Save the Lion-Hunting Cheerleader, Save the Lions!

ROARKendall
Jones
is a young, blond Texas cheerleader and—if you listen to
the Internet outrage machine—a cold-blooded killer.

The 19-year-old Texas Tech University student has been attacked
on her
Facebook page
for posting photos of herself posing with dead
exotic animals she killed on African hunting trips. Currently,
there are two petitions calling for her hide: the first one

asks Facebook to take down the photos
and the second asks for
her to be
barred from Africa

Jones has defended her big game hunting saying that her kills
are not only legal but they promote conservation efforts.

And you know what? She’s right.

It seems counterintuitive: How can killing animals actually save
endangered wildlife?

According to Reason Science Coorespondent Ronald
Bailey
 we should look
to the chickens
:

“The world is in no danger of running out of chickens. Yet the
world has fewer and fewer elephants. lions, tigers, giraffes and so
forth. Why? In part it is because no one owns wild animals and
consequently they are nuisances rather than resources.”

A 2005 paper in the Journal of International Wildlife Law
and Policy

provides evidence for this phenomenon
:

“The legalization of white rhinoceros hunting in South Africa
motivated private landowners to reintroduce the species onto their
lands. As a result, the country saw an increase in white rhinos
from fewer than one hundred individuals to more than 11,000, even
while a limited number were killed as trophies.”

A study done by Peter Lindsey, a conservation biologist with the
Univeristy of Zimbabwe in Harare,
came to the same conclusion
:

“Trophy hunting is of key importance to conservation in Africa
by creating [financial] incentives to promote and retain wildlife
as a land use over vast areas.” 

Because contrary to what animal rights activists are posting on
Jones’ Facebook page, the primary threat to endangered animals is
not trophy hunting. It’s the destruction of the animals’ natural
habitats and poaching. And as conservationist Mike Norton-Griffiths
points out,
private ownership curbs both of these issues
:

“The economic driving force behind both these is the fact that
for most landowners the returns available from agriculture greatly
exceed those from livestock, so it pays them to plough up the
rangelands. Everything is loaded against landowners making money
from wildlife…”

If Kenya wishes to maintain significant wildlife populations
outside its protected areas, then it has to ensure that landowners
can gain an income from wildlife that is competitive with what they
can earn from agriculture and livestock.”

Let the cheerleader hunt. She’s saving our wildlife, after
all.

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Stem Cell “Game Changing” Paper Retracted

RetractionIt’s apparently very easy to fool yourself when
you’re doing stem cell research – and not just yourself, the peer
reviewers at leading scientific journals can be easily gulled as
well. Just six months ago,
Nature published
two very high profile papers by
Japanese researcher Haruko Obokata in which she claimed that her
team could turn normal mature cells into stem cells by simply
bathing them in a mild acid. This would be a huge breakthrough
since stem cells might then be easily manufactured for therapeutic
use in individual patients. Alas, the work appears to be too good
to be true. The studies have been retracted according to the
Associated Press.
From the AP
:

On Wednesday, Nature released a statement from Obokata
and the other authors of the papers that withdrew the papers. The
scientists acknowledged “extensive” errors that meant “we are
unable to say without a doubt” that the method works. They noted
that studies of the simpler method are still going on by other
researchers.

Dr. Charles Vacanti of Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston,
another main author, issued a separate statement in which he said
he believes the further studies will vindicate the method, which
produced what the authors called STAP cells.

But another author, Yoshiki Sasai, deputy director of the Riken
center, said the errors in the papers meant “it has become
increasingly difficult to call the STAP phenomenon even a promising
hypothesis.” In a statement issued by Riken, he said he was “deeply
ashamed” of the problems in the papers.

Retractions of papers in major scientific journals like Nature
are rare. They can come about because of fraud or the discovery of
honest mistakes that undercut the conclusions of research.
Publications like Nature routinely have experts review papers
submitted by scientists to look for problems. But in an editorial
released Wednesday, Nature concluded that its editors and
reviewers “could not have detected the fatal faults in this
work.”

Glory (funding and tenure) tempts researchers to rush results
into high profile journals. Unfortunately, this incentive structure
for research seems to have gone considerably awry. For example, in
2012, I reported in my column, “Can
Most Cancer Research Be Trusted?
,” that researchers could
replicate the results of only six out of 53 landmark cancer
research papers.

More researchers and journals should follow the replication
system devised by the folks at the Open
Science Framework
project. Even better, major journals could
insist that they will publish “game changing” papers only after the
research has been replicated by an outside lab.

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Russell 2000 Gloom, Camera-on-a-Stick Doom, Bond Yields Boom

For the 5th month in a row, US treasury bonds started with a 2-day sell-off as yields rose arond 6bps today (back to unch from FOMC). Gold, silver, and copper all gained notably (despite a knee-jerk lower on the ADP data). The US Dollar jumped instantly on the ADP print then flatlined for the rest of the day but USDJPY pushed higher. However, stocks chose to ignore their ubiquitous drivers – VIX was slammed lower (stocks ignored it) and USDJPY surged (stocks ignored it) as early weakness in Trannies was overtaken by Russell 2000 losses as the S&P and Dow flatlined in a very narrow range. Shortly after the US markets opened, credit markets diverged notably from equity markets (but caught up into the close). VIX closed lower. The Dow had its narrowest range since Dec – funny what happens when there's no $190 billion repo injection, eh? The S&P and Dow closed marginally green at new record highs.

Perhaps Art Cashin summed it up best – good news is indeed bad news…

"I find it fascinating we're all sitting here worried about prosperity breaking out."

Early weakness in Trannies; extended weakness in Russell – S&P and Dow clung to record highs..

 

Which left the Russell almost unch for the month…

 

10Y rates rose back to FOMC levels (with S&P +2% still) as USDJPY also surged…

 

So stocks ignored USDJPY and also ignored VIX best efforts…

 

Credit and stocks diverged at the US open but credit rallied back towards the close…

 

The Dow had its narrowest range since Dec – has tended to signal a short-term turn…

 

10Y rates are back to breakeven from the FOMC (and 30Y above)

 

FX Markets were quiet with the main action at the ADP print (USD bid)…

 

Copper surged on the day as the CCFD unwinds continue to squeeze shorts and unwind hedges. Gold and silver also jumped off the knee-jerk snap lower from ADP…

 

Gold was slammed on the ADP print and again into the European close…

 

All we have to say is WWJSD?

 

Charts: Bloomberg

Bonus Chart: Camera-on-a-stick tumbles 17% from its highs…




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The Fed’s Inflation Survey That The Fed Would Rather Not Hear

U.S. consumers think one-year domestic price inflation will run 50-100% higher than the current headline Consumer Price Index that Wall Street uses to value financial assets. That surprising finding doesn’t come from the fringe "Inflation is nigh, repent!" camp; as ConvergEx's NBick Colas points out, it is the central observation of the New York Federal Reserve’s Survey of Consumer Expectations. This relatively new but rigorously designed monthly dataset polls 1,200 American households on a range of financial questions, from inflation expectations to household finances and labor market conditions. The news The Fed is hearing from the survey must be a bit tough to hear. Inflation expectations are significantly higher than their "Target" of 2% already, meaning any acceleration in prices will "Feel" higher than the central bank’s notional goals.

Via ConvergEx's Nick Colas,

…Less than a third of respondents expect higher interest on their bank deposits over the next year, they expect home price to rise 4% over the same period and food/college expenses to rise 5% and 8%, respectively.

There’s more to inflation than meets the CP-eye…

If the Age of the Internet has a philosophical cornerstone, it may well be engraved: “People like to talk.  About themselves.  About others.  About anything.  So let them talk”.  The Facebook post, the tweet, the Instagram picture, the Buzzfeed questionnaire…  Self-expression is the Lake Victoria of Web 2.0’s Nile River of content.  And everyone from the White House (online petitions) to the U.K. prison system (www.insidetime.org) leverages technology to engage a broader – and chattier – population.
 
And while they might be slightly late to the party, the New York Federal Reserve is now using the Internet to help with the U.S. central bank’s efforts to understand consumer inflation expectations. No, it’s not quite as exciting as a “Which Disney princess are you?” survey on Buzzfeed, but the outcomes from this effort are (hopefully) more relevant to society as a whole. It is called the Survey of Consumer Expectations – here is a brief historical summary of the effort:

In the fall of 2007, the NY Fed began studying ways to improve their understanding of consumer expectations. They worked with everyone from the RAND Corporation to other Fed branches and psychologists that specialize in survey design. Their three areas of focus were household finance, labor and inflation expectations, all through the lens of “Real world” household surveys.

 

Researchers settled on a monthly Internet survey of about 1,200 households, each of which received $15 for completing a questionnaire. The NY Fed sees about a 60% response rate for new participants and an 80% rate for repeat respondents. The survey uses a rotating panel of survey takers to maintain some much needed month-to-month continuity.

 

The survey consists of a repeating set of questions as well as special non-repeating topics. The items which appear every month include queries on household expectations for: future inflation, wage growth, home prices, various critical commodities, household income and spending, taxes, credit access and job search.

 

This month will mark the one-year anniversary of the dataset public history.  There are several links at the end of this note if you would like to see more details about the survey and download the detailed data.

As you cull through the results of the NY Fed’s new foray into Internet surveys, the first thing that strikes you is just how different the results are from common Wall Street wisdom about critical issues like inflation and interest rates. Granted, there are only 11 months of data so far, and this is a new effort.  But still…  Consider the following points:

According to the May data (last available) for the Survey of Consumer Expectations, respondents believe one-year inflation will run 3.2% to 4.3%.  Those are the median and point estimates – the survey question here is structured as a set of probabilities for 0-2% future inflation, 2-4%, and so forth. For reference, the last Consumer Price Index readings were 1.9% (Core) and 2.1% (Headline), and the May Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index was 1.8%. Essentially, consumers in this survey either see inflation up 50% to +100% higher in the next 12 months, or they simply feel that current government inflation data underestimates their current inflation rates. Or both, of course…

 

In a June 24, 2014 speech on the survey, the research head at the NY Fed James McAndrews discussed this dichotomy. One reason given: the “high right tail” created by select respondents – in other words, the propensity for some of the surveyed population to give answers that are much higher than the average. The answer to this problem: “Public information campaigns” to get the truth out.  When you look at the demographic details of those respondents who generally estimate higher levels of future inflation, you see that they tend to have lower levels of educational achievement. That means they, statistically speaking, probably have lower incomes. Another explanation for the “Right tail” respondents therefore falls to hand: they feel the whipsaws of food and fuel inflation more than higher income households. It may not be an information issue, in other words, for a lower income household simply feels higher prices for necessities more acutely than one with greater resources.

 

The NY Fed survey also surveys other useful measures of consumer expectations, such as the survey set’s estimate of future appreciation in house prices. Here, the respondents are fairly optimistic, with a consensus estimate of 4.0% as of May 2014.

 

The two cost items that consumers seem most concerned about are medical care and college education. The forecast price increases over the next year are: medical care: 9.5% and college cost inflation: 7.9%. The other items in the NY Fed survey are rent, gas and food – all forecast by the survey respondents to run between 4.6% and 6.0%. Again, these components are ones more keenly felt by lower income households as they make up a greater percentage of their typical monthly budget.

 

On the issue of wage growth, the population in the NY Fed survey has grown more cautious in recent months. Hopes for 2.4% growth earlier in 2014 have given way to 2.0% in the May results.  Interestingly, this is not due to greater job insecurity. Estimates by the survey respondents of losing their job involuntarily remain at 16.5%, essentially unchanged from the beginning of the year. Since this is a fairly new dataset there is no color on how the population felt in 2007, or during the housing boom of the mid-2000s.

 

A total of 14.2% of those answering the NY Fed’s online survey thought there was a chance of their not being able to make a minimum payment on their outstanding debt burden. That is down from the 17.2% of respondents who answered that question in September 2013, but still represents one in seven households who answer the questionaire.

 

Only 28.6% of households in the survey feel that they will be able to earn higher rates on their savings in a year’s time. Clearly, low interest rates have had their intended effect of convincing savers that they must invest their money in capital markets to achieve a return higher than inflation. But the recent Fed chatter about raising short-term interest rates hasn’t yet filtered through to the population as a whole.

 

Survey respondents estimate one-year wage growth at just 2.3%, well below their estimates of future price inflation. That’s a telling answer for a host of reasons. First, it helps explain the choppy economic recovery of the last year, winter weather notwithstanding. Consumers who expect a lower quality of economic life in the future are not ideal candidates for higher spending. It also speaks to why economic growth is likely to remain muted in the future.

In short, you have to give the NY Fed an immense amount of credit for the Survey of Consumer Expectation, and not just for embracing the technology of online surveys. The news they are hearing from the survey is a bit tough to hear. Inflation expectations are significantly higher than their “Target” of 2% already, meaning any acceleration in prices will “Feel” higher than the central bank’s notional goals. How that plays out in the coming years will be hard to ascertain. Still, the inclusion of rigorous consumer-based surveys is clearly a step in the right direction.




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Alabama Crushes Sex Offender Reform Camp for No Good Reason

In rural Clanton, Alabama, a
pastor named Ricky Martin has operated a camp on his property to
help convicted sex offenders reform themselves. Martin’s program
has since 2010 provided a refuge for over 50 men as they try to
assimilate back into society. Not anymore, though. C.J. Robinson,
the chief deputy district attorney of Chilton County, thought the
group was icky or dangerous or something, so he went out of his way
to put an end it.

The Associated Press
reports
on this incident:

Martin … said he met men with no place to go while serving as
a volunteer chaplain in a state prison. He came up with the idea of
a sex offender refuge in rural Chilton County, far away from any
schools or day care centers, and began screening potential
prisoners to live there. …

“We try to live Christian,” said Kenny Dark, who served time for
rape and has lived in one of the campers. “We go to the church
Wednesday and two times on Sunday. We help each other.”

Robinson … said Monday he doesn’t doubt the sincerity of
Martin’s religious beliefs. He said no one living at the camp has
been arrested for additional sex-related crimes. And, he said, sex
offenders do need a place to live.

If not behind a tiny church in an agricultural county with about
five dozen people per square mile, then where?

Robinson said he doesn’t know. But having so many ex-convicts
with similar criminal records in one place is a public safety
threat, he said, and Martin doesn’t have the specialized training
and credentials to deal with them. …

So [Robinson] wrote a bill to shut down the camp by prohibiting
two convicted sex offenders from living within 300 feet of each
other on the same property unless they are married.

The bill passed in March without any dissent and took effect
July 1. Property owners can face up to a $5,000 fine if they
violate the law. Great! Let’s just recap: Martin had a private
system that kept sex offenders away from potential victims while
also giving them a community and sense of moral purpose, and
Robinson crushed it without any idea of what to do next.

No matter the fact that many communities throughout the U.S.
implement similar restrictions, which tend to force sex offenders
to either become
homeless
or move into high density
enclaves
in cities, where locals then get
spooked
, and the convicts, despite having done their time, are

treated
as though they’re still dangerous and face severe
restrictions
on basic things like their ability to walk to a park.

“This might be the only chance I ever have as a prosecutor to
try to take steps on the front end,”
insisted
Robinson, and by golly, he just had to take that
chance. 

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Stocks Are Officially More Overvalued Than During The Last Bubble Peak

Over the weekend we showed that when it comes to fugding what one means by EPS (GAAP, non-GAAP, Pension accounting adjusted, etc), there is a virtually endless spectrum how one can make what is now effectively a 20x LTM P/E market appear as a “reasonably” valued 16.5x. But while fudging snapshot earnings is one thing, presenting an “apples-to-apples” valuation trend based on any one given methodology is something different, and provides a much needed continuum of (over) valuation. Which is why we go to the just released Q3 Guide to the Markets released by JPM Asset Management where we read the following:

  • Current forward S&P 500 P/E: 15.6x
  • Forward S&P 500 P/E on October 9, 2007: 15.2x

Needless to say, this assumes the current consensus for Non-GAAP earnings growth is accurate, which as we explained previously is driven almost entirely by “one-time charge” addbacks: addbacks which traditionally peak just before recessions strikes.

But all of the above is “noise” to quote Janet Yellen. One quick look at the chart below and it becomes immediately clear that the 190% surge in the S&P since the 2009 lows has been entirely on the $10 trillion (excluding China’s $25 trillion in new financial debt) in central bank created liquidity.




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Why The Mainstream Fails To Understand Recessions

Submitted by Hal Snarr via the Ludwig von Mises Institute,

In a 2010 Bloomberg Television interview, Alan Greenspan said, “The general notion the Fed was propagator of the bubble by monetary policy does not hold up to the evidence. … Everybody missed it — academia, the Federal Reserve, all regulators.”

Everybody missed it? Not according to Axel Leijonhufvud. In 2008 he wrote, “Operating an interest-targeting regime keying on the CPI, the Fed was lured into keeping interest rates far too low far too long. The result was inflation of asset prices combined with a general deterioration of credit … a variation on the Austrian overinvestment theme.”[1] Randall Forsyth concurred, writing the following in early 2009, “The Austrians were the ones who could see the seeds of collapse in the successive credit booms, aided and abetted by Fed policies.”[2]

 

The Failure of the Mainstream

Despite the unprecedented fiscal and monetary action taken by the Bush and Obama administrations, which pushed the per capita budget deficit to more than twice the previous record, and the Fed, which quadrupled its balance sheet,[3] the economy continues to be stuck in a deep recessionary gap. Instead of acknowledging the failure of these actions, policy makers have doubled down. As the Fed continues to print money to buy securities directly from Treasury and hold rates near zero, asset bubbles are reflating,[4] excess reserves have exploded, and bad economic news pushes stock markets ever higher.[5] With the pedal pushed to the metal, economists surveyed by the National Association for Business Economics in 2012 said they wanted current fiscal or monetary policy to continue.[6] A year later, economists in that same survey said monetary policy was about right.[7]

In a 2013 New York Times article,[8] Paul Krugman acknowledged that the housing bubble he prescribed for the 2001 recession[9] had resulted “in the greatest economic crisis since the 1930s,” but called for the Fed to ignore the “babbling barons of bubbleism, and get on with doing [its] job” of fighting high unemployment.

Money printing and low interest rates are part of a much broader problem. The system the Fed oversees is wracked with moral hazard. The FDIC, the Fed being the lender of last resort, the too-big-to-fail doctrine, and mortgage securitization by Fannie and Freddie allow lenders to make riskier loans than they would have otherwise made. Unlike large national banks, credit unions are hesitant to make 30-year fixed rate mortgages. Why? They understand that their net interest margin will be negative if future deposit rates rise above fixed rates on mortgages made years earlier. They also understand that they are too small to be bailed out.

The aforementioned backstops are necessary because fractional reserve banking is inherently unstable. The money that is lent into existence can vanish at a moment’s notice. The bank panic sparked by the Lehman Brothers collapse resulted in a massive shortage of reserves that was filled with a 578 percent increase in discount loans.

Although economic prosperity is linked to core tenets of Austrian economics, namely economic and political freedom,[10] the school is routinely dismissed by mainstream macroeconomists.[11] This is so despite prices falling, quality rising, and consumer choice increasing in markets that are relatively free of government intervention (e.g., cellular phones, televisions, software, and computers). On the other hand, inflation, stagnant quality, inefficiency, or moral hazard is typical of industries regulated, managed, or owned by government (e.g., banking, education, healthcare, and the post office). Thus, it is surprising that the school has not gained wider acceptance. This is perhaps due to mainstream macroeconomics offering sellable solutions. Whereas Austrian economists generally refuse to support politically-popular welfare programs when unemployment is high, mainstream macroeconomists do not. Keynesian “solutions” like public works projects, extensions to unemployment insurance compensation, and payroll tax cuts, are well-received among working-class voters. Supply-side and Chicago-School policy prescriptions, like capital gains tax rate cuts, low interest rates, and deregulation, appeal to investors and entrepreneurs.

Mainstream macroeconomics’ sellable solutions have consequences, which are fixed with additional interventions. The IRS tax code has nearly doubled in length to over 70,000 pages in twenty years.[12] During that same period, over 1.4 million pages have been added to the Federal Register.[13] During the last five years, the Fed has held rates near zero and paid banks to not make loans.[14] Consequently, the accumulation of intervention has coincided with long-run growth slowing to a crawl.

How did mainstream macroeconomics miss it, and why has it doubled down on policies that appear to be setting the table for future asset bubbles and financial crises?

Too much aggregation is mainstream macroeconomics’ fatal conceit.

 

Capital-Based Macroeconomics

Roger Garrison’s Capital Based Macroeconomics (CBM) avoids mainstream macroeconomics’ fatal conceit by disaggregating economic output by stages of production.[15] Expenditures on first stage capital goods, like rubber and steel, were committed to the production of second stage capital goods two periods ago. Expenditures on second stage capital goods, like tires and engines, were committed to the production of final goods last period. Adding these expenditures gives mainstream macroeconomics’ investment expenditures, which ignores the inter-temporal allocation of resources. Expenditures on final stage goods, like automobiles, are known as consumer expenditures in both macroeconomic views.

Consumption and investment are more realistically modeled as short-run tradeoffs in CBM. When consumers save more, the supply of loanable funds rises. This lowers interest rates and raises investment as consumption and profits fall.

Shrinking profits prompts innovation. Lower interest rates promote the discoveries, production, and adoption of new products and cost-saving technologies.

Unlike in mainstream macroeconomics, wages in CBM’s segmented labor markets do not all fall when GDP declines. Though falling profits decrease labor demand and wages in the final stage, labor demand and wages in earlier stages rise as firms redirect resources. The widening wage differential draws workers to earlier production stages. This migration reduces final stage labor supply and raises earlier stage labor supply, resulting in the final stage wage rising up toward the wages that prevail in earlier expanding stages.

After savings-induced investments have worked their way through the economy, the productive capacity of the economy has expanded, resulting in higher overall consumption. Though this contradicts Keynes’s Paradox of Thrift,[16] it does not work well when government interferes in markets.

Market interventions like social security, minimum wages, food stamps, and interest rate setting reduce savings, and make wages and prices sticky. Because persistently high unemployment is the unintended consequence of these interventions, monetary intervention is enacted to cure it.

When the Fed creates reserves, interest rates fall, investment increases, and savings decline. The wedge that is driven between investment and savings equals the amount of money that the Fed creates. The resulting malinvestment and overconsumption represent a competition for resources, which pushes asset prices ever higher and the economy beyond its productive capacity. This is what Austrians refer to as a Fed-induced boom.

 

Conclusion

The boom is unsustainable. Investment and consumption are higher than they would have been in the absence of monetary intervention. As asset bubbles inflate, yields increase, but so do inflation expectations. To dampen inflation expectations, the Fed withdraws stimulus. As soon as asset prices start to fall, yields on heavily leveraged assets are negative. As asset prices decline, increasingly more investors are underwater. Loan defaults rise as mortgage payments adjust up with rising interest rates. When asset bubbles pop, the boom becomes the bust.




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Yes, There’s Wood Pulp in Burgers…Here’s Why I Think it Matters

Screen Shot 2014-07-02 at 12.39.06 PMOn Monday, Quartz published an article by Devin Cohen titled, There is a Secret Ingredient in Your Burgers: Wood Pulp. Given the headline and people’s already present suspicion regarding all of the shady and potentially dangerous ingredients hidden in food items, the article gained a lot of traction. In subsequent days, most journalists and bloggers have focused on the dangers of this additive (unclear) and whether or not it is pervasive throughout the food chain as opposed to just fast food (it appears to be).

The one angle that has not been explored as much is the overall trend. Let’s go ahead and assume that wood pulp is a safe thing to consume, it certainly seems to have no nutritional value whatsoever. So why are companies inserting it into food items? To mask inflation and earn more profits most likely. This was a major theme I focused on last year in a series of pieces on stealth inflation and food fraud, a couple of which can be read below:

continue reading

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Meet the Three (Male, GOP) Politicians Who Support Over-the-Counter Birth Control Pills

Over-the-counter contraception is a popular
proposal among American women: In
a 2013 poll
, two-thirds said they were in favor of making
hormonal birth control pills available without a prescription. It’s
a plan supported
by major U.S. medical organizations
, too. Following this week’s

Supreme Court ruling
in Burwell v. Hobby
Lobby
, many libertarian types have been taking the occasion to
once again push
for OTC birth control pills

It’s not a terribly apt corollary to the Hobby Lobby
situation—of the contraceptive forms Hobby Lobby’s owners oppose,
one (Plan B) is already sold over the counter, and another (the
IUD) legitimately requires a doctor’s visit. But, hey, I’m always
game to discuss the merits of OTC birth control pills. Most
politicians, not so surprisingly, are not.

But what is surprising is who has been willing to
broach the topic. If this were an Upworthy-esque site, I would have
titled this post, “The 3 Politicians Who Publicly Support OTC Birth
Control—What They Have In Common Will Surprise You!” What they have
in common is they’re all male Republicans.

In the wake of the Hobby Lobby ruling, the only elected
officials who have been calling for truly giving women more
reproductive autonomy and greater access to contraception have been
Y-chromosomed conservatives. The majority of responses I’ve seen
from (male and female) Democratic politicians have simultaneously
asserted that birth control decisions are not a woman’s boss’
business and continued to call for a system that makes birth
control pills explicitly that. (The majority of official Republican
responses have been no joy ride either, but at least these tend to
be logically consistent in their idiocy.)

So without further ado: the only three politicians I could find
on record supporting non-prescription birth control
pills. 

1. Cory Gardner

Rep. Cory Gardner (R-Colo.) is currently running for a seat in
the U.S. Senate. His opponent, Democratic Sen. Mark Udall, has been
hammering Gardner over his alleged stance on contraception (Udall
claimed that Gardner wanted to ban it). Rather than sit back and
let the war-on-women hype machine roll over him, Gardner has gone
on the defensive. In June,
Gardner penned an op-ed
for The Denver Post calling
for an end to the “zero-sum approach to women’s medical care.”

“It’s time we changed that and adopt modern policies that make
sense instead of using women’s medical issues as an election-year
power play,” wrote Gardner. “One of the most rational ways for
Washington to break this gridlock is to approve oral contraception
for over-the-counter purchases by adults.” 

2. Bobby Jindal

In 2012, Louisiana
Gov. Bobby Jindal also
took to the op-ed pages in support of
over-the-counter birth control pills. “As an unapologetic pro-life
Republican, I also believe that every adult (18 years old and over)
who wants contraception should be able to purchase it,” Jindal
wrote in The Wall Street Journal, expressing
agreement with a recent announcement from the American College of
Obstetricians and Gynecologists that oral contraceptives should be
sold without a prescription. 

3. Gabriel Gomez

Gabriel Gomez is not even an elected official—this is how much I
had to scrape to come up with at least three vocal political
supporters of OTC birth control. Gomez was the Republican nominee
for a U.S. Senate seat in the 2013 special election Massachusetts
had to replace John Kerry. He lost to Democrat Edward Markey, who
had made abortion access and contraception a major focus of his
critiques against Gomez. 

Gomez stressed repeatedly that, while personally against
abortion, he viewed Roe v Wade as “settled law.” As far as
birth control,
Gomez said
, “contraception should be available over the
counter. They should take the politics out of it. And they should
take the pharmaceutical companies out of it.” 

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Ed Krayewski Talking Immigration on the Wilkow Majority

Ed Krayewski Talking Immigration on the Wilkow Majority

I’ll be on Andrew
Wilkow’s Sirius XM satellite radio show
 in a couple of
minutes to talk about immigration, why I
support
amnesty
, and
what to blame Obama for
. Tune in and check us out.

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