And the next country to join the renminbi fan club is…

china 2196985b And the next country to join the renminbi fan club is…

August 6, 2014
Vilnius, Lithuania

When you think about “strong banking”, what country comes first to mind?

A few years ago, the most obvious answer would be Switzerland.

Today, however, Switzerland’s reputation for banking is nowhere near where it once was.

Starting in 2009, the US, as chief financial bully, led the charge in assaulting the country’s banking sector and dragging it down brick by brick.

The pummelling has continued ever since, culminating in the end of banking secrecy in the country altogether.

Meanwhile, as Switzerland endured one blow after the next, the Chinese renminbi (RMB) quietly slipped past the steadfast Swiss franc to become a more popular currency for use in trade settlements.

Eager to restore some of its former banking luster, Switzerland has taken note of this and is rapidly positioning itself to become a major center of European RMB trade.

So the government of Switzerland recently signed a bilateral currency swap agreement with China, enabling the two countries to buy and sell up to 150 billion RMB or 21 billion Swiss Francs of each other’s currencies.

Switzerland is just the latest to join the queue, as nearly 25 other central banks already signed similar agreements with China.

Every few weeks, and with increasing frequency, we’re hearing news of the next country that is accepting China’s future financial primacy.

There’s no denying that both sovereign nations and market participants are accepting the validity of the RMB as a major trade currency. This is no longer an anomaly, but part of an obvious trend.

To be fair, it’s not that the RMB is a shoe-in for the next global reserve currency—because the country and its currency undoubtedly both have problems.

What’s really being revealed with these latest developments is relative confidence.

It may not be clear whether or not the RMB will make it to the top, but what is clear to everyone is that the USD is going down.

Here we see ambitious countries like the UK and Switzerland proactively trying to adapt to and take advantage of the changing financial climate.

The sole tactic of the US government, on the other hand, is to lash out at countries which make them feel threatened.

They rally the whole world against Russia for acts of war. They blast China as a currency manipulator.

And all of this as if the US wasn’t dropping bombs by remote control drone… or heavily manipulating its own currency.

This has accomplished nothing other than to demonstrate just how weak and insecure the former financial superpower has become.

Continuing to believe that the dollar is going to maintain its global reserve status is now not only foolish, but financially hazardous. To countries, businesses and individuals.

Those that accept these changes and try to get out in front of this trend will do incredibly well. They are the ones who will survive intact when the financial system resets.

Those who ignore the trend do so at their own peril.

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A. Barton Hinkle on Cops Shooting Dogs

Another day, another horrific story makes the
news about a cop shooting and killing a beloved family dog. Why is
it, asks A. Barton Hinkle, that postal workers, meter readers, and
pizza deliverymen—among others—all manage to do their jobs without
either getting maimed by pets or killing them? It seems awfully
curious that police officers seem to be the only ones who face such
a stark either/or.

View this article.

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Global Temperature Trend Update: Fifth Warmest July in Satellite Record

Hot ThermometerEvery month University of Alabama in
Huntsville climatologists John Christy and Roy Spencer report the
latest global temperature trends from satellite data. Below are the
newest data updated through July 2014.

Global Temperature Report: July 2014

Global climate trend since Nov. 16, 1978: +0.14 C per decade

July temperatures (preliminary)

Global composite temp.: +0.31 C (about 0.56 degrees Fahrenheit)
above 30-year average for July.

Northern Hemisphere: +0.29 C (about 0.52 degrees Fahrenheit)
above 30-year average for July.

Southern Hemisphere: +0.32 C (about 0.58 degrees Fahrenheit)
above 30-year average for July.

Tropics: +0.45 C (about 0.81 degrees Fahrenheit) above 30-year
average for July.

Global Temperature Trend July 2014

Notes on data released August 5,
2014:

In the tropics, July 2014 was the second warmest July in the
36-year satellite record, only 0.03 C cooler than July 2009 and
0.06 C warmer than July 1998, according to Dr. John Christy, a
professor of atmospheric science and director of the Earth System
Science Center at The University of Alabama in Huntsville. The
average temperature in the tropics during July was 0.45 C (about
0.81° F) warmer than seasonal norms for the month.

The global average temperature for July was 0.31 C (about 0.56
degrees Fahrenheit) warmer than seasonal norms, the fifth warmest
July in the satellite record.

Go
here
to see a map showing global temperature anomalies.

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Copyright Absurdity: Reagan Biographer Gets Paraphrased, Demands $25 Million

...and we can't build our dreams/on suspicious miiiiiinds...Craig Shirley, the author of
two books on Ronald Reagan, has sicced his lawyer on
historian Rick
Perlstein
, whose ’70s history The
Invisible Bridge
 
was published by Simon &
Schuster this week. Shirley’s attorney is demanding that the
publisher pulp Perlstein’s book, pay $25 million in damages, and
take out ads apologizing to Shirley in The New York Times, The
Washington Post, Newsweek, The Nation, The New Republic,
Slate,
and Salon.

What provoked these demands? Basically, the 810 pages of The
Invisible Bridge
include some information that can also be
found in Shirley’s book
Reagan’s Revolution
, and in some places
Perlstein paraphrases Shirley. Shirley thinks
this constitutes copyright infringement. If you’d like to read the
bill of particulars, Dave Weigel has
posted
the attorney’s letters and Simon & Schuster’s
response at Slate, and Shirley himself has posted a

litany of alleged thefts
on his website.

In the first item on the latter list, the two books do sound
alike: Describing the red-light district in Kansas City, Perlstein
echoes not just the info in Shirley’s text but Shirley’s words
“festooned” and “smut peddlers.” After that, though, we essentially
get a list of places where the two writers cited the same facts.
Facts are not copyrightable, and one pair of similar sentences does
not an infringement make. I don’t see a dollar’s worth of damages
here, let alone 25 million.

I should add that Perlstein has posted his endnotes online and
that they include dozens of citations to Shirley’s book. So it’s
not as though he’s trying to conceal where those facts were found.
Shirley is upset that the source notes do not also appear in the
physical text, but the book
tells readers
exactly where to go to find the references. The
worst you can say is that there are a few spots where those notes
call Shirley’s book “The Reagan Revolution” instead of
“Reagan’s Revolution.” I believe the legal term for such an error
is “a typo.”

I have both praised
and criticized
Perlstein’s writing in the past, and I’m writing a review of
The Invisible Bridge which will both praise and
criticize it some more. Mostly praise—I think it’s a good book. But
where I do find fault with it, I’ll take issue with its arguments,
not with the fact that it incorporates information from a text the
author cites repeatedly.

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A.M. Links: Incumbents Win on Primary Tuesday, John Kerry Calls For "Bigger" Approach During Temporary Gaza Ceasefire, San Antonio Spurs Hire Becky Hammon

  • Becky HammonIncumbent
    Sen. Pat Roberts defeated a Tea Party challenger in the Republican
    primary in Kansas. Reps. Tim Huelskamp and Mike Pompeo, who won as
    Tea Party candidates in 2010, survived “anti-Washington”
    challenges. So did Rep. Justin Amash in Michigan, handily, while an
    anti-surveillance amendment in
    Missouri
    passed overwhelmingly.
  • Secretary of State
    John Kerry
    is using a 72-hour ceasefire between Israel and
    Hamas in
    Gaza
    to call for a “bigger, broader approach” to
    negotiations—Operation
    Protective Edge
    enters day 29.
  • British Airways is suspending flights to Liberia and Sierra
    Leone through August over
    Ebola
    fears. More than 1,600 cases have been reported in West
    Africa so far.
  • At least 589 people are dead and more than 2,400 injured after
    a magnitude 6.1 earthquake hit the
    Yunnan
    province in southern China.
  • Rupert Murdoch has withdrawn a bid by
    21st Century Fox
    to take over Time Warner.
  • Apple and Samsung have agreed to end their patents fight in
    overseas courts, though they will continue to litigate in the
    United
    States
    .
  • The San Antonio Spurs hired WNBA player
    Becky Hammon
    as an assistant coach for next season. Meanwhile,

    Major League Baseball
    is expected to hire a new commissioner
    next week.

Follow Reason and Reason 24/7 on
Twitter, and like us on Facebook. You
can also get the top stories mailed to you—sign up
here
.

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A.M. Links: Incumbents Win on Primary Tuesday, John Kerry Calls For “Bigger” Approach During Temporary Gaza Ceasefire, San Antonio Spurs Hire Becky Hammon

  • Becky HammonIncumbent
    Sen. Pat Roberts defeated a Tea Party challenger in the Republican
    primary in Kansas. Reps. Tim Huelskamp and Mike Pompeo, who won as
    Tea Party candidates in 2010, survived “anti-Washington”
    challenges. So did Rep. Justin Amash in Michigan, handily, while an
    anti-surveillance amendment in
    Missouri
    passed overwhelmingly.
  • Secretary of State
    John Kerry
    is using a 72-hour ceasefire between Israel and
    Hamas in
    Gaza
    to call for a “bigger, broader approach” to
    negotiations—Operation
    Protective Edge
    enters day 29.
  • British Airways is suspending flights to Liberia and Sierra
    Leone through August over
    Ebola
    fears. More than 1,600 cases have been reported in West
    Africa so far.
  • At least 589 people are dead and more than 2,400 injured after
    a magnitude 6.1 earthquake hit the
    Yunnan
    province in southern China.
  • Rupert Murdoch has withdrawn a bid by
    21st Century Fox
    to take over Time Warner.
  • Apple and Samsung have agreed to end their patents fight in
    overseas courts, though they will continue to litigate in the
    United
    States
    .
  • The San Antonio Spurs hired WNBA player
    Becky Hammon
    as an assistant coach for next season. Meanwhile,

    Major League Baseball
    is expected to hire a new commissioner
    next week.

Follow Reason and Reason 24/7 on
Twitter, and like us on Facebook. You
can also get the top stories mailed to you—sign up
here
.

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Brickbat: If You Have Nothing to Hide

The FBI and other law
enforcement agencies stopped
all vehicles
 entering and leaving Armada, Michigan,
recorded their license plate numbers and marked the hands of their
occupants with an X. The blockade was apparently part of an
investigation into the recent disappearance of a teenage girl.

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Jacob Sullum on Prosecutors Who Love Mandatory Minimums

In 1996, when he was the U.S. attorney for the
District of Columbia, Eric Holder urged the D.C. Council
to reinstate mandatory minimum sentences for nonviolent drug
offenses, which it had abolished in 1994. Two decades
later, as an attorney general who has
repeatedly criticized “draconian” mandatory minimums and
sought to limit their use, he faces resistance from the federal
prosecutors he oversees.

Holder alluded to that resistance in a speech to the
National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers last Thursday,
saying “any suggestion that defendant cooperation is somehow
dependent on mandatory minimums is plainly inconsistent with the
facts and with history.” More to the point, says Jacob Sullum,
coercing “cooperation” cannot be the overriding goal of criminal
penalties, which must be constrained by principles of fairness and
proportionality.

View this article.

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Amash Beats Back Crony Republican's Primary Challenge

AmashIncumbent Rep. Justin Amash (R-Mich.) survived a
closely-watched primary election Tuesday night, defeating
challenger Brian Ellis 55 percent to 45 percent and retaining the
Republican nomination for the west Michigan House seat. Ellis
conceded around 10:30 p.m. ET, according to the Grand
Rapids Press
.

Amash, a liberty-friendly Republican whose principled opposition
to NSA spying, crony capitalism, and foreign entanglements has
earned him support from libertarians—as well as the enmity of the
GOP establishment—was forecast to win the race weeks ago.
However, his political survival was not always a matter of fact.
Neoconservative Republicans and corporatist special interests
backed Ellis early in the race. Their attempts to portray Amash as
the “best friend” of both Nancy Pelosi and al-Qaida backfired,
however. District voters
told
Slate’s Dave Weigel that they were tired of Ellis’s
negative campaigning and agreed with Amash that it was wrong to
trade liberty for security.

Having secured the Republican nomination, Amash is all but
guaranteed to be re-elected in November. Undeniable good news: It
seems a libertarian Congressman can fight an uncompromising battle
against big government and big business and keep his seat, after
all.

Read more about why Justin Amash’s primary win
vindicates libertarian politics here
.

And watch Reason TV’s interview with Amash below.

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Amash Beats Back Crony Republican’s Primary Challenge

AmashIncumbent Rep. Justin Amash (R-Mich.) survived a
closely-watched primary election Tuesday night, defeating
challenger Brian Ellis 55 percent to 45 percent and retaining the
Republican nomination for the west Michigan House seat. Ellis
conceded around 10:30 p.m. ET, according to the Grand
Rapids Press
.

Amash, a liberty-friendly Republican whose principled opposition
to NSA spying, crony capitalism, and foreign entanglements has
earned him support from libertarians—as well as the enmity of the
GOP establishment—was forecast to win the race weeks ago.
However, his political survival was not always a matter of fact.
Neoconservative Republicans and corporatist special interests
backed Ellis early in the race. Their attempts to portray Amash as
the “best friend” of both Nancy Pelosi and al-Qaida backfired,
however. District voters
told
Slate’s Dave Weigel that they were tired of Ellis’s
negative campaigning and agreed with Amash that it was wrong to
trade liberty for security.

Having secured the Republican nomination, Amash is all but
guaranteed to be re-elected in November. Undeniable good news: It
seems a libertarian Congressman can fight an uncompromising battle
against big government and big business and keep his seat, after
all.

Read more about why Justin Amash’s primary win
vindicates libertarian politics here
.

And watch Reason TV’s interview with Amash below.

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