remains to be seen.

Despite a modest blip lower in risk, stocks have promptly BTFD on the news and for now appear unbothered by this latest development involving the Trump probe.

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Good Samaritans in Southern California Cited for Feeding the Homeless

Police cite Break the Ban leaderPolice in the City of El Cajon (near San Diego) spent part of the Martin Luther King holiday weekend citing people for feeding the homeless. Now those people are fighting back.

On Sunday, police cited about a dozen people—including one 14-year-old girl—with misdemeanor charges for feeding homeless people in a public park.

El Cajon passed this law as an “emergency” in October, claiming it was needed due to a rise in Hepatitis A in Southern California last year, an outbreak that has hit the homeless especially hard. Hepatitis A can be spread quite a few ways among those who live unsanitary lives (as the homeless typically do), but it seems unlikely that it’s a result of non-homeless people giving homeless people food.

El Cajon’s City Council is abusing a health scare to make it harder for the public to provide assistance to homeless people because they want them off the streets and into managed shelters and churches. This “solution” then criminalizes voluntary charitable interactions between citizens for not fitting into the model of how the city wants people to behave.

High school teacher Matthew Schneck shared his citation on Twitter:

Listen to El Cajon City Council member Bob McClellan complain about people finding their own ways of helping the homeless and not complying with the city’s master plan (via the San Diego Union Tribune):

Councilman Bob McClellan said the city has published a list of churches where people can get food and where activists can help serve food, in an effort to contain food sharing to closed and sanitary environments.

“They don’t have to feed them in the park where it could cause a problem according to the health authorities,” McClellan said. “If they want to help the homeless, look at the list of places. All they have to do is read the list.”

The group responsible for the event on Sunday knew full well what was going to happen. The group—named Break the Ban—is defying the ordinance on purpose. They and their lawyers are now going to use the citations to challenge the constitutionality of the law itself. This was their fourth event feeding the homeless in defiance of the law. They’re planning another event for January 27.

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) describes the ban as “unconstitutional and unnecessarily cruel.” They’re claiming the sharing ban violates freedom of speech. It may seem strange to say that giving food is a form of speech, but the ACLU argues that the city is picking and choosing who can express charitable attitudes toward the homeless and the circumstances of how they may do so:

“By prohibiting food sharing only when done for ‘charitable purposes,’ El Cajon is regulating food sharing because of its expressive content, punishing only those who share food to express their religious or political beliefs in ministry or charity but not those who share food for other purposes,” said David Loy, ACLU SDIC’s legal director. “If charitable appeals for funds are within the protection of the First Amendment, the same is true for charitable giving, whether of money or food.”

El Cajon is hardly alone here. Atlanta has targeted good Samaritans for feeding the homeless in public spaces, as have such cities as Orlando, Tampa, Houston, and Philadelphia, among others. Watch ReasonTV’s video from 2012 about Philadelphia’s attempt to stop people from feeding the homeless:

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NYPD Officers Investigated for Illegal Gun Searches

The Bronx County District Attorney’s Office is investigating members of the New York Police Department’s (NYPD) 52nd Precinct for perjury and official misconduct in connection with allegations of illegal investigative tactics used to locate illegal guns, the New York Daily News reports.

The precinct, located in in the central Bronx, has seen a dramatic recent uptick in gun possession arrests, a trend which has earned its leadership praise within the NYPD’s statistics-driven command structure. According to the report, members of the precinct could face criminal charges, internal disciplinary measures, or both.

Because they often involve broad-scale intrusive searches of homes and individuals, such police “gun recovery” operations have drawn criticism from residents and civil liberties groups in the past. New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg’s controversial “Stop and Frisk” program, which was declared illegal by a federal judge in 2013, was largely aimed at discovering illegal guns.

Officers in the precinct allegedly engaged in a routine practice of arresting suspects on questionable pretexts, and offer to drop charges in exchange for the location of illegal guns. When the guns were located, however, the cops would charge their new ‘informant’ with possession of the guns, often leaving the original arrest and charge in place.

These tactics reportedly led to a number of felony gun possession cases being dropped in court or plead out as minor misdemeanors, presumably to avoid having to defend the officers’ conduct in court.

As the report notes, it is not unlawful for police to lie or make false promises to criminal suspects. It is likely the district attorney’s investigation is instead focused on whether officers have deliberately made unjustified arrests to leverage for interrogations aimed at gun recovery, or have lied to courts about their investigative procedures. There may also be a question as to whether ‘consent searches’ conducted under such circumstances are legally valid, or whether consent to search arrestees’ homes was ever actually obtained at all.

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Trump Warns Xi That “Disappointing” Surge In China Trade Deficit Is “Not Sustainable”

President Trump and China’s President Xi Jinping, held a call yesterday, according to the White House.

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While President Trump “expressed hope” that the resumed inter-Korean dialogue may prompt a change in North Korea’s destructive behavior, perhaps more notable was the fact that President Trump used the call “express disappointment that the United States’ trade deficit with China has continued to grow” and made clear that “the situation is not sustainable.”

Indeed – China’s Trade Surplus with the US grew notably in Trump’s first year…

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The full readout is below:

President Donald J. Trump spoke yesterday with President Xi Jinping of the People’s Republic of China to discuss recent developments on the Korean Peninsula.

President Trump and President Xi acknowledged the resumption of inter-Korean dialogue and expressed hope that it might prompt a change in North Korea’s destructive behavior.

President Trump committed to sustain the United States-led global campaign of maximum pressure to compel North Korea to commit to denuclearization.

The two leaders also discussed trade issues, and President Trump expressed disappointment that the United States’ trade deficit with China has continued to grow. President Trump made clear that the situation is not sustainable.

It is unclear just what Trump will do about it but as we noted previously, it seems China is deeply worried about US trade sanctions, and more broadly the US taking  more assertive in rectifying perceived issues in the bilateral trade relations. Every Administration goes through an episode of promising to deal with Chinese trade interventions and ends up with a watered down, vague agreement. China’s pre-emptive action (with its Treasury purchase headlines) suggests that this time the level of worry is different.

Of course this week also reportedly sees the launch of the Petro-Yuan futures contract.

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“Buy Puts Now”: Morgan Stanley Issues A Warning As S&P Calls Hit All Time Highs

Pitching hedges when the market is in the middle of a blow off top is a tough sell. But, according to Chris Metli, executive director in Morgan Stanley’s Inst. Equity Division, that’s exactly what traders should be doing, for three reasons: 1) positioning, 2) pricing, and 3) potential catalysts, which “all suggest now is an attractive time to buy Feb puts as a hedge – and it is a rare event when all align.”

Here is how one of the top Morgan Stanley cross-asset quants justifies his reasoning:

First this is not a call for the final top – positive sentiment and positioning can have momentum of their own and absent some kind of shock likely take the market higher.  But the rally is getting more fragile – as MS Equity Strategist Mike Wilson notes in Weekly Warm-up: Euphoria! (Jan 16, 2018) “The bottom line is that we have entered the late cycle euphoria stage we predicted a year ago.” and “it is more likely the S&P 500 will reach our bull case of 3,000 before it’s over. We just want to make sure investors appreciate this is higher, not lower risk than the rally we experienced last year.”

1.  The rally is getting riskier because of positioning – investors have aggressively chased beta with both futures and options.  Over the last two weeks investors have bought the 2nd largest amount of S&P 500 futures (as measured by MS Trade Pressure) since at least 2010, while at the same time net holdings of S&P 500 calls are the highest and the net holdings of S&P 500 puts are the lowest since at least 2010.

 

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2. That demand for upside and lack of interest in protection has driven short dated skew down to near post crisis lows, making puts cheaper.  This flattening of skew is a sharp turnaround from the historical highs seen just last October and bucks the structural steepening of the last several years (chart above).

On one hand the flattening simply reflects a lack of demand for puts.  But it also reflects the fact that volatility is now positively correlated to spot – i.e. volatility has been rising in an up market – and a belief by market participants that vol is unlikely to rise significantly if spot falls

While this may hold for small declines in spot, QDS thinks that anything more than a 2% drawdown could drive a meaningful increase in vol, making puts even more valuable.  A 2% decline would certainly surprise the market, and would also be compounded by dealer demand for options – while the overall investor community doesn’t own a lot of protection, there has been some lumpy buying of puts that means in a move lower dealers will get shorter vol and need to cover (i.e. buy options).

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3)    Finally there is actually a potential catalyst with a potential government shutdown this Friday January 19th, as well as the State of the Union on the 30th.  Shutdowns rarely have any lasting impact, but historically have resulted in short-term equity drawdowns, and it appears that the probability of an adverse outcome this time around is rising.

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To position for a quick pullback QDS suggests simply buying Feb 2% OTM SPY puts for ~41bps (272 strike vs 277.92 ref as of Friday’s close, but should roll up to higher strike on today’s rally) to capture both potential catalysts and leave a little time value to benefit from a potential increase in volatility on a selloff.  The market implied probability of a 2% decline over the next month is only ~12%, in the 3rd percentile since 2001, and puts have rarely been cheaper.  The MS Index Trading desk has also commented on the attractiveness of SPX hedges.

 

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Stocks Slammed As VIX Spikes To 1-Month High

The Dow has tumbled back below 26,000…

 

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And all major US equity markets are stumbling notably after their exuberant open…

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As VIX extends its pre-market ramp above 11 to its highest in 5 weeks…

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Notably, Morgan Stanley points out that over the last two weeks investors have bought the 2nd largest amount of S&P 500 futures (as measured by MS Trade Pressure) since at least 2010, while at the same time net holdings of S&P 500 calls are the highest and the net holdings of S&P 500 puts are the lowest since at least 2010.

Probably nothing.

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Goldman’s Commodity Revenue Falls 75% To Lowest On Record

With Goldman having shuttered much of its commodity front-office in recent years, it probably won’t come as a big surprise that the bank has become increasingly less reliant on commodities as a profit center following repeated probes into manipulation by Goldman and other big banks, as well as organic revenue declines in the sector.

What is surprising, however, is the extent of the revenue decline because as Bloomberg reports this morning, Goldman suffered its worst commodities performance in the bank’s history as a public company, when a drop of about 75% in net revenues in 2017 put it behind long-time rival Morgan Stanley.

More from Bloomberg:

For decades Wall Street’s dominant commodities trader, Goldman’s performance was dragged down by losses in gas and power. The slump means the bank’s storied natural resources unit fell behind competitors such as Morgan Stanley, where net revenues in the sector rose by about a fifth last year, one of the people said — a reversal of fortunes for the two banks known as the “Wall Street refiners.”

As previously reported, the last C in FICC – which once upon a time was a wildly profitable group – Goldman’s commodities unit had been under scrutiny both within the bank and among investors since it revealed its second-quarter performance was the worst in its post-IPO history. That triggered an informal review of the unit and several high-profile departures, including global commodities head Gregory Agran.

And, as Bloomberg adds, the bank’s commodities earnings in the final three months of 2017 were better than the previous two quarters as losing natural gas trades were closed. Nonetheless, “performance at the unit remained lackluster as it cut back risk-taking.”

Almost as if the lack of volatility unleashed by central banks to help banks  was… bad for banks.

While Goldman does not breakout its commodities earnings, which are lumped into its fixed income, currencies and commodities division, Goldman had net revenues from the unit of a little under $1.1 billion in 2016, according to Bloomberg. And yet, it was ranked No. 1 among global investment banks in the sector, according to Coalition Development Ltd., a London-based analytics company.

A 75% drop suggests Goldman’s net revenues in commodities last year were less than half those of Morgan Stanley, where a strong performance in gas and power helped spur an increase in commodities net revenues to more than $600 million, according to one of the people.

And while the contribution of commodities to the banks’ overall results these days is small, the asset class was once a significant driver of profits.  In its heyday in the mid-2000s, Goldman enjoyed net revenues that peaked at $3.4 billion in 2009 thanks to volatile markets, rising interest from investors and little competition from other banks.

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And, as a reminder, many of the bank’s top executives – including Chief Executive Officer Lloyd Blankfein – cut their teeth in the commodities division, J. Aron.

The bank has remained committed to the unit in spite of its weak results, making at least seven new hires to the unit in the past few months, and pushing investment bankers to use their relationships with natural resources companies to help drive business.

There may be a silver lining: according to the report, so far 2018 is proving kinder to Goldman’s commodities business than 2017, according to one of the people: it had a good start to 2018, profiting from volatility in energy markets as the U.S. northeast was hit by a blast of freezing weather, which as we previously reported sent nat gas prices soaring to record highs.

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Florida Lawmakers Are Fast-Tracking Licensing Reforms

Florida has some of the nation’s most onerous licensing laws, but state lawmakers there have taken the first step towards undoing some of the most outlandish requirements for low-income professions.

On Friday, the Florida House voted 74-28 to approve a bill that slashes licensing requirements for would-be barbers, hair-braiders, and manicurists. It also reduces the licensing burden for a number of professions that you probably don’t even associate with licensing, like geologists and timekeepers at boxing matches.

As state legislative sessions get underway this month, occupational licensing figures to be an important—if under the radar—issue in almost every statehouse. Labor Secretary Alexander Acosta has called for state legislatures to ease licensing requirements, following-up on similar calls to action issued by the Obama White House three years ago. Combined with support for reform from government agencies like the Federal Trade Commission and academics from all sides of the political spectrum, licensing reform has a chance to be a truly bipartisan economic issue in an era where few of those exist.

In Florida, for example, the licensing bill offered by a trio of Republican lawmakers got broad support from both Democrats and Republicans in the House. According to the Tallahassee Democrat, it was one of 24 pieces of legislation—out of more than 2,700 bills filed—selected for consideration in the opening days of the legislative sessions, which began last week. Because the Florida Legislature holds a relatively short, 60-day session, getting fast-tracked on opening day gives the bill a much better chance of becoming law.

If it clears the Senate and gets a signature from Gov. Rick Scott, a Republican, the bill would cut in half the number of hours needed to become a barber, from 1,200 to 600 hours, and would exempt a number of specific skills—including body wrapping, hair wrapping, applying makeup and applying nail polish—from the state’s cosmetology licensing laws. It would also reduce the amount of training necessary to become a licensed nail specialist (someone who is allowed to perform manicures and pedicures, in addition to applying nail polish) from 240 hours of training to 150 hours.

Requiring hundreds of hours of training to do something, like cutting hair or filing nails, that plenty of people do at home for free is still excessive. Particularly because getting an emergency medical technician license in Florida requires only 110 hours of training—10 times less than the current requirement for barbers. There’s no real public health and safety reason for the state to require a license for barbering or cosmetology, but reducing those requirements is still a step in the right direction.

The bill also targets licensing requirements in a number of more obscure professions. It would repeal Florida’s licensing requirements for geologists and for boxing timekeepers and announcers. It would also allow licensed yacht brokers—yes, a real thing—to operate more than one office under a single license.

Florida still has a long way to go. According to the Institute for Justice, a national libertarian law firm that tracks licensing requirements across the states, Florida has the fifth most burdensome requirements in the country.

“Occupational licensing is one of the biggest barriers stopping Floridians from finding work,” says Justin Pearson, managing attorney of the Institute for Justice’s Florida office. “This vote is a welcome first step to paring back many arbitrary, onerous and just downright pointless regulations that infringe on the right to earn an honest living.”

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