Elizabeth Nolan Brown on Forcing Pregnant Women Into Surgery

Jennifer Goodall was about to have her fourth child when the
ordeal began. Having given birth to three previous children through
cesarean section—a surgical procedure that allows a baby to be
delivered through a woman’s abdomen—the Cape Coral, Florida, mother
wanted to try a natural delivery now. But in early
July, Bayfront Health Port Charlotte—the hospital where
Goodall had been planning on giving birth in about two weeks—told
her it wasn’t permitted. A letter from Bayfront’s chief financial
officer said if she attempted a “trial of labor,” the facility
would report her to the state’s Department of Children and Family
Services, seek a court order to perform the surgery anyway, and do
the procedure “with or without (her) consent” if she showed up at
the hospital. 

Goodall’s case is far from an anomaly, Elizabeth Nolan Brown
explains. At hospitals across the country, pregnant women are
banned from making fundamental decisions about their medical care
and coerced into compliance with threats of involving the state.
 

View this article.

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Cantor Says Farewell, House GOP Border Bill Collapses, Wis. Restrictions on Public Unions Upheld: P.M. Links

  • Won't have Cantor to kick around anymore.Soon-to-be-former
    House Majority Leader Eric Cantor
    (R-Va.), who lost his
    primary, gave his farewell address to Congress today. Rep. Kevin
    McCarthy (R-Calif.) will take over following the August
    recess.
  • House Republicans couldn’t agree on how to address the
    border crisis
    and thus a bill that was scheduled for vote today
    was abandoned.
  • Wisconsin’s Supreme Court has
    upheld the 2011 law that ended collective bargaining
    for most
    public employees, a victory for Republican Gov. Scott Walker.
  • Regardless of any truces or cease-fires, Israel Prime Minister
    Benjamin Netanyahu has vowed to destroy all of
    Hamas’ secret tunnels
    .
  • One single cop in Seattle has been responsible for
    80 percent of marijuana tickets
    in the city this year since it
    has been legalized. He has been reassigned.
  • Edward Snowden’s one-year asylum in
    Russia
    is expiring and it’s not clear yet whether it will be
    extended, though his lawyer believes it’s likely he’ll stay put for
    now.

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Challengers Ask SCOTUS to Hear Obamacare Subsidies Case

Last week, two circuit courts
split over legal challenges to the Obama administration’s decision
to allow subsidies in federally run exchanges under Obamacare.

A three judge panel in the D.C. Circuit ruled that the
administration’s implementation, authorized by an Internal Revenue
Service rule, was illegal. A separate three judge panel from the
Fourth Circuit ruled that the administration’s approach was
allowable under the law. 

The challengers who lost in the Fourth Circuit have now appealed
directly to the Supreme Court, asking the high court to resolve the
issue as quickly as possible.

The petition,
from the Competitive Enterprise Institute (CEI), which is
coordinating the challenges, lays out the central question and the
stakes involved:

Two Courts of Appeals have squarely divided over its facial
validity. The resulting uncertainty over this major plank
of ACA implementation means that millions of people have
no idea if they may rely on the IRS’s promise to subsidize
their health coverage, or if that money will be clawed back.
Employers in 36 states have no idea if they will be penalized
under the ACA’s employer mandate, or are effectively exempt
from it. Insurers have no idea if their customers will pay for
health coverage in which they enrolled, or if large
numbers will default. And the Treasury has no idea if billions
of dollars being spent each month were authorized by Congress,
or if these expenditures are illegal. Only this Court can
definitively resolve the matter; it is imperative that the
Court do so as soon as possible. 

The high court is under no obligation to hear the case, but will
do so if four justices decide to grant certification. Challengers
hope that the Supreme Court will agree to hear the case as soon as
possible. If the court does hear the case, a decision could come as
early as next spring. 

(Disclosure: I worked at CEI from summer 2005 through early
2007.

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"Markets In Turmoil" Russell 2000 Plunges Most In Over 2 Years, Dow Down For 2014

The deer is back…

 

Stocks finally snapped and caught down to high-yield credit's warnings. The worst day for the Dow in 6 months, smashing through its 50- and 100-day moving-average. The Russell 2000 was worst on the day to end July down over 6% – its worst month since May 2012. The S&P's had almost its worst day in 6 months. Trannies dropped 3.4% on the week – the worst in 11 months. Stocks closed at the day's lows.

 

NOT OFF THE LOWS…

The week

 

 

Stocks finally caught down to credit's warnings…

 

Dow's worst day in 6 months…

 

All major US equity indices close lower in July… The Russell 2000's worst month since May 2012

 

Builders are worst but Discretionary and Staples are now red YTD…

 

Amid all the carnage in stocks, Treasury yields closed +/-1bps (long-end higher in yield, short-end lower)…

 

The USD was flat…

 

Commodity markets were clubbed as we suspect EU closing margin calls (and then US margin calls) hit them… WTI dropped below $98!!

 

 

Year-to-date, gold and bonds continue to lead, HY lags…

 

So to sum up – carnage in stocks… USD flat, bonds flat… Oil monkey-hammered and PMs dumped.

Charts: Bloomberg




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1n833hy Tyler Durden

“Markets In Turmoil” Russell 2000 Plunges Most In Over 2 Years, Dow Down For 2014

The deer is back…

 

Stocks finally snapped and caught down to high-yield credit's warnings. The worst day for the Dow in 6 months, smashing through its 50- and 100-day moving-average. The Russell 2000 was worst on the day to end July down over 6% – its worst month since May 2012. The S&P's had almost its worst day in 6 months. Trannies dropped 3.4% on the week – the worst in 11 months. Stocks closed at the day's lows.

 

NOT OFF THE LOWS…

The week

 

 

Stocks finally caught down to credit's warnings…

 

Dow's worst day in 6 months…

 

All major US equity indices close lower in July… The Russell 2000's worst month since May 2012

 

Builders are worst but Discretionary and Staples are now red YTD…

 

Amid all the carnage in stocks, Treasury yields closed +/-1bps (long-end higher in yield, short-end lower)…

 

The USD was flat…

 

Commodity markets were clubbed as we suspect EU closing margin calls (and then US margin calls) hit them… WTI dropped below $98!!

 

 

Year-to-date, gold and bonds continue to lead, HY lags…

 

So to sum up – carnage in stocks… USD flat, bonds flat… Oil monkey-hammered and PMs dumped.

Charts: Bloomberg




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21 Ways To End The Phrase "Americans Are So Broke…"

Submitted by Michael Snyder of The Economic Collapse blog,

Did you know that 77 million Americans have unpaid debts that are "in collections" and that Congress is actually thinking about letting post offices offer payday loans?  We live in a country where almost everyone is drowning in debt and where most people are either flat broke or very close to flat broke.  Years ago, "your Mama is so broke" jokes were all the rage, and at the rate we are going they could make a big comeback.  Some of my favorites were "your Mama is so broke she went to McDonald's and put a milkshake on layaway" and "your Mama is so broke your family ate cereal with a fork to save milk".  Unfortunately, the facts that I am about to share with you are not funny at all.  In fact, they are quite sobering.  Yes, things are going fairly well for the elitists that live in the good areas of New York City, Washington D.C. and San Francisco right now, but most of the country is deeply struggling as our economic fundamentals continue to crumble.

Please share these numbers with as many people as you can, because we need people to understand that there has not been an "economic recovery" for most of America.  In fact, in many ways things just continue to get even worse.  The following are 21 ways to end the phrase "Americans are so broke"…

1. Americans are so broke that about a third of them have debt collectors on their heels.  One recent study discovered that more than one out of every three adults in the United States has an unpaid debt that is "in collections".  That is a total of 77 million people.  In other words, the debt collection business in America is absolutely booming.

2. Americans are so broke that Congress is now actually considering allowing post offices to provide payday loans and check cashing services.

3. Americans are so broke that they are keeping their vehicles longer than ever.  The average age of vehicles on America’s roads recently set a new all-time high of 11.4 years.

4. Americans are so broke that car dealers are having to go to extreme lengths to get new customers.  Last year, one out of every four auto loans in the United States was made to someone with subprime credit.

5. Americans are so broke that 52 percent of them cannot even afford the homes that they are living in right now.

6. Americans are so broke that they are falling farther behind on their student loans than ever.  The total amount of student loan debt in the U.S. has now reached a whopping 1.2 trillion dollars, and approximately seven million Americans are in default on their student loans at this point.

7. Young Americans are so broke that half of all college graduates are still relying on their parents financially when they are two years out of school.

8. Young Americans are so broke that only 36 percent of American adults under the age of 35 currently own a home.  That is the lowest level that has ever been recorded.

9. Americans are so broke that many of them can't even afford to shop at Wal-Mart and dollar stores anymore

Discount stores are slowly dying.

 

Yesterday, Dollar Tree announced it would buy Family Dollar, a chain that is in the process of closing hundreds of stores and firing workers.

 

Other discount stores have been struggling as well, writes Heidi Moore at The Guardian. Fashion discounter Loehmann's filed for bankruptcy, while Wal-Mart's sales have declined for the past five quarters.

 

"There’s just not enough money deployed by American families to keep all the discount chains in business," Moore writes.

10. Americans are so broke that they are running up record levels of debt.  Overall, U.S. households are 11.68 trillion dollars in debt right now.

11. Americans are so broke that the wealth of the "typical American household" has fallen by 36 percent over the past decade.

12. Americans are so broke that one out of every four part-time workers in America is living below the poverty line.

13. Americans are so broke that more than 37 million Americans are now being served by food pantries and soup kitchens.

14. Americans are so broke that there are 49 million Americans that are dealing with food insecurity.

15. Americans are so broke that the number of people on food stamps has increased by about 14 million while Obama has been in the White House.  Ten years ago, the number of women in the U.S. that had jobs outnumbered the number of women in the U.S. on food stamps by more than a 2 to 1 margin.  But now the number of women in the U.S. on food stamps actually exceeds the number of women that have jobs.

16. Americans are so broke that the U.S. government has had to spend an astounding 3.7 trillion dollars on welfare programs over the past five years.

17. Americans are so broke that more than 20 percent of all children in the U.S. are living in poverty.

18. Americans are so broke that we have a record number of kids sleeping in the streets.  In fact, we have more than a million public school children that are homeless at this point.

19. Americans are so broke that 76 percent of all Americans are living paycheck to paycheck.

20. Americans are so broke that 26 percent of Americans have absolutely no emergency savings whatsoever.

21. Americans are so broke that approxim
ately two-thirds
of all Americans do not have enough money saved up to cover six months of expenses if an emergency arose.

If things are this bad now, during the so-called "economic recovery", how bad will things get during the next major economic downturn?

Unfortunately, most Americans have been lulled into a false sense of security.  The financial crisis of 2008 seems like ancient history to most of them now, and most people appear to believe that our leaders have "fixed" whatever was wrong the last time.

Of course that is not the case at all.  In fact, our long-term problems have just continued to grow since then.

The truth is that what we are experiencing right now is about as good as things are going to get for the U.S. economy.  When the next crisis arrives, all of the numbers in the list above are going to rapidly get a lot worse.

So enjoy the rest of this "bubble" while you still can.  It certainly will not last for too much longer.




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1AEn0Hg Tyler Durden

21 Ways To End The Phrase “Americans Are So Broke…”

Submitted by Michael Snyder of The Economic Collapse blog,

Did you know that 77 million Americans have unpaid debts that are "in collections" and that Congress is actually thinking about letting post offices offer payday loans?  We live in a country where almost everyone is drowning in debt and where most people are either flat broke or very close to flat broke.  Years ago, "your Mama is so broke" jokes were all the rage, and at the rate we are going they could make a big comeback.  Some of my favorites were "your Mama is so broke she went to McDonald's and put a milkshake on layaway" and "your Mama is so broke your family ate cereal with a fork to save milk".  Unfortunately, the facts that I am about to share with you are not funny at all.  In fact, they are quite sobering.  Yes, things are going fairly well for the elitists that live in the good areas of New York City, Washington D.C. and San Francisco right now, but most of the country is deeply struggling as our economic fundamentals continue to crumble.

Please share these numbers with as many people as you can, because we need people to understand that there has not been an "economic recovery" for most of America.  In fact, in many ways things just continue to get even worse.  The following are 21 ways to end the phrase "Americans are so broke"…

1. Americans are so broke that about a third of them have debt collectors on their heels.  One recent study discovered that more than one out of every three adults in the United States has an unpaid debt that is "in collections".  That is a total of 77 million people.  In other words, the debt collection business in America is absolutely booming.

2. Americans are so broke that Congress is now actually considering allowing post offices to provide payday loans and check cashing services.

3. Americans are so broke that they are keeping their vehicles longer than ever.  The average age of vehicles on America’s roads recently set a new all-time high of 11.4 years.

4. Americans are so broke that car dealers are having to go to extreme lengths to get new customers.  Last year, one out of every four auto loans in the United States was made to someone with subprime credit.

5. Americans are so broke that 52 percent of them cannot even afford the homes that they are living in right now.

6. Americans are so broke that they are falling farther behind on their student loans than ever.  The total amount of student loan debt in the U.S. has now reached a whopping 1.2 trillion dollars, and approximately seven million Americans are in default on their student loans at this point.

7. Young Americans are so broke that half of all college graduates are still relying on their parents financially when they are two years out of school.

8. Young Americans are so broke that only 36 percent of American adults under the age of 35 currently own a home.  That is the lowest level that has ever been recorded.

9. Americans are so broke that many of them can't even afford to shop at Wal-Mart and dollar stores anymore

Discount stores are slowly dying.

 

Yesterday, Dollar Tree announced it would buy Family Dollar, a chain that is in the process of closing hundreds of stores and firing workers.

 

Other discount stores have been struggling as well, writes Heidi Moore at The Guardian. Fashion discounter Loehmann's filed for bankruptcy, while Wal-Mart's sales have declined for the past five quarters.

 

"There’s just not enough money deployed by American families to keep all the discount chains in business," Moore writes.

10. Americans are so broke that they are running up record levels of debt.  Overall, U.S. households are 11.68 trillion dollars in debt right now.

11. Americans are so broke that the wealth of the "typical American household" has fallen by 36 percent over the past decade.

12. Americans are so broke that one out of every four part-time workers in America is living below the poverty line.

13. Americans are so broke that more than 37 million Americans are now being served by food pantries and soup kitchens.

14. Americans are so broke that there are 49 million Americans that are dealing with food insecurity.

15. Americans are so broke that the number of people on food stamps has increased by about 14 million while Obama has been in the White House.  Ten years ago, the number of women in the U.S. that had jobs outnumbered the number of women in the U.S. on food stamps by more than a 2 to 1 margin.  But now the number of women in the U.S. on food stamps actually exceeds the number of women that have jobs.

16. Americans are so broke that the U.S. government has had to spend an astounding 3.7 trillion dollars on welfare programs over the past five years.

17. Americans are so broke that more than 20 percent of all children in the U.S. are living in poverty.

18. Americans are so broke that we have a record number of kids sleeping in the streets.  In fact, we have more than a million public school children that are homeless at this point.

19. Americans are so broke that 76 percent of all Americans are living paycheck to paycheck.

20. Americans are so broke that 26 percent of Americans have absolutely no emergency savings whatsoever.

21. Americans are so broke that approximately two-thirds of all Americans do not have enough money saved up to cover six months of expenses if an emergency arose.

If things are this bad now, during the so-called "economic recovery", how bad will things get during the next major economic downturn?

Unfortunately, most Americans have been lulled into a false sense of security.  The financial crisis of 2008 seems like ancient history to most of them now, and most people appear to believe that our leaders have "fixed" whatever was wrong the last time.

Of course that is not the case at all.  In fact, our long-term problems have just continued to grow since then.

The truth is that what we are experiencing right now is about as good as things are going to get for the U.S. economy.  When the next crisis arrives, all of the numbers in the list above are going to rapidly get a lot worse.

So enjoy the rest of this "bubble" while you still can.  It certainly will not last for too much longer.




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1AEn0Hg Tyler Durden

Demoted Chicago Tech Firm CTO Shoots Boss, Self

One man is dead and one man critical after a 59-year-old employee of Chicago tech firm ArrowStream shot the company’s CEO and then turned the weapon on himself and committed suicide. Chicago Police stated that “he was despondent over the fact that he got demoted.” The alleged shooter, Anthony DeFrances, CTO for the firm, had worked for the company since 2001. As Fox reports, the company’s CEO, Steven LaVoie, 54, of LaGrange, was in critical condition at Northwestern Memorial Hospital, after being shot in the head and stomach.

 

FOX 32 News Chicago

 

As Fox Chicago reports,

A recently demoted executive entered a Loop office building in Chicago on Thursday morning and shot the company’s CEO before turning the gun on himself and committing suicide, authorities said.

 

The shooting happened just before 10 a.m. at the ArrowStream company on the 17th floor of the Bank of America building, 231 S. LaSalle St.

 

Apparently he was despondent over the fact that he got demoted,” Chicago Police Supt. Garry McCarthy said.

 

The company’s CEO, Steven LaVoie, 54, of LaGrange, was in critical condition at Northwestern Memorial Hospital, after being shot in the head and stomach, authorities said.

 

The alleged shooter was identified as Anthony DeFrances, a 59-year-old employee who had been told on Friday that he was being demoted as the company downsizes, police said. DeFrances had worked at the company since January 2001, according to his LinkedIn profile.

 

According to ArrowStream’s website, Anthony DeFrances is the CTO of the company.

Tony DeFrances
Chief Technology Officer

Tony DeFrances is the Chief Technology Officer for ArrowStream. With ArrowStream virtually since its inception, Tony leads all aspects of ArrowStream’s technology, including Development, Quality Assurance, Technical Support, Documentation, Systems and Network Infrastructure, and Data Management.

 

DeFrances brings more than 25 years of technology experience to ArrowStream. For the 10 years prior to joining the company, he founded and ran a successful software company that developed and sold communications, middleware, and sales force automation products and services to Fortune 500 companies in foodservice and other industries. Prior to starting his own company, DeFrances spent 15 years in technology consulting and software development.

 

DeFrances has a Master of Science in Experimental Psychology and a Masters of Computer Science from the University of Dayton.

 

Tony lives in the Chicago area with his wife Eileen and three children.

*  *  *

Sadly, as small cap stocks come under pressure and the endless flow of hot money into tech startups slows (as it has done before), we fear this episode could well repeat all over the country.




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

"Stability Breeds Instability", Or Why John Taylor Is Angry

John Taylor of FX Concepts is angry.

Stability Breeds Instability

In three words our title describes one of the basic foundation blocks of Hyman Minsky’s theories.

The idea is so straightforward, so logical that you can feel the process in your bones, yet no central bank, no finance minister, no head of state has ever publically recognized it. We analysts seem to know it is there as we all talk about gearing up to make a return in these low interest rate, low volatility times. We know our investments, the equities we buy, the bonds we choose are the ones that are levered even if we aren’t. Some incredible percentage of US corporate bonds are covenant lite, more than twice as many, percentage wise than at any peak before a crash, but we still buy. How else can anyone make a return that will get clients, make enough to cover the retirement benefits our pension is committed to, or (at the bottom of it all) keep our jobs? We know we are walking further out a tapering diving board but we have to do it. Why don’t we face facts and study the principles behind the recurrent crashes? Of course, one individual cannot buck the trend because he/she will lose their job, before the inevitable top.

One of my great-grandfathers was a family hero because he, as the manager of a mutual fund company was being sued for under-investing as the crash arrived in 1929. He was acquitted. Maybe this underlies my belief in Minsky’s understanding of financial development and my crusading for the yin and yang of cycles. I even liked reading Hegel, Pareto, and Shumpeter in school. What is the matter with us? Why can’t we – especially our financial leaders – get it? Too much demos? Are we ruled by the Sun, the NY Post, and the Roman circus?

Dropping back to earth from 10,000 meters – unfortunately, not high enough to be safe – the Japanese yen and the Dollar Index in general went wild this past week rising from comatose – straight lining almost – seemingly out of nowhere. It wasn’t actually the Japanese industrial production coming in at minus 3.3% instead of the forecasted minus 1.2% that was such a surprise. We and many other analysts have been saying the Japanese economy was acting worse than it did in 1997 when they last hiked the sales tax, but the authorities everywhere said nothing, there seem to be no vigilantes of any sort. This is not the 1970’s or the 1980’s, we don’t call an idiotic policy by its name (with money, that is). Zero Hedge can rant on but no one follows them or, more important, does a real analysis of the situation.

So now, Japan is collapsing. So what? In the summer of 1997, at exactly the same time-span after the hike as today, the yen started a 30% decline over the next year. That’s not our forecast, but it is now two standard deviations from it. Any takers? Even if there are there are enough benchmark hungers to make the collapse a minor probability. What about Europe? Politics don’t matter. I remember the German grand coalition, all of society agreed on the right course – except a few and there was hell to pay. That stability led to political instability. We would not buy French, Italian, Spanish and other 5- and 10-year paper at under US rates. What are they thinking? We know and so did Minsky. It will not end well.

h/t Ryan




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