Anti-Logic And The Keynesian “Stimulus”

Submitted by William L. Anderson via the Ludwig von Mises Institute,

American political culture always seems to be “celebrating” the anniversary of something, be it JFK’s assassination (we just passed the 50th anniversary of that sad event) or the signing of some (mostly bad) legislation. The latest political activity to be enshrined with an anniversary is the so-called stimulus, the $800 billion monstrosity passed five years ago ostensibly to “put America back to work.”

Not surprisingly, the New York Times has editorialized that any criticism of the spending bill — at least any criticism which says “too much” was spent — is a Republican “myth and falsehood.” Not only was the “Stimulus” a legitimate piece of legislation, sniffed the NYT, but it also:

prevented a second recession that could have turned into a depression. It created or saved an average of 1.6 million jobs a year for four years. (Where are the jobs, Mr. Boehner.) It raised the nation’s economic output by 2 to 3 percent from 2009 to 2011. It prevented a significant increase in poverty — without it, 5.3 million additional people would have become poor in 2010.

Like all examples of the Broken Window Fallacy, the spirited defense of this spending bill is based upon “accounting” methods that count the people hired through “stimulus” spending as “new jobs” but fail to note how others might have lost their own means of employment. Now, this was a bill that, among other things, had workers rolling sod into the grass median of I-68 (which is near my home) in an area where runoff collected from tons of salt thrown onto roads by state highway crews (our area receives a lot of snowfall). Not surprisingly, within a year, all of the new grass was dead.

I liken the “stimulus” to throwing a bit of lighter fluid onto a pile of soaking wet wood. The flames pop up for a few seconds, but then disappear as the effects from the fluid go away. (No, repeated douses of “stimulus” fluid do not ultimately gain traction and then lead to a miraculous economic recovery.)

If Beltway political culture permits any criticism of the Holy Stimulus, it is this: “the stimulus wasn’t big enough.” Intones the NYT: “The stimulus could have done more good had it been bigger and more carefully constructed.”

The rest of the editorial is a compilation of near-plagiarism from Paul Krugman’s columns and blog posts, and it reflects how Keynesian anti-logic works. The “logical” narrative goes as follows:

  • “Enough” government spending during a recession will bring the economy to “full employment.”
  • The economy is not at full employment.
  • Therefore, there wasn’t enough government spending.

Should one question the Keynesian premises of this awful syllogism, the standard answer is: America had “full employment” during World War II. (Robert Higgs has thoroughly debunked this enduring myth.) But, then, so did Germany and the U.S.S.R., according to Keynesian standards, but no one envies what people there experienced!

The problem that occurs when one wishes to interpret the results of the Stimulus is not due to bad politics. To put it another way, Stimulus spending always will confer political benefits, given that the money is transferred from taxpayers to preferred political constituents. Those footing the bill include both present and future taxpayers, since they will have to pay later for the public debt incurred to pay for present stimulus spending.

I make this point because the stimulus always has been presented as a government action that improved general or overall economic conditions, as opposed to being a political wealth-transfer scheme. The NYT editorial drips with what only can be a religious faith in the whole system, as though politicians seeking votes are going to “carefully” construct a process that is aimed at making certain political constituencies better off — but at the expense of other constituencies.

In reality, the government-based stimulus is based upon bad economics or, to be more specific, one of bad economic logic. To a Keynesian, an economy is a homogeneous mass into which the government stirs new batches of currency. The more currency thrown into the mix, the better the economy operates. One only needs to read Krugman’s writings to see that belief in full bloom.

Austrian economists, on the other hand, recognize the relationships within the economy, including relationships of factors of production to one another, and how those factors can be directed to their highest-valued uses, according to consumer choices. The U.S. economy remains mired in the mix of low output and high unemployment not because governments are failing to spend enough money but rather because governments are blocking the free flow of both consumers’ and producers’ goods and preventing the real economic relationships to take place and trying to force artificial relationships, instead. (Green energy and ethanol, anyone?)

Simply put, the stimulus could work only if it were directing factors of production from lower-valued uses to higher-valued uses as determined ultimately by consumer choice. If that actually were the case, then the government would not have to force consumers to use stimulus-funded ethanol and electricity created by wind power.

Austrians arrive at their position through logic, but logic that is based in what we already know about human action. Unlike Keynesian “logic,” the premises of Austrian economics are sound, so the conclusions derived from them also are sound. No wonder the Austrian position is banned from the NYT editorial page!


    



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“Fabulous Fab” Fired From Financial Faculty

Just six brief days after we discussed the somewhat stunning fact that none other than Fabrice "Fabulous Fab" Tourre was set to each an economics course at the University of Chicago, it appears the prestigious school has had second thoughts. As WSJ reports, a university spokesman explained, "as preparations continue for the Spring Quarter, Fabrice Tourre will no longer be assigned as an instructor for Honors Elements of Economic Analysis," decling to comment on the specifics of the sudden change. We are sure there is an 'ethics' course that needs a TA.

Via WSJ,

Mr. Tourre, the former Goldman Sachs trader found liable for defrauding investors, will no longer teach an honors economics course to undergraduate students at the University of Chicago. The move is an abrupt change, considering Mr. Tourre , nicknamed as the “Fabulous Fab,” had been slated to begin teaching the course during the spring quarter, which begins later this month.

 

As preparations continue for the Spring Quarter, Fabrice Tourre will no longer be assigned as an instructor for Honors Elements of Economic Analysis in the College,” Jeremy Manier, a university spokesman, said in an email to MoneyBeat. “Instead he will be able to fulfill the teaching requirements for his Ph.D. program through opportunities in his department’s graduate-level curriculum.”

 

Mr. Manier declined to comment on the sudden change.

Shame really… Still, who needs an economics class anyway?


    



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Ohio 10-Year-Old Reportedly Suspended For Pointing His Finger Like a Gun

at least there wasn't a cop around to mistake it for a real gunThe latest victim of zero
tolerance,
via CNN
:

According to his father, Paul Entingh, one moment the
boy was “goofing off” with his friends in fifth grade science
class, and the next the teacher was taking him out of the classroom
invoking Ohio’s zero-tolerance policy.

The offense? Nathan was “making his fingers look like a gun, having
the thumb up and the pointed finger sticking out,” said Entingh,
describing the February 26 incident.

“He was pointing it at a friend’s head and he said ‘boom.’ The kid
didn’t see it. No other kids saw it. But the teacher saw it,” he
said. “It wasn’t threatening. It wasn’t hostile. It was a
10-year-old kid playing.”

The principal told the father his son was being suspended for
three days for a “level 2 look alike firearm,” and that she sent
notices home to parents for weeks. Entingh’s infraction wasn’t an
isolated incident; the middle school principal is worried about an
outbreak of play gunfights and even, the horror, paper guns.

CNN also reports that according to the state’s own statistics,
419 students were suspended and 38 expelled for “firearm
look-a-likes.”

Earlier this year, the Obama administration
released guidelines
in an apparent effort to get local schools
to calm down on zero tolerance policies. Unfortunately, the Obama
administration’s concurrent
anti-gun efforts
have helped contribute to an environment where
a middle school principal sees herself as fighting the scourge of
children playing kids’ games.

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Singapore Tops Tokyo

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Thank your lucky stars that you don’t live in some places around the world. If you think you are having a rough time getting by, finding enough money to make ends meet and you constantly talk over the increase in prices, then think again. You probably don’t live in one of the most expensive cities in the world.

According to a new survey that has just been carried out by the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) it’s now Singapore that is the most expensive place to live in the world; that’s no saving race for the rest of us that thing that we are also actually living in the most expensive city in the world; It’s always in your own back yard that you are worried about how much things cost, never anywhere else. I wonder if there will ever be a limit to the cost of living or if the sky’s the limit. When do things stop getting more expensive? Even when things went pear-shaped after the financial bubble exploded, things still continued to get more expensive in the scramble to stop going under. We ended up with less money and higher prices.

Even in 2011, just three years after the 2008 financial crisis global food prices for example still remained very high. Despite the fact that they were not quite at the extreme record levels of 2008, they were gradually creeping higher, making the position of some in the global economy even more of a struggle. Lower demand should have, in theory, pushed prices down and a slow recovery should have brought about easier times for those that were already struggling to get by. But, the food-price crisis and the financial explosion of the stock market were very much linked to each other. While the housing bubble was expanding, the emerging economies and those that were dependent in Africa on commodity exports also fuelled the increase in food prices. The ensuing financial crisis meant that food stocks and production dropped dramatically in those commodity-producing countries and as a consequence prices increased. We can’t deal with the financial crisis and food-reform policies as separate entities. Nothing is separate these days, is it?

Where’s the limit to just how expensive things can get then? 
The Worldwide Cost of Living Survey for 2014 has just been published and it’s as follows:

Singapore
• Paris
• Oslo
• Zurich
• Sydney
• Caracas
• Geneva
• Melbourne
• Tokyo
• Copenhagen

The majority of those cities come as no surprise to anyone of us. But, it’s interesting to note that despite the apparent woes of Asia and South America, they are the most present cities in the list. The French have always prided themselves on asking for a lot for a little and they are past masters at conspicuous consumption. The Swiss come as no surprise either in their bank-fuelled world of economics.

But, just a decade ago and Singapore was right down in 18th position. But, now, thanks to utility bills soaring out of control and the strength of the currency they have shot to the top.

Check out and compare how much it costs where you live in comparison with Singapore averages:

• Gas, Water and Electricity could cost an average of S$600 (US$472) per month 
• Internet works out to about S$50 (US$39.41) per month. 
• Mobile telephone connection will cost you S$100 (US$78.81) a month.
• Sending your kids to an international school will cost S$3, 000 (US$2,364.44) per month. 
• Local government school will set you back S$772 (US$608.45) per month. 
• Owning and running a car means paying out (before you actually get the car) a tax called the Certificate of Entitlement (COE) which stands at roughly S$57, 009 (US$44931.42). 
• An apartment in the city fringe will set you back about S$7, 000 per month (US$5517.02) in rent.

Singapore transport costs work out at something like three times more than in New York City for example. New York is the world’s 26th most-expensive city in the world these days, but it is still used as the base rate for comparison. The Japanese Yen fell by 20% last year and Tokyo was ousted from its number one position. Mumbai is the least expensive city in the world to live in according to the survey. That leaves plenty of room for it to grow, increase in price and rise to the dizzy heights of the Singapore-s and the Paris-es of this world.

Originally posted: Singapore Tops Tokyo

 


    



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Ukraine: Follow The Energy

Submitted by Charles Hugh-Smith of OfTwoMinds blog,

Scrape away the media sensationalism and geopolitical posturing and it boils down to a simple dynamic: follow the energy.

Though many seem to believe that internal politics and geopolitical posturing in Ukraine are definitive dynamics, I tend to think the one that really counts is energy: not only who has it and who needs it, but where the consumers can get it from.

Let's cut to the chase and declare a partition along long-standing linguistic and loyalty lines a done deal. Let's also dispense with any notions that either side can impose a military solution in the other's territory.

Media reports on the weakness of Ukrainian military forces abound (for example, Ukraine Finds Its Forces Are Ill Equipped to Take Crimea Back From Russia), but Russia's ability to project power and hold territory isn't so hot, either.

A knowledgeable correspondent submitted these observations:

RE: Russian Army. Effective draft evasion is running 80%. Morale is low, training is very poor and poorly funded. The Russian army has also gone through 22 years of near continuous contraction.

And this standing army has heavy commitments in the Caucasus and Far East Siberia. Moreover, at least half of these Russian ground troops are short term 12 month conscripts. I don't think these kids will produce many usable and motivated troops. The low morale recently seen in the Ukrainian Berkut and other police will be multiplied by at least 10x.

 

Russian speaking Ukrainian bands are rumored to already be crossing the borders into Russia territory. They're to be ready to sabotage bridges and infrastructure and generally retaliate. Fluent Russian speakers with many years experience of living in Russia. Who can say for sure if this has already happened or is just being threatened? We can say this is a very real danger. These people look just like "Russians."

 

And we can also say this threat will seriously complicate Russian rear area security and logistics. And speaking of logistics, the distances in south Ossetia and Abkhazia were very short and the populations were entirely friendly. Neither condition prevails in the Ukraine outside the Crimea.

 

Supplying moving armored units over hundreds of miles of occupied country is very difficult logistically. The logistics for air assault helicopter units are just as bad. These helo units look mobile but they're a lot like a yoyo being twirled around your head on the string. They only go fast within a fixed radius anchored by logistics that are about as heavy to move as an armored division's supply columns. That is years in the 101st Airborne Division talking. The fuel consumption rates are immense. Stuff starts breaking down fast.

Conclusion: a de facto partition is already baked in because neither side can force a re-unification. Various jockeying and posturing will undoubtedly continue for some time, but the basic end-game is already visible: de facto partition.

Let's move on to correspondent A.C.'s observations about energy.

This map rounds out the European energy Rosetta Stone. When they hear that Italian fighter jets are over Tripoli, or that the French Foreign Legion has returned to the deep Sahara Desert, they can can better understand the reasons and real objectives of such operations.

source:

 

Many have noted that the Russia economy is critically dependent on oil and gas exports to the EU. It should be noted that the converse is less true every day about EU dependence on Russian oil and gas. The Wall Street Journal even had a line about an EU proposal to push natural gas EAST to the Ukraine. It's hard to understand that passage or where the natural gas could come from unless one understands the North Africa to southern Europe gas pipelines.

 

The factors bringing the conflict in Ukraine to a head are:

 

1. The natural gas discoveries in eastern Poland and western Ukraine played the largest role.

 

2. The reduced importance of the gas pipeline running through the Ukraine to Europe as compared to 2009. Since that time the Nordstream lines have been finished and Gazprom acquired commercial control of the Belarus pipeline. The South Stream lines are well along in development.

 

3. Fast developing liquid natural gas (LNG) seaport terminal infrastructure.

 

Events in Libya, Mali and Algeria are not hermetically isolated from this. They are part of a comprehensive energy policy problem being dealt with by the same leaderships. It increasingly looks like a series of peripheral Energy Wars that are being fought out for control of Europe.

LNG exports are going to become a weapon in the struggle for geopolitical influence and control.

 

This highlights another problem for Russia/Gazprom. Its present natural gas advantage in Europe now rests mainly on its pipeline infrastructure. This advantage is fading due to the current and proposed pipeline projects running through Turkey to Europe, plus LPG terminal & ship developments, plus the five trans-Mediterranean pipelines from Libya, Algeria and Morocco to southern Europe, plus local shale gas plays…

 

The Ukraine is not the only country becoming less systemically important to Europe for natural gas supply. So is Russia. Current events will only accelerate everyone's efforts to diversify away from such an unstable and apparently dangerous supplier.

 

I think the long-term fallout from the Ukrainian Crisis will be similar to China's attempt to exploit its temporary low price monopoly position in rare earth metals a few years ago. The result is rare earth metals are becoming less rare by the day as alternate mines outside China are opened and reopened.

Thank you, A.C. Scrape away the media sensationalism and geopolitical posturing and it boils down to a simple dynamic: follow the energy.


    



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Putin Economic Adviser Warns Russia Will Sell U.S. Bonds And Of “Crash” Of Financial System

Today’s AM fix was USD 1,339.50, EUR 973.90 and GBP 802.87 per ounce.                                                  

Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,344.25, EUR 975.58 and GBP 803.50 per ounce.     


Gold climbed $26.80 or 2.02% yesterday to $1,351.40/oz. Silver rose $0.26 or 1.23% at $21.43/oz
.



U.S. Dollar Index, 1968-March 4, 2014 – (Bloomberg)

Gold dropped 0.8% today as equities bounced higher after reports that Russian President Vladimir

Putin had ordered troops engaged in exercises in an area which borders Ukraine to return to their base.

Gold rallied to a four-month high yesterday after investors sold risk assets following Russia’s military intervention, which prompted the United States to look at a series of economic and diplomatic sanctions to isolate Moscow.


As ever, it is always difficult to be prescriptive and pinpoint price movements on specific events. It is arguable, that gold could have risen over 1.5% yesterday even if events in Ukraine were not leading to a deterioration in relations between Russia and the West.


This is because gold still has strong fundamentals which is leading to robust global demand – especially from China.

However, the situation in the Ukraine is potentially one of the greatest geopolitical risks since the end of the Cold War.

A senior adviser to Putin said this morning that if the United States were to impose sanctions on Russia over Ukraine, Moscow might be forced to drop the dollar as a reserve currency and refuse to pay off loans to U.S. banks.

As newswires reported the comments from Putin’s senior aide Glazyev, the USD Index fell marginally to session lows and broke below 80.00 before recovering.

Russia could reduce to zero its economic dependency on the United States if Washington agreed sanctions against Moscow over Ukraine, politician and economist Glazyev said, warning that the American financial system faced a “crash” if this happened.

Sergei Glazyev, a senior adviser to President Putin, added that if Washington froze the accounts of Russian businesses and individuals, Moscow will recommend to all holders of U.S. treasuries to sell their U.S. government debt.

Glazyev is often used by the authorities to stake out a hardline stance. He does not make policy but has the ear of Putin and would be aligned with the more hawkish elements in the Russian government and military.

 

“We would find a way not just to reduce our dependency on the United States to zero but to emerge from those sanctions with great benefits for ourselves,” said Kremlin economic aide Sergei Glazyev.

He told the RIA Novosti news agency Russia could stop using dollars for international transactions and create its own payment system using its “wonderful trade and economic relations with our partners in the East and South.”

Russian firms and banks would also not return loans from American financial institutions, he said.

“An attempt to announce sanctions would end in a crash for the financial system of the United States, which would cause the end of the domination of the United States in the global financial system,” he added.

Late Monday, U.S. President Barack Obama said the U.S. plans to impose penalties on Russia unless it withdraws its military forces, and on Tuesday, Russia reportedly called troops on military exercises back to their bases.

Glasyev’s comments were likely sanctioned by the Kremlin and by Putin himself. They would appear to be a warning to the U.S. regarding isolating Russia politically and imposing economic sanctions.

If diplomacy does not prevail, then trade wars and currency wars will ensue with attendant consequences for the already vulnerable financial system and global economy.


The 7 Key Gold Storage Must Haves
A diversification into gold remains prudent and will again protect investors, both retail and institutional, pensions owners and savers, over the medium and long term. However, this is only the case if the gold owned is physical bullion coins and bars and not digital gold, pooled gold or paper gold. Fully segregated and fully allocated gold coin and bar storage remains the safest way to own gold.

Download your copy of 7 Key Allocated Gold Storage Must Haves here


    



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PIMCO To Buy Billions In European Toxic Debt

Earlier today we were surprised when none other than uber central-planning skeptic, not to mention bond fund manager, Bill Gross threw in the towel and in his latest letter advocated the purchase of risk assets – and Bill Gross is the last person needing reminding that in a day and age when the 10 Year yields just barely over 2.5%, this means not bonds but stocks. The surprise, however, promptly disappeared when we realized that PIMCO is merely the  latest entrant in the scramble for yield game following, with a substantial delay to all of its other “alternative” asset management peers, right into ground zero: European toxic debt.

WSJ reports that Pimco quietly has raised $5.5 billion to buy bank assets in the U.S. and Europe and has closed the fund to new investors, according to a person familiar with the fundraising. The Bank Recapitalization and Value Opportunities II fund, or Bravo II, is being led by deputy chief investment officer Dan Ivascyn and will target a range of unwanted assets on the balance sheets of banks, including residential and commercial real-estate assets.

In other words: toxic, non-performing debt, which is something Europe’s bank certainly have a lot of. How much? Recall that it was the IMF itself which said in October of 2012 that European banks needs to sell $4.5 trillion in assets until 2014Naturally, they are way behind schedule, which means vulture investors will have a buyer’s market in setting the price as banks have crossed the desperation point in finding buyers.

But it’s toxic debt? How are non-performing loans, on which the obligor has most likely defaulted several times over, a good investment under any price? Well, the hope here, of course, is that as those tens of millions of unemployed workers find their way back into the work force, that the debt will be “worked out” and that recoveries on the said debt will make the purchase at deep distressed levels profitable.

WSJ adds:

Investors are lining up to snap up the unwanted loan portfolios and real-estate assets. Many of the targets lie in Europe, where banks have been busy shrinking their balance sheets primarily to meet stricter capital requirements.

The good news is that PIMCO will not have difficult finding willing sellers of such debt:

Last month, The Wall Street Journal reported that two of Italy’s biggest banks, Intesa Sanpaolo and UniCredit were in talks with U.S. private-equity firm KKR regarding the sale of some of their restructured loans.

 

Commerzbank said in February that it had sold €710 million of Spanish commercial real-estate loans to investors. In the U.K. late last year, the Royal Bank of Scotland sold its first portfolio of U.K. commercial property assets to hedge fund Varde Partners, and in August, Spain’s ‘bad bank’—set up to house assets from the country’s bailed out banks—sold its first real-estate assets to private equity group HIG.

Why is PIMCO doing this? Simple – following consecutive months of outflows, even the biggest bond manager in the world has finally “yielded” to the chase for yield, or as we described it last May FOMO, aka Fear of Missing Out.

Pimco’s new Chief Executive Douglas Hodge told Financial News last month that he wants to broaden the firm’s equity expertise, including backing the hiring of teams by equity chief Virginie Maisonneuve. The firm offers products in derivatives, multi-asset, real estate, private equity, real return and emerging markets, but is still 90% exposed to fixed income

So as PIMCO too joins the great flood of one time skeptics who dare not look at themselves in the mirror and are willing to blindly follow the herd, one wonders: just how much more incremental dollars are out there left to chase assets that others are already selling. Because readers certainly remember that while algos, retail and momo speculators, not to mention TV pundit that invest with monopoly money, are rushing into the parabolic blow off top phase of the market, the smart money can’t wait to get out, and its advice as of last August was simple: “sell now.”

They can now also count PIMCO among the FOMO buyers.


    



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Let’s See If California Decides We Have the Right to Know Which Cops Shoot People

And they never need to be reloaded! Terrifying!A Los Angeles Times
reporter wanted to know the names of the officers who shot Long
Beach man Douglas Zerby to death in 2010 for the deadly crime of
holding a garden hose nozzle. Long Beach officials refused to tell
him, nor provide the names of any Long Beach officers involved in
shootings for the previous five years.

The Long Beach police officer’s union has been fighting to keep
the secret and has been losing in court. Today, the Los Angeles
Times
reports the case making it all the way to California’s
Supreme Court. The Times seems to think
they might win this one
:

The California Supreme Court appeared inclined during a hearing
Tuesday to favor a ruling that the public has the right to know the
names of police officers involved in shootings.

During oral arguments, most members of the state high court
seemed skeptical of contentions by police agencies that officer
names must be kept secret because disclosure could jeopardize
officer safety and involve protected police personnel matters.

Chief Justice Tani Cantil-Sakauye, whose husband is a retired
police lieutenant, suggested that the California Public Records Act
contains a presumption in favor of disclosure and does not provide
for blanket exemptions.

Justice Marvin R. Baxter questioned whether police agencies
would refuse to release the names of officers involved in acts of
heroism.

And Justice Goodwin Liu noted that officers wear nameplates
identifying them to the public.

The officers were cleared of misconduct, but the city was still
ordered to
pay $6.5 million
to the victim’s family following a federal
lawsuit where the jury determined the officers were negligent and
violated Zerby’s rights.

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L.A. City Council Unanimously Bans Vaping in Public Places

As
expected
, the Los Angeles City Council today
voted
unanimously to ban vaping everywhere that smoking is
banned, including indoor workplaces and outdoor locations such as
parks, beaches, and restaurant patios. Although one of the main
rationales for the ban is that children might confuse e-cigarettes
with the real thing and mistakenly conclude that smoking is not so
bad after all, an amendment that would have exempted bars and other
establishments that are open only to adults
failed
by a vote of 8 to 6. In a generous concession, the city
will allow people to vape in vaping lounges, in e-cigarette stores,
and on stage for “theatrical purposes.”

Judging from the
account
 in the Los Angeles Times, the debate
over the ordinance was dominated by non sequiturs: 

Councilman Mitch O’Farrell, who pushed for the new restrictions,
spoke of his unhappiness at breathing secondhand smoke during his
days as a waiter in the early 1990s….

Council President Herb Wesson, in the most passionate speech of
the day, described his decades-long addiction to cigarettes, a
habit he told his colleagues would almost certainly kill him one
day.

Wesson said he began smoking because he wanted to be cool.

“When you’re 15, you want to be cool,” he said. “And I will not
support anything—anything—that might attract one new smoker.”

What if the thing that “might attract one new smoker” already
has helped thousands of smokers quit a habit that was threatening
their health and their lives? Why do these actual people count for
nothing in Wesson’s calculus, while the hypothetical person
attracted to smoking by vaping has the power to move legislation?
And what on earth does O’Farrell’s distaste for secondhand smoke
have to do with a project that generates none?

Here is what passed for
scientific guidance
at the council meeting:

“Safer does not mean safe,” Dr. Jonathan Fielding, the county’s
public health director, told the council. “Although they are less
harmful than traditional cigarettes, some e-cigarettes contain some
health risks.”

Fielding is absolutely right: Safer does not mean safe. But
safer does mean safer—in this case, given the absence of tobacco
and combustion, much safer. So why is the Los Angles City Council
taking steps to discourage smokers from switching to a far less
hazardous source of nicotine?
For the children
:

Foes of e-cigarettes said they threaten to make smoking socially
acceptable after years of public opinion campaigns to discourage
the habit. Young people who get hooked on the nicotine in
e-cigarettes may then turn to tobacco use, said Jonathan Fielding,
director of the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health.

“We don’t want to risk e-cigarettes undermining a half-century
of successful tobacco control,” he said.

It is rather mysterious how that would happen, since the main
selling point of e-cigarettes is that they are much less dangerous
and disgusting than the conventional kind. Nor is there
any evidence
that vaping is a gateway to smoking. But
politicians do not need evidence when they’ve got the
precautionary principle
.

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Homeland Security Grants “Indefinite Deferred Status” to German Family Whose Asylum Appeal Justice Department Opposed and Supreme Court Rejected

learnin about americaThe Supreme Court has
declined
to hear an appeal for asylum by the Romeike family of
Germany, which fled to the United States in the late 2000s and
actually received
asylum in 2010
before the Department of Justice stepped in to
object, arguing that Germany’s ban on homeschooling did not
constitute persecution, a requirement for asylum. Nevertheless,

according
to the Homeschool Legal Defense Association, which
helped the Romeike family in their legal fight, a “supervisor” from
the Department of Homeland Security informed the family’s attorneys
that they’d been granted “indefinite deferred status.”

So why did the Obama Administration oppose the asylum request?
It may have been seeking to hold the line on more stringent
requirements for asylum, or it may have been seeking to cut off
attempts to argue that homeschooling is a right. No matter its
intentions, the effect of the feds first opposing the granting of
asylum and then granting that same family an “indefinite” status is
to enforce the idea that,
in immigration as in other policy domains
, the rule of men
trumps the rule of law.

Reason TV highlighted the case of the Romeike family, asking
whether homeschooling is a universal right, which you can watch
below:

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