This seems to be going well (chart)

September 15, 2014
Santiago, Chile

Gallup released a new poll late last week showing how many (or few, as it were) Americans are ‘satisfied’ with the direction of the country. 23%. That’s it. 76% are NOT satisfied. Only 1% aren’t sure.

The chart below shows the astounding, long-term decline since 2000.

Screen Shot 2014 09 15 at 3.27.06 PM 300x163 This seems to be going well (chart)

Note, this is a trend that has outlasted three Presidents and six Congresses. It’s not about a single politician, or even ALL the politicians. It’s about the system itself.

Bottom line, people are fed up. The system has failed. And people are starting to realize it. Where do you think this goes?

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Gazprom Says Kiev Should Blame Warsaw For Gas Supply Cut

Submitted by Andy Tully via OilPrice.com,

No one disputes that the amount of Russian gas being piped through Ukraine has been cut by at least 20 percent. But who’s responsible?

Poland said Sept. 10 that the amount of gas coming from the Kremlin-run gas monopoly Gazprom was down by at least one-fifth, feeding a growing suspicion in much of Europe that Moscow is using energy as leverage in its continuing dispute with the West over its actions in Ukraine.

Poland’s state-controlled gas company PGNiG says gas deliveries from Gazprom through Ukraine and neighboring Belarus were down by 20 percent on Sept. 8 and by 24 percent on Sept. 9. It says it’s investigating the shortfall.

Meanwhile, Ukrtranzgaz, Ukraine’s pipeline monopoly, said Gazprom was reducing shipments to Poland to prevent “reverse flows” of gas, where Warsaw diverts 4 million cubic meters of gas daily headed for Western Europe southward to serve Ukrainian homes and businesses.

Uktransgaz CEO Igor Prokopiv said Russia is trying to “derail” this reverse-flow agreement. Ukraine is getting no gas directly from Russia in a dispute over outstanding debt for previous gas deliveries.

Gazprom says its flow of gas hasn’t changed and that if there is a reduction, it’s Poland’s fault, not Russia’s.

“Reports by news agencies on the reduction of volumes of gas supplies by Gazprom to Poland’s PGNiG are incorrect,” Gazprom spokesman Sergey Kupriyanov said, according to RT, quoting Itar-Tass. “The same volume of gas as in previous days – 23 million cubic meters a day – is being supplied to Poland now.”

No matter who is responsible for the reduction in the flow of gas, the consequences of the dispute go far beyond Poland and Ukraine. EU nations get one-third of their gas supplies from Russia, and half of that amount flows through Ukraine. Similar disputes led to interruptions in the supply of gas to Europe twice before, in 2006 and 2009.

Nevertheless, there was no evidence that the current shortage was affecting any Western European customers. Slovakia, a major transit point for Russia gas exports to Europe, said volumes had not changed, and operators in Hungary, Bosnia and Serbia said the same.

And in Austria, a spokesman for the energy company OMV told Reuters, “The supply situation in Austria is normal. Deliveries from our Russian partner come within the range of normal fluctuations.”




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Do We Really Need a Federal Robotics Commission?

robotUniversity of Washington law professor Ryan
Calo offers over at the Brookings Institution the modest proposal
that the Feds
create a Robotics Commission
to oversee developments in that
field.

Calo cites current confusion among various agencies about how to
respond to the development of drones, driverless cars, and
algorithmic stock trading as evidence that the government needs a
robotics commission to serve as a central repository for expertise
on robotics. Calo rejects the notion that the new commision should
be some kind of enforcement agency like the Federal Trade
Commission, the Securities and Exchange Commission, or the Food and
Drug Administration. However, bureaucratic precedents suggest that
Calo’s good intentions regarding such advisory agencies are likely
to be subverted as the commissioners over time seek to expand their
budgets and power.

Ultimately, I fear that a Federal Robotics Commission would do
for robots and artificial intelligence what the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission has done for nuclear power.

See also, my article, “Will
Superintelligent Machines Destroy Humanity?

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TSA Demands to Search Man AFTER Plane Lands. He Filmed His Response.

Kahler Nygard, 22, of Minnesota
was called off a plane by the Transportation Security
Administration (TSA) when it landed in Colorado earlier this month.
He filmed his unsettling encounter with the agency.

“I’m the only one walking off the plane,” Nygard states in the
first
video
he posted on Youtube six days ago. “They let me fly all
the way to Denver. Everyone’s wondering what’s going on with me,”
he says as heads turn toward him. “No, I have not committed a
crime.”

His plane tickets, like those of about 14,000 other individuals,
are
apparently
marked by the TSA “SSSS” for Secondary Security
Screening Selection. That means he gets to go through all those
extra pat-downs every time he wants to travel through the air for

unknown reasons based on hazy criteria
.

His second video has all the creepy action. Once he gets off the
plane, a TSA agent named Andrew Grossman claims the screening of
Nygard was “not completed” in Minnesota, so they need to re-examine
“his body and his bags” now. The agent calls Nygard “pretty
objectionable” for filming the encounter, demands to see his
boarding pass, and threatens to call Denver police on him for not
complying.

Regarding the boarding pass, Nygard responds “I misplaced it.”
This seems to stump Grossman, as do Nygard’s many valid questions.
He repeatedly asks if he’s being detained, and gets a different,
mushy answer each time. He asks why he needs to be screened
after a flight since he traveled safely from one location
to the other, and the agent says, “I’m not going to argue with
you.” He asks under which statute or law he’s being detained, and
the agent replies, “I’m following my orders.”

Watch the encounter here:

He walked out of the airport despite the agent’s demands, and

according
to NBC, “Nygard says he flew back to Minneapolis
[last] Thursday. Besides another pat-down, he says there were no
issues.” He wasn’t arrested as the agent threatened, but the TSA
says it “is investigating the case.” 

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Seven Weeks Later Accused Rapist Oklahoma Trooper Arrested, on Pending Charges

Eric Roberts mug shotEric
Roberts, an officer with the Oklahoma Highway Patrol (OHP), was
accused of raping a woman he pulled over on July 22 in a federal
lawsuit filed by the woman last month. The trooper was suspended
with pay on July 24, when the OHP says it found out about the
allegations. He was arrested today, but not yet formally charged.
Fox 25 in Oklahoma City
reports
:

The woman was traveling with a friend and claims the trooper
told her friend to go to a hotel while she was told to get in the
trooper’s squad car.

The woman says the trooper made her access porn on her phone so
he could watch and took her to a secluded area and raped her,
according to the lawsuit.

Charges pending against Roberts include 2nd degree rape, two
counts each of of rape by instrumentation, kidnapping, indecent
exposure, one count of forcible oral sodomy, and one count of
sexual battery. The charges have not yet been filed against the OHP
trooper.

The reason Roberts pulled the woman over? According to her
complaint, she did not break any traffic laws but the officer said
he smelled marijuana in the vehicle.

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Petrodollar Panic: EU Officials Admit Buying Oil From ISIS

We recently explained how ISIS remains so well funded but what was unclear was who exactly what purchasing their 'recently-provisioned' oil reserves? The assumption being some desperate third-world nation or some scheming offshore hedge-fund arbitrageur; however, as Sott.net reports, a senior European Union official has revealed that some EU member states have purchased oil from ISIL Takfiri militants despite their rhetoric against the group. The official declined to disclose any names but Turkey remains a front-runner (having already shunned President Obama) and potentially France (after their recent anti-Petrodollar comments).

 

As The Daily Signal's Kelsey Harkness ( @kelseyjharkness ) notes,

According to the Iraq Energy Institute, an independent, nonprofit policy organization focused on Iraq’s energy sector, the army of radical Islamists controls production of 30,000 barrels of oil a day in Iraq and 50,000 barrels in Syria.

 

And now we know who is buying… (as Sott.net reports)

A senior European Union official has revealed that some EU member states have purchased oil from ISIL Takfiri militants despite their rhetoric against the group.

 

In a briefing to the European Parliament Foreign Affairs Committee, EU Ambassador to Iraq Jana Hybas-kova said some European countries have purchased crude from the ISIL.

 

She, however, refused to disclose any names despite pressure by some Parliament members to do so.

 

The EU official also warned against any support by the West for separatist Kurdish groups who, she said, would destabilize the Middle East.

 

Earlier reports accused Turkey of buying and transporting oil from both the ISIL and Qaeda-linked Nusra Front. According to the reports, Western intelligence agencies could track ISIL oil shipments as they moved across Iraq and Turkey.

 

ISIL reportedly controls eleven oil fields in northern Iraq as well as Syria's Raqqa province.

 

US intelligence officials estimate that the Takfiri militants earn more than USD 3 million a day from oil profit, theft, human trafficking and ransom. They say the militants sell oil and other products via established networks in Turkey, Jordan and Iraq's Kurdistan region. ?Turkey has denied reports of involvement in ISIL's oil smuggling operations.

*  *  *
How long before US places sanctions directly on these European nations (instead of implicitly through Russia)?




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Global Fragmentation: Crying Wolf Again?

There is a specter haunting the op-ed pages. It is not the specter of creeping socialism that many observers worried about as the Great Financial Crisis broke.  It is the end of globalization.

This has been a recurring theme that has its present roots in the immediate post-9/11 world.  Some argued that the increased security risks raise the cost of international trade.

A decade later the doomsayers were still at it.  In January 2011, the Financial Times asked five leading thinkers/policy makers to weigh-in on whether that year would see the “once-unstoppable force of economic, financial and cultural globalisation begins to reverse.  On September 4, the FT’s Stephens pushed the argument further.  He takes the up the charge that the sanctions against Russia undermine the “open international system.”  Stephens argues that globalization has been unraveling since the onset of the financial crisis.  He attributes it to America’s “steady retreat from global engagement.”

II

This is a derivative of the hegemonic stability crisis.  One school of thought in political science and international relations argues that capitalism works best when there is one country sufficient strong and willing to devise and enforce the rules of the game.  “Without a champion,” writes Stephens, “globalization cannot but fall into disrepair.”

Stephens frets about what he calls the “Balkanisation” of the internet and the fragmentation of the global trading system bemoaning the collapse of the Doha Round.  He records the BRICS launch of their own financial institutions.  However, he does recognize that both China and India are unwilling to step into the void created by a withdrawing US, which Stephens argues no longer sees its national interest in “upholding an order that redistributes power to its rivals.” He  concludes that the new powers (BRICS) show little enthusiasm for multi-lateralism.

In a weekend interview with Financial Times Gillian Tett, the IMF’s Lagarde shares more nuanced observations.  She is concerned about the tension between the economic system, which she judges to be increasingly integrated, and the political system that she judges to be increasingly fragmented.  She is sensitive to the “backlash against the way that globalization is hurting some people.”    Unlike Stephens, who concludes that  “the world is marching away from globalization, Lagarde is less conclusive, “It is not clear which of these trends [for economic integration or political fragmentation] will win. I am worried. Very worried.” 

While Lagarde sees continued economic integration, Stephens plays up the opposite.  It is true that merchandise trade is not growing much faster than world GDP, and direct investment flows are well off the 2012 peak.  McKinsey studies point to only a slow recovery in cross border capital flows after the collapse in 2008-2009.

III

On one hand, it is not clear how much this is a structural break and how much is cyclical in nature.  Some observers offer to square the circle by making it part of the Summers’ revived-Hansen thesis of secular stagnation. A prolonged period of slow growth with test the commitment to multilateralism and globalization.  Others eschew the secular part of the thesis and meld it with a decade of loss growth associated with the financial crisis.

On the other hand, previously many argued that the global imbalances (essentially the US current account deficit and China’s surplus) was a major threat to the world, and to globalization, as it spurred protectionism.  Both these external imbalances have been sharply reduced.  But the price of the reduction makes it look like less globalization.    The US is a bit less dependent on foreign energy, and the shift in the global division of labor and cost structure has seen some manufacturing move back onshore.    For its part, China seems less dependent on exports (at least until recently) and more reliant on domestic investment (which in practice has also meant debt-financed). 

This is to say that part of what appears to be a retreat from globalization has been the reduction of imbalances and a consequence of cyclical forces, which may or may not be projected into the future.  Slower growth after a financial crisis would not be surprising given the historical record.  At the same time, to the extent that growth is a function of labor force growth and productivity, the prospects also do not look particularly favorable.  Many countries, not just high income countries, but many developing economies in parts of Asia, including China, and eastern and central Europe, like Russia, also have  deteriorating demographics.  

The first wave of globalization ended with the World Wars.  By some measures, it took most of the last half of the 20th century to recoup the level of integration achieved on the eve of WW1.  It is possible that the post-WWII globalization is over, but it does appear to be a done deal.  The financial crisis disrupted capital and trade flows.  The reduction of the US and China imbalances also give the appearance of a reduction in globalization.  High levels of unemployment and domestic social stress may also fan nationalistic tendencies.

Kissinger warned in his  2002 book “Does America Need a Foreign Policy?” (which he of course answers in the affirmative) of a crisis of the Westphalia Treaty.  This 1648 agreement provided the broad framework of the sovereignty of the nation-state.  What Kissinger had in mind was the rise of multinational states, like Russia, China and the US. However, now, with Scotland about to vote on its 300-year union with England and Catalonia pushing for its own referendum some fear a more generalized crisis of the nation-state.  It is possible that an independent Scotland is not able to maintain its territorial integrity.  Many see an independent Scotland bolstering the independent movements in Spain (not just Catalonia, but also the Basque Country), and adding to the centrifugal forces in Belgium.

Throughout Europe, the anti-integrationist forces find expressed.  The UKIP has enjoyed some electoral success and appears to be enjoying some favorable momentum.  In Germany, the AfD, which wants Germany to pullout of EMU, has won representation in three state government elections over the past two months.  Le Pen is on the march in France.  In Sweden’s election yesterday, the anti-immigration Democrats garnered 13% of the vote.  It Italy, the 5-Star movement tapped into similar sentiment.

IV

What is striking is that the main assault on globalization and integration are taking place from the political right, not the left.   Fukuyama’s 2012 Foreign Affairs essay,  “The Future of History,”  notes that there was not surge of populism from the political left in response to bank bailouts, the  increased disparity of wealth and income.  The Occupied Movement was the closest, but it has been overshadowed by the populist right response in both the US and Europe.

He explains this: “There are several reasons for this lack of left-wing mobilization, but chief among them is a failure in the realm of ideas. For the past generation, the ideological high ground on economic issues has been held by a libertarian right. The left has not been able to make a plausible case for an agenda other than a return to an unaffordable form of old-fashioned social democracy.”

Simply put, Fukuyama argues that it has been several decades since the left articulated a coherent analysis and promoted a politically realistic program of protecting and expanding middle class society.   At the same time, it is not clear that the anti-immigration, anti-integrationist populist right has a compelling vision either.  Yet its ability to say
“no” and propose a narrative that blames the Other, is potent.

This implies that the liberal world order may be durable and flexible than the naysayers suggest.   Nowhere has the populist right come to power.  The force facilitating global integration, like multinational companies and NGOs have not been weakened by the crisis.  The IMF has been revised by the financial crisis and Lagarde’s leadership.  Efforts to promote greater coordination of the regulation of financial institutions have been enhanced.  While there are some notable exceptions, there has not been wholesale protectionism, nor beggar-thy-neighbor type of policies that materialized before and after the Great Depression.

At nearly any point over the last half century, many could and did issue similar warnings about the coming breakdown of the post-WWII order.  In 1971, the economist Raymond Vernon published “Sovereignty at Bay,” which told how multinational companies were challenging the legitimacy and power of the nation-state.  These arguments have many faces:  the limits on sovereignty, the demise of the United States, the decline of the role of the dollar, the rise of the rest, G-zero, the return of sphere of influence, etc, etc.    When Russia acquired nuclear weapons, when the US lost the war in Vietnam War, when Nixon resigned, the prevalence of voluntary export restrictions (VERs) and orderly market agreements (OMAs) in the 1980s, the rise of China and its push for the internationalization of the RMB all were cited as heralding the end of the post-WWII order. 

 

The globalization at the end of the nineteenth century ended because of nationalism and militarism.  It is possible that this wave of globalization ends by the same forces.  But it seems that it is too early to deliver its eulogy.  There is still another chapter (at least) to be written.   Globalization has always been a work in progress.  Let’s not confuse its ebb and flow, and transformation, with certainty over its demise. 




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America Has a Really, Really Lousy Tax Environment, Says New Report

IRSRemember all of that “inversion
buzz about nasty, greedy corporations relocating overseas to escape
their patriotic duty to be milked by the United States government?
“Even as corporate profits are higher than ever,” President Obama

told us
, “there’s a small but growing group of big corporations
that are fleeing the country to get out of paying taxes.”

But…Could it be that those companies—and individuals—are
fleeing because the United States tax system so truly sucks that it
isn’t even slightly competitive with the deals offered by other
countries? Let’s see what the Tax Foundation has to say on its new

International Tax Competitiveness Index
:

The United States places 32nd out of the 34 OECD countries on
the [International Tax Competitiveness Index]. There are three main
drivers behind the U.S.’s low score. First, it has the highest
corporate income tax rate in the OECD at 39.1 percent. Second, it
is one of the only countries in the OECD that does not have a
territorial tax system, which would exempt foreign profits earned
by domestic corporations from domestic taxation. Finally, the
United States loses points for having a relatively high,
progressive individual income tax (combined top rate of 46.3
percent) that taxes both dividends and capital gains, albeit at a
reduced rate.

That puts us behind Italy, but ahead of Portugal and France.
Yay.

The Index squares remarkably well with the
shitty rating
the United States gets from PricewaterhouseCoopers
in its international rankings of ease of paying business taxes.

Maybe, just maybe, people have growing reason to think the land
of opportunity has an overseas address.

No wonder American voters are
down in the dumps
over the country’s economic prospects.

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Stop and Frisk: The Opera

It probably won’t stand up to the artistry of,
say, Three Penny Opera, but librettist Daniel Neer

has teamed up
with the music ensemble Two Sides Sounding to
produce a three-part opera titled Independent Eve, which
explores American race relations in three different eras. The first
act, “Stop and Frisk,” based around New York City’s notorious
policing tactic, debuted during the Brooklyn BEAT Festival on
Saturday. The act follows an operatic dialogue between a black man
and his white friend. The former tries to explain the experience of
being targeted by the police for some quickie stop and frisk
action:

I came home from work—dressed in a suit. Walked past three cops
in the lobby. They saw me and nodded—one even said ‘Hi.’ …

When I got to the lobby, those very same cops grabbed me and
asked who I was. They had a ‘reasonable suspicion,’ they said, and
told me they knew I had drugs. . . . I was stripped
and searched because of my skin.

Rousing, if not particularly poetic, words. But his white friend
has a hard time understanding why it’s such a big deal, asking
whether his friend provoked the encounter by acting “strange.” The
composer, Sidney Marquez Boquiren, noted that “the tension is the
fact that [the two actors are] singing the same text, the same
melody, but [they’re] not in the same world.” Historically, New
York police have disproportionately targeted blacks and Latinos for
a rough feel-up, with the two demographic groups often comprising
well
over 85 percent of those stopped
from 2003 to 2012.

Neer says that he was inspired to write the piece during the
heightened scrutiny of the Michael Bloomberg administration’s
support for the tactic. Bloomberg and his police commissioner Ray
Kelly couldn’t shield stop and frisk from later getting
constitutionally roughed up, however: In August 2013 a U.S.
District Court judge ruled stop and frisk unconstitutional and

another judge in July
of this year denied the police union’s
challenge of the ruling.

Although police stops have declined dramatically in 2013
and so far in 2014, blacks and Latinos nevertheless continue to
make up the lion
s share of stops—this
despite the evidence
that stopping and frisking
dark-skinned men has little impact on
crime.
 


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Why Worry? The Two Scariest Charts In The World

Submitted by Erico Matia Tavares via Sinclar & Co,

There are plenty of things to worry about these days. A cursory look through today’s (13 Sep 14) drudgereport.com sets the tone: the Pope says WWIII is underway; a senior Democrat accuses the Republicans of endangering civilization; drones are invading the privacy of citizens; militias are blocking traffic in the Mexican border; Feds run a US$589 billion budget deficit; the UK might fall apart; the Ebola epidemic is getting serious in Africa; a mystery virus spreads to NY and CT (and we could not resist adding this one: Hillary Clinton is doing yoga).

With all of this in our minds it is easy to forget, or at least put in proper context, the extraordinary progress that mankind has achieved over the centuries against remarkable odds. World population has steadily increased, proving Malthus wrong. Serious diseases like polio and smallpox, which affected even monarchs and presidents over the centuries, have been eradicated. We can crisscross the planet in less than 24 hours and put satellites in deep space. The baby boomers and their offspring are the most prosperous generations the world has ever seen.

This shows that with enough intelligence, political will, common sense and perseverance most challenges we face as a species can be overcome. This should provide a decent amount of hope that we can tackle whatever we are facing right now.

So why worry?

Well, what will happen if we start losing those qualities and values as a global society? Which is why we believe that the following graphs are the scariest in the world today:

WORLD IQ LEVEL OVER TIME

 

Source: MailOnline, University of Hartford.

 

INDEX OF MILITARY EXPENDITURES OVER TIME (1950 = 100)(a)

 

Source: SIPRI.

(a) Based on NATO expenditures (in 2011 constant US$), the longest data series publicly available.

The average world citizen is getting dumber while our means of doing harm are increasing. This trend is clearly not our friend.

Consider the following.

Countries around the world today spend over US$1.7 trillion on weaponry – more than the total global investment in energy supply. Beyond the manufacturers and suppliers downstream, this produces zero economic benefits (weapons become obsolete very quickly and do not generate any returns; on the contrary as, well, they blow stuff up) and the associated costs add to already bloated government debt levels. And that’s US$1.7 trillion less available each year to improve world education, food and fuel availability, the environment and shifting global demographics, all critical issues of the 21st century.

Also concerning is the fact that control over these weapons can be quickly lost, creating the prospect of blowbacks, never ending conflicts and major tragedies.

Prior to 1991, the Soviet Union had more than 27,000 nuclear warheads and plenty of weapons-grade uranium and plutonium to triple that number. While there have been no confirmed reports of missing or stolen former-Soviet nuclear weapons (astonishing given all the political and economic turmoil since then), there is ample evidence of a significant black market in nuclear materials. How long before someone in that rapidly expanding pool of idiots gets a hold of some is anybody’s guess.

Note: accidents can happen as well, adding to the unease of handling this type of firepower. For instance, in 1961, a B-52 carrying two nuclear bombs broke up in mid-air, dropping its nuclear payload very close to Goldsboro in North Carolina. Five of the six fuses designed to prevent a detonation failed in one of the bombs, with only the last one averting a nuclear explosion. That was an unbelievable close call.

And now turmoil is spreading across the Middle East yet again. With all the conflict going on, anyone showing up and volunteering to fight for one of the sides will be given free food and weapons, courtesy of the associated regional and international powers. Will those weapons stay there, concerning as that might already be for local populations, or will they be used elsewhere, even if the conflict is contained or resolved? As we all know fundamentalists – probably the most idiotic of the bunch – are ready to do anything.

Humanity cannot risk its future falling into the hands of increasingly lethal buffoons. The stakes are just too high now. Hopefully our leaders are paying attention, but this should concern us all. Let’s try to be smart about it – while the smart is still going.




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/XpJN9Y Tyler Durden