Attention Deficit Dystopia

Submitted by James H. Kunstler via Kunstler.com,

Apparently someone at the US State Department put out the fire in John Kerry’s magnificent head of hair, because he has stopped declaiming (for now) on the urgent need to start World War Three over Russia’s annexation of the Crimean peninsula. In my lifetime, there has never been a more pointless and unnecessary international crisis than the current rumble over Ukraine, and it’s pretty much all our doing.

After all, we kicked it off by financing the overthrow of Ukraine’s elected government. How do you suppose the US would feel if Moscow engineered the overthrow of the Mexican government? Perhaps a little insecure? Perhaps even tempted to post some troops on the border?

Since the end of the Cold War, the US has engaged in a nonstop projection of power around the world with grievous results in every case except in the breakup of Yugoslavia. The latest adventures in Iraq and Afghanistan, have been the most expensive — at least a trillion dollars — and mayhem still rules in both places. In fact, news reports out of Kabul on NPR this morning raised doubts that the scheduled elections could take place later this week. The country’s so-called Independent Election Commission has been under rocket attack for days, the most popular hotel for foreign journalists was the site of a massacre two weeks ago, and the Taliban remains active slaughtering civilians in the lawless territory outside of the Afghan capital.

Of course, even those dreadful incidents raise the rather fundamental question as to why anything about Afghanistan really matters to the USA. How many years will it take for us to get over the fact that Osama bin Laden ran a training camp for jihadists there? Right now you can be sure that somewhere between Casablanca and East Timor there are training camps for religious maniacs and thousands more casual meet-ups among aggrieved young men with testosterone boiling in their brains and nothing else to occupy their time but playing with guns. Are we going to invade every land where this goes on?

One part of our ever-evolving reality is that the global economy is in the process of cracking up. Despite the claims of one Tom Friedman at The New York Times, Globalism was not a permanent installation in the human condition. Rather, it was a set of transient economic relations brought about by special circumstances in a particular time of history — namely, a hundred years of cheap energy and about fifty years of relative peace between the larger nations. That’s all it was. And now it’s dissolving because energy is increasingly non-cheap and that is causing a lot of friction between nations utterly addicted to high flows of cheap oil and gas.

The friction is manifesting especially in the realm of money and finance. The high energy addicted nations have been trying to offset the rising cost of their addiction, and the absence of conventional economic “growth,” by borrowing ever more money, that is, generating ever more debt. This ends up expressing itself in “money printing,” that range of computerized banking activities that pumps more and more “liquidity” into “advanced” economies. The result of all that is the mis-pricing of just about everything (including especially the cost of borrowing money), and an increasingly antagonistic climate of currency war as all players vie for the supposed advantages devaluation — most particularly the ability to dissolve their own sovereign debts via inflation.

The finer points of all that are debatable as to eventual consequences but we can easily draw some larger conclusions about the macro trends. The global orgy of cheap goods and bubble finance is ending. Nations and indeed regions within nations are going to have to find a new way of making a living on the smaller scale. This is sure to include new arrangements for governance. The breakup of nation states is well underway and is moving from the margins inward to the political center — from the hopeless scrublands of overpopulated nations that will never “develop” to the increasingly sclerotic giants.

The USA is exhibiting pretty severe signs of that sclerosis in the demented behavior of its leaders in episodes such as the current unnecessary manufactured fiasco over Ukraine to the physical deterioration of our towns, roads, bridges, and all the plastic crap we managed to smear over the mutilated landscape to the comportment of our demoralized, mentally inert, drugged-up, tattoo-bedizened populace of twerking slobs.

In short, it is self-evident that Russians have an abiding interest in the Crimea and we have none, while both the material and cultural life of the US is in a shambles and much more worthy of our own attention.


    



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Where Does the Real Problem Reside? Two Charts Showing the 0.01% vs. the 1%

While I always supported the overall message and energy that encompassed the Occupy Wall Street movement, I never backed the slogan of the 1% vs. the 99%. From my own personal experience, it is entirely clear that the actual problem is a far smaller group within the 1%, the 0.1% or the 0.01% (although I recognize “We Are the 99.9%” isn’t catchy).

This is why you’ll never hear me demonize “the 1%”, rather I always try to use the term oligarch, which refers a small handful of people who benefit most disproportionately from Federal Reserve handouts, D.C. corruption, tax code loopholes and the destructive trend of financialization generally.

This is is also why I became so disgusted by Sam Zell’s ignorant and destructive comments on Bloomberg television earlier this year that decided to pen an open letter to him.

Thanks to The Atlantic, we now have two charts that show what I have been writing about for many years now. It is not the 1% that is the problem, it’s actually a much smaller slice within that group that is thieving and pillaging at will from the rest of American society.

From The Atlantic:

I’ve written, over and over, that the most important divide in our wealth disparity was between the 1 percent and the 99 percent. For example, when I compared the evolution in investment income since the late 1970s, I often imagined a graph like this from the Economic Policy Institute, showing the 1 percent flying away from the rest of the country.

It turns out that that graph is somewhat misleading. It makes it look like the 1 percent is a group of similar households accelerating from the rest of the economy, holding hands, in unison. Nothing could be further from the truth.

A few weeks ago, I shared this graph (from the World Top Incomes Database) showing how the top 0.01 percent—that’s the one percent of the 1 percent—was leaving the rest of the top percentile behind.

Screen Shot 2014-03-29 at 9.23.25 PM

It’s even more egregious than that. An amazing chart from economist Amir Sufi, based on the work of Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman, shows that when you look inside the 1 percent, you see clearly that most of them aren’t growing their share of wealth at all. In fact, the gain in wealth share is all about the top 0.1 percent of the country. While nine-tenths of the top percentile hasn’t seen much change at all since 1960, the 0.01 percent has essentially quadrupled its share of the country’s wealth in half a century.

houseofdebt_SaezZucman21

continue reading

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Japan Gives Residents All Clear To Return To Fukushima Disaster “Hot Zone”

As we reported last night, Japan’s economy may once again be relapsing into a slowing phase, perversely well in advance of the dreaded sales-tax hike which many expect will catalyze Japan’s collapse into another recession as happened the last time Japan had a tax hike, but that doesn’t mean its population should be prevented from enjoying the heavily energized local atmosphere buzzing with the hope and promise of imminent paper-based “wealth effects” for those long the daily penNikkeistock rollercoaster…. and just as buzzing with copious gamma rays of course. Which is why for the first time in over three years, since Japan’s Fukushima nuclear disaster, residents of a small district 20 km from the wrecked plant are about to be allowed to return home. Because if the honest Japanese government says it is safe, then so it must be.

But how is this possible?

Just recall, as we reported in December citing SCMP, that the incidence of Thyroid cancers had surged among Fukushima youths. It took the government a few days of contemplation before spinning this deplorable revelation as one which blamed not the coverup surrounding the Fukushima fallout, but – get this – the fact that children were getting sick because they were not going out enough!

Mindboggling as it may be, this is precisely the kind of ridiculous propaganda one would expect from a flailing authoritarian regime, with a crashing economy, and a demographic collapse with no credible options left except to goose the manipulated market higher… The kind of propaganda that is now being used to give the “all clear” to move back to Fukushima!

From Reuters:

The Miyakoji area of Tamura, a northeastern city inland from the Fukushima nuclear station, has been off-limits for most residents since March 2011, when the government ordered evacuations after a devastating earthquake and tsunami triggered a triple meltdown at the power plant. Tuesday’s reopening of Miyakoji will mark a tiny step for Japan as it seeks to recover from the Fukushima disaster and a major milestone for the 357 registered residents of the district – most of whom the city hopes will go back.

Because children need to be outdoors, mingling with the high energy radiation, to avoid the dreaded consequences of being locked indoors of course. Still, not everyone is a complete idiot:

But homesick evacuees have mixed feelings about returning to Miyakoji, set amid rolling hills and rice paddies, a sign of how difficult the path back to normality will be for those forced from their homes by the accident. Many families with young children are torn over what to do, one city official acknowledged.

 

“Young people won’t return,” said Kitaro Saito, a man in his early 60s, who opposed lifting the ban and had no intention of going home yet.

 

“Relatives are arguing over what to do” and friends disagree, he said, warming his hands outside his temporary home among rows of other one-room trailers in a Tamura parking lot. “The town will be broken up.”

 

Saito said he wanted to go back to his large hillside house in Miyakoji, but thinks the government is using residents as “guinea pigs” to test whether larger returns are possible.

Japan? A terminal Keynesian regime in its death throes? Experimenting with its population? Perish the though…

The 2011 crisis forced more than 160,000 people from towns near the Fukushima plant to evacuate. Around a third of them are still living in temporary housing scattered over Fukushima prefecture, their lives on hold as they wait for Japan to complete decontamination work. 

 

Japan’s $30 billion cleanup of radioactive fallout around Fukushima is behind schedule and not expected to achieve the long-term radiation reduction goal – 1 millisievert per year – set by the previous administration.

What next: cash-strapped Ukraine makes Chernobyl’s Pripyat a global tourism hub? So just why again are people coming back to what is a nuclear disaster zone? Oh who cares.  Let’s just go with the propaganda.

Across Fukushima prefecture, hundreds of workers are still scraping the top soil off of the ground, cutting leaves and branches off trees and hosing down houses with water to lower radiation levels.

 

Radiation levels in selected monitoring spots in Miyakoji ranged from 0.11 microsieverts to 0.48 microsieverts per hour, according to Tamura city’s February results. This was higher than the average 0.034 microsieverts per hour measured in central Tokyo on Monday, but comparable to background radiation of about 0.2 microsieverts per hour in Denver. A commercial flight between Tokyo and New York exposes passengers to about 10 microsieverts per hour.

 

Populations exposed to radiation typically have a greater chance of contracting cancers of all kinds after receiving doses above 100 millisieverts (100,000 microsieverts), according to the World Health Organisation.

Because we all know TEPCO would never misreport the radiation surrounding Fukushima. Oh wait: “From April to September of 2013 TEPCO admits that levels of radiation measured from water samples around the destroyed Fukushima nuclear reactor were “significantly undercounted.” But that was all, TEPCO swears – this time will be different. And it is certainly “counting” radiation correctly now, when it has given people the all clear to go back to the disaster zone.


    



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A. Barton Hinkle on How Zero Tolerance Hurts Kids and Ruins Schools

Virginia Beach sixth-grader Adrionna Harris
took a razor away from a troubled student who was cutting himself
and threw it in the trash. When school administrators found out,
they gave her a certificate of merit for helping a classmate.

Ha, ha! Of course they didn’t, writes A. Barton Hinkle. They
gave her a 10-day suspension, with a recommendation that she be
expelled. For three or four seconds there, she was in possession of
a dangerous object. It’s the latest example, Hinkle explains, of
how zero tolerance policies are hurting kids and ruining
schools.

View this article.

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David Stockman: Why We Are Plagued With Drivel Masquerading As Financial Reporting

Submitted by David Stockman via Contra Corner blog,

Bubbleberg News LP: Why We Are Plagued With Drivel Masquerading As Financial Reporting

One of the evils of massive over-financialization is that it enables Wall Street to scalp vast “rents” from the Main Street economy. These zero sum extractions not only bloat the paper wealth of the 1% but also fund a parasitic bubble finance infrastructure that would largely not exist in a world of free market finance and honest money.

The infrastructure of bubble finance can be likened to the illegal drug cartels. In that dystopic world, the immense revenue “surplus” from the 1000-fold elevation of drug prices owing to government enforced scarcity finances a giant but uneconomic apparatus of sourcing, transportation, wholesaling, distribution, corruption, coercion, murder and mayhem that would not even exist in a free market. The latter would only need LTL trucking lines and $900 vending machines.

In this context, the sprawling empire known as Bloomberg LP is the Juarez Cartel of bubble finance. Its lucrative 320,000 terminals and profit-rich $10 billion in revenue are not purely a testament to the extraordinary inventive genius of Michael Bloomberg The Younger. In fact, Bloomberg’s 1981 invention owed a huge debt of gratitude to Richard Nixon and Milton Friedman. It was they who destroyed the Bretton Woods regime of anchored money and global financial discipline that made “Bloombergs” necessary.

Let me explain. Under the fixed exchange rate regime of Bretton Woods—ironically, designed mostly by J.M. Keynes himself with help from Comrade Harry Dexter White—there was no $4 trillion daily currency futures and options market; no interest rate swap monster with $500 trillion outstanding and counting; no gamblers den called the SPX futures pit and all its variants, imitators, derivatives and mutations; no ETF casino for the plodders or multi-trillion market in “bespoke” (OTC) derivatives for the fast money insiders. Indeed, prior to Friedman’s victory for floating central bank money at Camp David in August 1971 there were not even any cash settled equity options at all.

The world of fixed exchange rates between national monies ultimately anchored by the solemn obligation of the US government to redeem dollars for gold at $35 per ounce was happily Bloomberg-free for reasons that are obvious—albeit long forgotten. Importers and exporters did not need currency hedges because the exchange rates never changed. Interest rate swaps did not exist because the Fed did not micro-manage the yield curve. Consequently, there were no central bank generated inefficiencies and anomalies for dealers to arbitrage. Stated differently, interest rate swaps are “sold” not bought, and no dealers were selling.

There were also natural two-way markets in equities and bonds because the (peacetime) Fed did not peg money market rates or interpose puts, props and bailouts under the price of capital securities. This means that returns to carry trades and high-churn speculation were vastly lower than under the current regime of monetary central planning. Financial gamblers could not buy cheap S&P puts to hedge long positions in mo-mo trades, for example, meaning that free market profits from speculative trading (i.e. hedge funds) would have been meager. Indeed, the profit from “trading the dips” is a gift of the Fed because the underlying chart pattern—mild periodic undulations rising from the lower left to the upper right–is an artifice of central bank bubble finance.

And, in fact, so are all the other distincitive features of the modern equity gambling halls—index baskets, cash-settled options, ETFs, OTCs, HFTs. None of these arose from the free market; they were enabled by central bank promotion of one-way markets—that is, the Greenspan/Bernanke/Yellen “put”. The latter, in turn, is a product of the hoary doctrine called “wealth effects” which would have been laughed out of court by officials like William McChesney Martin who operated in the old world of sound money.

In short, Wall Street’s triumphalist doctrine—claiming that massive financialization of the economy is a product of market innovation and technological advance—is dead wrong. We need “bloombergs” not owing to the good fortune of high speed computers and Blythe Master’s knack for financial engineering; we are stuck with them owing to the bad fortune that Nixon and then the rest of the world adopted Milton Friedman’s flawed recipe for monetary central planning.

fin profits chart

Needless to say, the parabolic rise in financial sector profits from about 1.25% of GDP prior to Camp David to 4.25% of GDP today—call it a round $500 billion per year—is only the tip of the ice-berg. What lies beneath, according to the Commerce Department numbers crunchers, is “value-added” of some $3.75 trillion in the FIRE sector (finance, insurance and real estate), which generates the aforementioned accounting profits and consists primarily of compensation.

Here the uplift is even more dramatic. The FIRE sector’s 800 basis point gain from 14% of GDP in 1970 to 22% at present rounds to about $1.4 trillion. That’s the bloat from financialization—which is to say, the infrastructure of bubble finance. Embedded in that bloat is everything from the running cost of fund-of-funds and family offices (i.e. private chefs, ”investor” conferences at tony resorts etc.) to the vast network of bankers, brokers, appraisers, title insurers, settlement lawyers and escrow agents that tend the home mortgage churning machine.

In the latter case, the untoward impact of financialization on the world of George Bailey’s Savings and Loan can not be gainsaid. Back then, people took out mortgages and paid them off a bit at a time over 30 years owing to the fact that there was no basis for today’s serial “mortgage refi”. On the free market, mortgages would either carry floating rates or have embedded call protection on fixed rates.

Moreover, the basis for today’s serial refi would not exist. Interest rates would have no directional trend in an environment where they represent the market clearing price, balancing the supply of savings and the demand for loanable funds.

By contrast, the artificial downward-sloping trend in mortgage rates in recent decades has been an intentional outcome of the Fed’s interest rate rigging policies designed to goose housing prices and spur homebuilding. During the 55 months that elapsed between Lehman’s failure and April 2013, for instance, the Freddie Mac reference rate for 30-year mortgages dropped almost linearly from 6.5% to 3.3%.

As it happened, this massive inducement to home-borrowing did not generate much lift in the home-building sector because the stock of residential homes is massively over-built from the first housing bubble. But it did generate a substantial “refi” wave owing to the sheer math of mortgage finance. Indeed, Bernanke-Yellen regime have made no bones about their alleged success in driving down the 10-year treasury benchmark rate and thereby reflating the housing market.

In truth, the monetary politburo induced nothing more than another round of mortgage churn among a small sub-set of existing homeowners. There are approximately 115 million households in the US—40 million of which are renters and 25 million own their homes free and clear. Yet even among the 50 million households with mortgages, upwards of 25 million are still under-water or do not have enough positive equity to cover transactions costs and meet today’s more stringent loan-to-value requirements.

So at the end of the day, the refi churn machine has arbitrarily conferred debt service relief on a randomly selected sub-set of perhaps 10-20% of households—many of which have engaged in serial refi for several decades now. This serves no evident principle of public policy based on need or merit. But that doesn’t matter to the monetary central planners. Their only goal is to stimulate GDP as measured by the government stat mills—even if what they are measuring is more bloat from financialization.

In fact, that’s about all the Fed’s housing stimulus is now generating. For nearly 40 years, household mortgage borrowing did stimulate measured GDP. During that span the ratio of debt/wage and salary income was ratched-up by periodic Fed reflations from a pre-1970 level of about 80 percent to a peak of 210% by 2007.

But now that ”peak” debt has been reached and the household leverage ratio has fallen back slightly to about 180%, what the Fed’s ministrations produce is only a tepid amount of GDP from financialization; that is, we get a dollop of GDP from the pointless churning of home mortgages—a financial engineering process that does not create new wealth, but simply siphons existing wealth into activity among loan brokers, appraisers and real estate attorneys that the BEA is pleased to call GDP.

.FIRE economy

Indeed, the elephant in the room lurking behind the rising FIRE line in the graph above is the nation’s current $59 trillion in credit market debt. At 3.5 turns of GDP it represents a vast aberration of bubble finance, and compares to a healthy ratio of 1.5 turns that prevailed for more than a century before 1971.

These two extra turns of combined household, business, finance and government debt are not simply statistical curiosities. It represents $30 trillion of incremental debt that not only weighs heavily on the stagnating incomes of borrowers, but also represents a vast inventory of loans, bonds, hypothecations, re-hypothecations, derivatives and securitizations. It goes without saying that this immense inventory must be constantly tended, serviced, repackaged, extended, pretended and re-sliced and re-diced. Juggling the debt and chasing the “assets” which it funds and hypothecates is what financialization does.

As is well-known, the “Bloombergs” at the center of the bubble finance casino are so immensely profitable that they generate the equivalent of a drug lords’ surplus— which, in turn, funds the extensive apparatus of financial information and news production that comprise the Bloomberg empire. But at the end of the day, Bloomberg News LP is only a vertically integrated representation of the entire infrastructure of bubble finance. Reuters, the Financial Times, CNBC, Dow-Jones/News Corp and Inside Mortgage Finance are all part of the food-chain by which the bloated financial sector maintains and services itself.

It is not surprising, therefore, that the scribes and pundits employed by the bubble infrastructure cannot see beyond it; that CNBC can find an endless supply of fund managers who are buying the dips and following the Fed’s promise to keep interest rates lower longer and stock prices rising higher forever; that a corrupt financial market in which all interest rates are pegged and rigged by the Fed is taken for granted as the natural order of economics; that government borrowing to stimulate and support the economy is viewed as essential regardless of its future consequences; that arbitrary central banking targets like 2% inflation as an instrument of optimum GDP growth or the bogeyman of “deflation” are embraced uncritically as axiomatic; or that economic absurdities such as zero money market interest rates for seven years running are rarely even noted.

In short, the vast infrastructure of bubble finance bends, shapes and curates the daily narrative so thoroughly that the denizens of the stage set do not even notice its vast artificiality. Its just one day at a time, and one more fix by the monetary and fiscal authorities to keep the bubble inflating, or at least stable.

In that context comes the monetary insanity of Abenomics and the economic freak-show of Japan Inc. After 20 years of relentless borrowing and money printing, it teeters on the edge of an economic abyss, shackled with massive public debt, a shrinking/ aging population, a rapidly depleting savings pool, comically low interest rates on its public debt and a truly horrid fiscal posture—namely, it will need to borrow 50% of every dime its spends in the year ahead, even with the long-overdue rise of consumption taxes beginning in April.

Now comes a Bloomberg scribe, Matthew Klein, offering to essay on the upcoming baby-step toward fiscal sanity in Japan. The headline says it all:

Japan Is Taxing Itself Into Trouble

And then there follows more of the mindless narrative:

On April 1, Japan’s national sales tax will rise to 8 percent from 5 percent. Unless wages rise by an equal amount, the effect will be a drop in consumer spending…. Even if this isn’t enough to push the economy into recession, raising the sales tax is a bad move that will undermine Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s agenda for the world’s third-largest economy….If anything, the government should be cutting taxes now

Young Matthew also notes that the Japanese people have not been astute enough to recognize what Wall Street and London gunslingers intuitively understood. That is, with the BOJ expanding its balance sheet at three times the rate relative to GDP of the Fed’s mad money printing, stock prices would soar and wealth effects would be had by all:

For instance, Japanese have been large net sellers of Japanese stocks ever since the big rally that began in the fall of 2012. Foreign investors have more faith in Abenomics than the people with the most at stake.

Then there is the news that victory over ”deflation”  is in sight. Never mind that there has never been any sustained consumer price deflation in Japan, and that the current index of about 99.0 stands almost at the very spot it occupied 21 years ago in March 1993—with only tiny undulations during the intervening years:

A more encouraging bit of news is the rise in consumer prices, excluding food and energy. This measure of inflation has accelerated to 0.7 percent annually — its fastest pace since 1998, although still slower than the official target of 2 percent…..

On the drivel meanders. Nowhere is it noted that Japan’s scheduled consumption tax rise is a bitter, chronically deferred, end-of-the line fiscal necessity; that sustained 2% inflation would destroy its monstrous $10 trillion government bond market; and that Abenomics has already manifestly failed.

By trashing the Yen, Abenomics has imported massive commodity inflation onto an island that has no hydrocarbons, industrial raw materials or even operational nuke plants. Consequently, real wages are falling at an even faster rates than before and the massive debt burdens created by decades of bubble finance push the world’s largest retirement community toward its final demise.

This bit of tommyrot was published under Bloomberg Views—perhaps suggesting that it represents opinion, not hard news. But that’s just the trouble. The vast infrastructure of bubble finance generates an overpowering consensus of opinion that is utterly blind to the very bubble in which it resides.


    



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Will Senate’s Anti-Torture Report Be Used to Bolster NSA Snooping Defenses?

"Tell me when the McRib will be coming back! Tell me!"Sources have told the
Associated Press (watch out for another round of phone
record-snatching, guys!) that the Senate Intelligence Committee
report at the center of a fight between the committee and the CIA
confirms what many observers knew or suspected: Waterboarding and
harsh interrogation techniques did not provide any useful
information to catch Osama bin Laden. In every case where the CIA
used torture and claimed it helped, there were
other explanations
as to where they got the
information. 

The most high-profile detainee linked to the bin Laden
investigation was Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, whom the CIA waterboarded
183 times. Mohammed, intelligence officials have noted, confirmed
after his 2003 capture that he knew an important al-Qaeda courier
with the nom de guerre Abu Ahmed al-Kuwaiti.

But the report concludes that such information wasn’t critical,
according to the aides. Mohammed only discussed al-Kuwaiti months
after being waterboarded, while he was under standard
interrogation, they said. And Mohammed neither acknowledged
al-Kuwaiti’s significance nor provided interrogators with the
courier’s real name.

The debate over how investigators put the pieces together is
significant because years later, the courier led U.S. intelligence
to the sleepy Pakistani military town of Abbottabad. There, Navy
SEALs killed bin Laden in a secret mission.

The creation of this report, still classified (though at this
point the contents are probably one of the
worst-kept secrets
in D.C.), prompted a squabble between the
CIA and the Senate Intelligence Committee over access to an
internal CIA report that allegedly came to the same conclusion. The
conflict caused Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) to
take an unusual stand
, at least for her: She came out against
government surveillance. Or rather, she came out against government
surveillance of Senate staffers. The CIA has reportedly snooped in
Senate Intelligence Committee computers to try to determine how
staffers got access to this internal report (Feinstein claims the
CIA itself provided access to the report).

The real lesson of the report, though, is that we all have
foreign surveillance and the National Security Agency (NSA) to
thank for helping get to bin Laden:

Without providing full details, aides said the Senate report
illustrates the importance of the National Security Agency’s
efforts overseas. Intelligence officials have previously described
how in the years, when the CIA couldn’t find where bin Laden’s
courier was, NSA eavesdroppers came up with nothing until 2010 –
when Ahmed had a telephone conversation with someone monitored by
U.S. intelligence.

At that point, U.S. intelligence was able to follow Ahmed to bin
Laden’s hideout.

So we need to keep an eye out for the inevitable straw man
arguments about the NSA’s metadata collection efforts. The
objection has always been to the mass collection of the phone
records of millions upon millions of innocent Americans. It is not
an argument that the NSA shouldn’t be attempting to track suspected
foreign terrorists overseas. It’s easy, though, to see how this
report, once declassified, could be used to defend any form of NSA
surveillance.

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Useful New Product Threatens Older Company’s Market Share; Judge Issues Sales Ban

In January I
wrote
about the Typo, a product that allows you to attach a
keypad to an iPhone. The device immediately inspired an
intellectual-property suit from BlackBerry, which argued
that the Typo’s keyboard was too similar to the keyboard found
on BlackBerry’s phones. I’m sorry to report that a U.S. district
judge has now issued a
preliminary injunction
prohibiting sales of the Typo as the
case moves forward.

As I wrote in January, the biggest problem here is

Buy now! Or...er...buy later! Maybe! If they'll let us sell it!the fact that it’s possible to
drag a company into court for making this kind of product in the
first place. A device that lets you mix and match elements of the
iPhone and BlackBerry is an innovative and useful technology. The
Typo isn’t the only product that offers this possibility—the
bulkier
Keyboard Buddy Case
has been on the market for a while, for
instance, and the Solomatrix Spike attaches a
keyboard to an iPhone on some hinges, so you can swing it on and
off as needed. But the Typo has its own distinctive approach to the
design and engineering issues involved, and at least some users
think it’s the
best available option
.

It could also lead to still better options. Right now the market
evidently has room for just one major smartphone with a physical
keyboard, and the business that makes that product is
struggling
. No one expects another company to start
manufacturing a new keypad phone anytime soon. But a phone
accessory that serves the same market niche: That may make
sense. If the Typo does well, there’s a decent chance that other
enterprises will follow.

Unfortunately for BlackBerry, that may threaten its strategy for
survival, which is to
pursue the keyboard crowd
at a time when other phone-makers
aren’t serving that market. You can’t help wondering whether the
primary purpose of the Typo suit is to squash some
competition.

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$4 Trillion In “Fake” Euro Bonds Seized At Vatican Bank

In 2009, two Japanese individuals were arrested trying to smuggle $134 billion in US bonds into Switzerland from Italy. In 2012, Italian authorities seized $6 trillion in allegedly fake US bonds from safe-deposit boxes in Zurich (which were purportedly to be used to buy plutonium from Nigerian sources). And now, in 2014, The BBC reports, Italian police have arrested two men who were allegedly trying to deposit trillions of euros in fake bonds in the Vatican bank.

 

Via The BBC,

Italian police have arrested two men who were allegedly trying to deposit trillions of euros in fake bonds in the Vatican bank.

 

Officials say the pair, an American and a Dutch national, claimed they had an appointment with bank officials to gain entry but were handed over to police.

 

Fake bonds with a face value of 3tr euros ($4.1tr; £2.5tr) were found in their briefcase, the officials say.

 

 

The bank – officially called the Institute for the Works of Religion – runs thousands of private accounts held by cardinals, bishops and religious orders all over the world.

 

The two suspects were later released pending further investigation, Financial Guard police officer Davide Cardia told AP news agency, as Italian law does not require arrest for fraud investigations.

As FOX details,

Financial Guard police Lt. Col. Davide Cardia said the would-be swindlers, who were wearing business suits, tried to convince Swiss Guards at a Vatican City gate earlier this month that “cardinals were expecting them.”

 

Cardia said the fake documents purported to be bond certificates for non-Italian companies. “The sum — worth some 3 trillion euros (more than $4 trillion dollars) — is impressive, even though it’s only symbolic because we’re talking about false” certificates, said Cardia, in charge of the financial police’s operations in Rome and surrounding area.

 

Investigators suspect the men might have planned to use the fake bonds as security to open a hefty line of credit through the Vatican bank.

 

But this is not the first time,

Both suspects, whose names weren’t released by police, had been previously investigated for attempted fraud in Asian countries, Cardia said without elaborating.

With trillion of freshly minted dollars, yen, euros, and yuan floating around the world (and all the subsequent monetized debt); and in light of increasing capital controls in a desperate world, who knows with any of these “frauds.” Just the sheer scale of trying to pull of a trillion dollar fraud would be incredible were it not for the Central Banks numbing us to the new normal.


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1gTRVYh Tyler Durden

Martin Armstrong Warns This Is The Age Of Civil Unrest

Submitted by Martin Armstrong via ArmstrongEconomics,

All governments had better open their eyes for we are on the brink of a major convergence between both the Cycle of Civil Unrest, Civil War & Revolution and International War. Both of these models converge and as I pointed out at the Cycles of War Conference, this is the first time we have seen this convergence since the 1700s.

This is no plain modern event with civil unrest erupting because of an interconnected world. These are grassroots uprisings cross-fertilized perhaps from a world contagion yet they often have similarities – corrupt governments. Turkey, Ukraine, Thailand, Venezuela and Bosnia-Herzegovina are all middle-income democracies with elected leaders besieged by people angry at misgovernment, corruption and economic sclerosis. These days it is no longer just dictators who have something to fear from the crowd. This is the promise of Marxism that centralized planning and false promises are coming home and governments are too corrupt and incompetent to deliver what they have claimed for decades.

USIntAs%Total

Communism is dead. The socialistic agendas that have lined the pockets of government and filled the coffers of banks is over. The national debts are on average composed of 70% interest payments not programs to help the poor as marketed. The debts that keep growing with no intent upon paying anyone back are draining the national productivity and turning the people into economic slaves. The standard of living has declined and it now takes two incomes to survive where one use to be just fine. Women won the right to work and lost the right to stay home.

IntRate-Manipulate

 

The promises that you save for the future have collapsed into dust as interest rates have been driven lower making savings utterly worthless. There is no such thing as saving and living off your fixed income. The elderly are being driven back into the work force and the whole ideas that a generation believed in are vanishing before their eyes.

So it is no longer communists and dictators that are the targets. All governments are now the targets and when the economy turns down after 2015.75, the threat of civilization will be pulled apart by the self-interest of politicians clinging to power to the detriment of the people.


    



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Obamacare Sees Last Minute Sign-Up Surge, But How Many Enrollees Were Previously Uninsured?

It’s the final day for Obamacare’s official open
enrollment period. (The special open enrollment period for folks
who miss out the first time around starts tomorrow.) The day
started with a website
outage
. Between 3 a.m. and 9 a.m. the federal health insurance
exchange at the heart of the law was down, and unable to process
new applications.

Obama administration officials say it was a software bug that
popped up during scheduled maintenance. It probably didn’t have
anything to do with the crushing traffic load that was reported
over the weekend. Via
The Wall Street Journal, enrollment points online and off
were slammed over the last few days:

Federal officials said HealthCare.gov had two million visitors
over the weekend. On Friday, the site had blocked people trying to
log in for about two hours starting at 4 p.m. Eastern, and they
were told to wait until the site had fewer users, said a person
familiar with the site’s operations. On Sunday, the site was
holding up well, the person said, handling some 50,000 simultaneous
users, up from a previous peak of 40,000.

Long waits to reach a federal call center for help also
frustrated some applicants. Federal officials said the center
received about 270,000 calls Saturday from people trying to apply
by phone or resolve problems with their online
application. 

The Journal, along with other
news outlets
, reports that enrollment centers faced long lines
over the weekend. Combined with last week’s announcement of 6
million sign-ups, it looks like this year’s open enrollment period
will finish with a last minute surge. At this point, I expect we’ll
see at least 6.5 million sign-ups by the end of today. It could
easily be 6.7 million.

But as insurance industry consultant Bob Laszewski
argues
, this isn’t the number we really want to know.

Of course, the more than 6 million enrollment the administration
recently announced overstates Obamacare’s success because this
includes enrollments that were never completed since the person
never paid the premium. There are lots of reasons why a consumer
might not complete the enrollment. The person may have hit the
enroll button a number of times and ended up paying only once. It
may have been one of the infamous “834” transactions that never
made sense and the consumer ended up having to enroll again later.
Or, the person might have had second thoughts about the
cost/benefit of Obamacare and decided not to move forward.

Then there were a measurable number of people who paid their
first month’s premium but never paid the second month’s premium. I
am told that 2% to 5% of January’s enrollments never paid in
February, for example.

Whatever the reason, the real enrollment number will likely be
about 20% lower than what the administration finally
reports. 

It’s not just that the sign-ups figure provided by the
administration don’t reflect real enrollments. It’s that they don’t
tell us about the net gain in the number of uninsured.

There are two important pieces of information we need to have
before the country can really answer this fundamental question
about the way Obamacare accomplished health insurance reform:

  1. How many people have actually paid and completed their
    enrollment?
  2. To what extent have we reduced the ranks of the uninsured—how
    many of these people who enrolled were previously insured and how
    many of them were previously uninsured?

Reporters often ask these questions and the Obama administration
says they don’t know. And, that’s the end of it.

But these questions are easily answered.

Every insurance company knows exactly how many people it has
enrolled and who paid their premium at the end of every billing
period. How else would they be able to process the claims for these
people?

We’ll probably get this information eventually. And we’ll
certainly get surveys and other attempts to quantify the changes in
the meantime. But I think it’s going to be a while before we have a
reliable count of how many have enrolled, and how many are newly
insured. 

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