Nick Gillespie on a Century of Youth Icons, From Flappers to Hipsters

flapperIf
youth is wasted on the young (and it is!), it’s also a constant
source of desire and anxiety in American society. There’s virtually
no social panic or cultural love affair like the ones about the
kids these days, whether it’s fear of fawning over flappers; hating
on or hailing hippies; or freaking out or rhapsodizing over ravers.
Millennials and even-younger kids are dismissed as a narcissistic
“Generation Selfie” that is dangerously self-obsessed. At least
when they are not being praised as independent and
individualistic. Nick Gillespie takes you on a  quick tour of
a century’s worth of mesmerizing, terrifying, cringe-inducing youth
icons. 

View this article.

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Technical Overview Ahead of Next Week’s Key Events

Next week may very well be one of the most important weeks of the year.  There are a number of events that individually and collectively have the potential to spur significant moves across the capital markets.  These events include the Scottish referendum, FOMC meeting, and the launch of the ECB’s TLTRO facility.

 

In addition, the Swiss National Bank meets, and it has indicated that negative rates have not been ruled out to help defend the currency cap. Catalonia’s parliament will decide whether to push forward with a non-binding survey/referendum that has been rejected by the national government.  Some observers have attributed the under-performance of Spanish assets (after a period of out performance) to the idea that the strong showing of the Scottish nationalists has some bearing on Catalonia’s independence.

 

Given the potential for these events to drive the capital markets, and that the volatility of volatility, if you will, has risen, an overview of the technical condition of the capital markets may be particularly helpful now.  At the risk of oversimplifying, the US dollar is in a strong uptrend against the major currencies and most of the emerging market currencies.  Speculative positioning in the future market has been concentrated in amassing significant short euro and yen positions.   The market was net long Australian and Canadian dollars, but the recent price action suggests a substantial position adjustment took place, and more than what is captured in the position report for the week ending September 9.

 

There has also been a sharp reversal in US yields.  The 10-year Treasury yield was near the lows for the year in late August below 2.35%.  It briefly traded poked through 2.60% before the weekend. It has now satisfied a Fibonocci retracement (38.2%) of the yield decline from January through August. The next retracement target is near 2.68%.  Barring a shock, the yield can climb into the 2.75%-2.80% in the coming weeks.

 

Yields around the world have risen with US Treasuries (which is why political scientists rather than investment advisers formalized the hypothesis of a G-zero world). European bond yields have risen less, and several emerging markets and Australia experienced larger increases in yields.   Generally speaking, in rising interest rate environment, one would expect the credit spreads to widen, with lower credit yields rising more.

 

The S&P 500 set record highs on September 4, but the technical tone has deteriorated in recent session.  The development is somewhat reminiscent of the topping pattern carved out in the second half of July, when the S&P 500 also registered record highs.  It is as if investors are happy to take profits on rallies.  Perhaps this reflects a mistrust for the equity gains or belief that the environment that facilitated them will change soon  We note that the five and twenty day moving average are set to cross, and this cross-over has done a good job in recent months of signaling the trends. The poor close before the weekend warns of follow through losses next week.  Initial targets are in 1970 and then 1958,  It takes a break of the 1940 area to signal a test on the August low in front of 1900.

 

Most equity markets also fell last week, but lets looks at the exceptions first.  The weakening of yen may have helped encourage the 1.8% rally in the Nikkei.  Soft Chinese CPI underscores the scope for potential easing of policy, and this may have helped the national markets rise 1-2%.  The MSCI emerging market equity index recorded its 3-year high on September 4, while the S&P was making its record high.  It fell each session last week, and the five and twenty day moving averages have crossed.   All of the Fibonocci retracement objectives have been surpassed, highlighting the risk that the index 1045-50 area (~1.5%-2.0% decline).  

 

Commodity prices have fallen sharply.  The CRB Index is off more than 10% since late June, and 4% this month alone.  The momentum is too much and some signs of consolidation were seen toward the end of the week in which twice the index gapped lower.  Of note, for American drivers gasoline prices at the pump are at six-month lows (average price in US, according to AAA). Oil prices themselves staged a potentially important technical reversal last week.  The move through $96 would indicate a low of some significance was likely in place.   The price of gold is at an eight-month low. Raising interest rates increase the opportunity cost of holding gold, and the rally in the dollar may deter other buyers.  

 

Taking a closer look at the foreign exchange market, we share four points.  First, the euro’s record long losing streak of eight weeks ended with a firm close before the weekend.   The $1.3000 level has psychological significance, while the retracement of the ECB-induced slide is $1.3010.  It may take a move through the $1.3045 area to encourage short covering.  

 

Second, the dollar has made new highs against the yen for eleven consecutive sessions.  The rise in US yields, and the official jawboning, took place after the move was well under way.    The advance in the dollar has met no resistance.  The diversification of Japan’s public funds, the increased portfolio outflow, and speculators are among the featured yen sellers.  With ECB officials talking the euro lower, Japanese officials may sense a greater sense of flux, and have welcomed the yen’s decline, and recognizing the fundamental economic considerations behind it. The dollar finished last week near its highs, and further near-term gains are likely.  The JPY108 level beckons but real target seems to be closer to JPY110.  

 

Third, the gap that was created a the start of last week’s trading, in response to the YouGov poll that showed the Scottish independents with a lead, has not been fully filled.   A small gap still exists between $1.6277-$1.6283.  We think that nearly every one really expects the “no” vote to carry the day and the speculative positioning in the futures market bears this out.    There is a sense that sterling has been oversold, but the risks are great, and the cost of hedging (implied volatility) is high.   It takes a break of $1.60 to signal something important.  It is likely to remain intact until the referendum.  A “yes” victory would wreak havoc.  Sterling would sell-off sharply, and likely drag down short-term rates.  The market would price in a political and economic crisis.  At the same time, a “no” victory would allow the market to focus on favorable UK fundamentals and a pound that has lost 12 cents over he past two months.  On a as-expected “no” vote, our target for sterling is $1.65-$1.66.  

 

Fourth, a negative attitude to the European currencies and yen are not new.  The new thing that has taken place is that the dollar-bloc currencies have also now fallen out of favor.  The Australian and New Zealand dollars were the weakest of the majors last week.  The yen barely eclipsed the Canadian dollar to take third place.   The technical indicators warn of further losses ahead.  In addition, the take-away from the recent price action in the other major currencies, is that this is does not the kind of dollar market that one has been rewarded for fading breakouts.  Both the Australian and Canadian dollar have broken out of their previous ranges.  Technically, there may be scope for another 2% decline in the coming weeks.  

 

Observations based on speculative positioning in the futures market:  

 

1.  There were two significant (10k+ contract change in gross positions) position adjustment in the CFTC reporting period ending September 9.  First, short-covering reduced the gross short yen position by 14.8k contracts to 118.0k.  The yen has continued to sell-off and new shorts were likely established since the reporting period ended.  Second, the bulls went shopping in sterling.  They extended the gross long position by 13.8k contracts to 81.3k.  It was the most buying in five months. It is also larger than the euro, yen and Swiss franc gross positions combined.   

 

2.   The other twelve gross currency positions we track were adjusted by less than 5k contracts.  Generally speaking, this reflected the position squaring in the sense that most of the currency futures (but the Swiss franc and the Australian dollar) saw a small reduction in gross short positions.  Outside of sterling that we discussed above, there was virtually now buying of the currency futures during the reporting period.  Combined the euro, yen, and Swiss franc saw an increase of 2.5k gross long contracts.  Gross longs were reduced in Canadian and Australian dollars and the Mexican peso.   The out-sized losses in these currencies in recent says suggests were longs have been liquidated.  

 

3.  Speculators in the US 10-year Treasury futures bought into the decline through September 9. During the week they added almost 58k long contracts for a gross position of 440.2k contracts.  The gross shorts edged a little higher.  The 8.4k contract increase brings the gross short position to 473.5k contracts.  The net short position fell to 33.3k contracts from 82.7k.   An important question is when will the longs capitulate?   We think that the yields are a little more than  half way to what may be a new equilibrium (~2.75%).




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Technical Overview Ahead of Next Week's Key Events

Next week may very well be one of the most important weeks of the year.  There are a number of events that individually and collectively have the potential to spur significant moves across the capital markets.  These events include the Scottish referendum, FOMC meeting, and the launch of the ECB’s TLTRO facility.

 

In addition, the Swiss National Bank meets, and it has indicated that negative rates have not been ruled out to help defend the currency cap. Catalonia’s parliament will decide whether to push forward with a non-binding survey/referendum that has been rejected by the national government.  Some observers have attributed the under-performance of Spanish assets (after a period of out performance) to the idea that the strong showing of the Scottish nationalists has some bearing on Catalonia’s independence.

 

Given the potential for these events to drive the capital markets, and that the volatility of volatility, if you will, has risen, an overview of the technical condition of the capital markets may be particularly helpful now.  At the risk of oversimplifying, the US dollar is in a strong uptrend against the major currencies and most of the emerging market currencies.  Speculative positioning in the future market has been concentrated in amassing significant short euro and yen positions.   The market was net long Australian and Canadian dollars, but the recent price action suggests a substantial position adjustment took place, and more than what is captured in the position report for the week ending September 9.

 

There has also been a sharp reversal in US yields.  The 10-year Treasury yield was near the lows for the year in late August below 2.35%.  It briefly traded poked through 2.60% before the weekend. It has now satisfied a Fibonocci retracement (38.2%) of the yield decline from January through August. The next retracement target is near 2.68%.  Barring a shock, the yield can climb into the 2.75%-2.80% in the coming weeks.

 

Yields around the world have risen with US Treasuries (which is why political scientists rather than investment advisers formalized the hypothesis of a G-zero world). European bond yields have risen less, and several emerging markets and Australia experienced larger increases in yields.   Generally speaking, in rising interest rate environment, one would expect the credit spreads to widen, with lower credit yields rising more.

 

The S&P 500 set record highs on September 4, but the technical tone has deteriorated in recent session.  The development is somewhat reminiscent of the topping pattern carved out in the second half of July, when the S&P 500 also registered record highs.  It is as if investors are happy to take profits on rallies.  Perhaps this reflects a mistrust for the equity gains or belief that the environment that facilitated them will change soon  We note that the five and twenty day moving average are set to cross, and this cross-over has done a good job in recent months of signaling the trends. The poor close before the weekend warns of follow through losses next week.  Initial targets are in 1970 and then 1958,  It takes a break of the 1940 area to signal a test on the August low in front of 1900.

 

Most equity markets also fell last week, but lets looks at the exceptions first.  The weakening of yen may have helped encourage the 1.8% rally in the Nikkei.  Soft Chinese CPI underscores the scope for potential easing of policy, and this may have helped the national markets rise 1-2%.  The MSCI emerging market equity index recorded its 3-year high on September 4, while the S&P was making its record high.  It fell each session last week, and the five and twenty day moving averages have crossed.   All of the Fibonocci retracement objectives have been surpassed, highlighting the risk that the index 1045-50 area (~1.5%-2.0% decline).  

 

Commodity prices have fallen sharply.  The CRB Index is off more than 10% since late June, and 4% this month alone.  The momentum is too much and some signs of consolidation were seen toward the end of the week in which twice the index gapped lower.  Of note, for American drivers gasoline prices at the pump are at six-month lows (average price in US, according to AAA). Oil prices themselves staged a potentially important technical reversal last week.  The move through $96 would indicate a low of some significance was likely in place.   The price of gold is at an eight-month low. Raising interest rates increase the opportunity cost of holding gold, and the rally in the dollar may deter other buyers.  

 

Taking a closer look at the foreign exchange market, we share four points.  First, the euro’s record long losing streak of eight weeks ended with a firm close before the weekend.   The $1.3000 level has psychological significance, while the retracement of the ECB-induced slide is $1.3010.  It may take a move through the $1.3045 area to encourage short covering.  

 

Second, the dollar has made new highs against the yen for eleven consecutive sessions.  The rise in US yields, and the official jawboning, took place after the move was well under way.    The advance in the dollar has met no resistance.  The diversification of Japan’s public funds, the increased portfolio outflow, and speculators are among the featured yen sellers.  With ECB officials talking the euro lower, Japanese officials may sense a greater sense of flux, and have welcomed the yen’s decline, and recognizing the fundamental economic considerations behind it. The dollar finished last week near its highs, and further near-term gains are likely.  The JPY108 level beckons but real target seems to be closer to JPY110.  

 

Third, the gap that was created a the start of last week’s trading, in response to the YouGov poll that showed the Scottish independents with a lead, has not been fully filled.   A small gap still exists between $1.6277-$1.6283.  We think that nearly every one really expects the “no” vote to carry the day and the speculative positioning in the futures market bears this out.    There is a sense that sterling has been oversold, but the risks are great, and the cost of hedging (implied volatility) is high.   It takes a break of $1.60 to signal something important.  It is likely to remain intact until the referendum.  A “yes” victory would wreak havoc.  Sterling would sell-off sharply, and likely drag down short-term rates.  The market would price in a political and economic crisis.  At the same time, a “no” victory would allow the market to focus on favorable UK fundamentals and a pound that has lost 12 cents over he past two months.  On a as-expected “no” vote, our target for sterling is $1.65-$1.66.  

 

Fourth, a negative attitude to the European currencies and yen are not new.  The new thing that has taken place is that the dollar-bloc currencies have also now fallen out of favor.  The Australian and New Zealand dollars were the weakest of the majors last week.  The yen barely eclipsed the Canadian dollar to take third place.   The technical indicators warn of further losses ahead.  In addition, the take-away from the recent price action in the other major currencies, is that this is does not the kind of dollar market that one has been rewarded for fading breakouts.  Both the Australian and Canadian dollar have broken out of their previous ranges.  Technically, there may be scope for another 2% decline in the coming weeks.  

 

Observations based on speculative positioning in the futures market:  

 

1.  There were two significant (10k+ contract change in gross positions) position adjustment in the C
FTC reporting period ending September 9.  First, short-covering reduced the gross short yen position by 14.8k contracts to 118.0k.  The yen has continued to sell-off and new shorts were likely established since the reporting period ended.  Second, the bulls went shopping in sterling.  They extended the gross long position by 13.8k contracts to 81.3k.  It was the most buying in five months. It is also larger than the euro, yen and Swiss franc gross positions combined.   

 

2.   The other twelve gross currency positions we track were adjusted by less than 5k contracts.  Generally speaking, this reflected the position squaring in the sense that most of the currency futures (but the Swiss franc and the Australian dollar) saw a small reduction in gross short positions.  Outside of sterling that we discussed above, there was virtually now buying of the currency futures during the reporting period.  Combined the euro, yen, and Swiss franc saw an increase of 2.5k gross long contracts.  Gross longs were reduced in Canadian and Australian dollars and the Mexican peso.   The out-sized losses in these currencies in recent says suggests were longs have been liquidated.  

 

3.  Speculators in the US 10-year Treasury futures bought into the decline through September 9. During the week they added almost 58k long contracts for a gross position of 440.2k contracts.  The gross shorts edged a little higher.  The 8.4k contract increase brings the gross short position to 473.5k contracts.  The net short position fell to 33.3k contracts from 82.7k.   An important question is when will the longs capitulate?   We think that the yields are a little more than  half way to what may be a new equilibrium (~2.75%).




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Russia Sends Second Humanitarian Convoy Into Ukraine, And Nobody Says A Word

About a month ago, when Russia sent a humanitarian convoy to aid ethnic Russians in east Ukraine, the Western world, and of course media, screamed bloody murder, with everyone from NATO to the Kiev government declaring it, without a shadow of a doubt, an invasion, a Trojan Horse, and a convoy of arms deliveries for the rebels caught in the Ukraine civil war, not necessarily in that order. Nobody thought it could possibly be just that: a convoy of humanitarian aid delivering provisions to hundreds of thousands of civilians caught in the middle of a war. Then finally, after weeks of delays, the convoy was allowed in and after unloading its cargo, promptly returned to Russia without a single incident.

Fast forward to today, when hours ago Russia sent a second humanitarian convoy into east Ukraine, which entered without enter the approval of Kiev or the oversight of the Red Cross and nobody said a word.

As if all the posturing and warmongering rhetoric have long since departed the Ukraine, now that the US is fully engaged in yet another war, this time not a proxy civil war but one involving doing Qatar’s natural gas pipeline bidding once more, meaning it is time to conclude what was started in early 2013 and once again try to dethrone Syria’s assad so that the all important Gazprom-displacing pipeline from the middle east can finally make its way to Europe, aided by a soon to be new, pro-American government in Syria.

But back to Ukraine where the second convoy barely made news and the details about it were only revealed several paragraphs deep inside this AP article about ongoing fighting near the Donetsk airport:

On Saturday Russia also sent a convoy across the border of Ukraine, loaded with what Russian reports said was humanitarian aid, without the approval of Kiev or oversight of the international Red Cross. A similar convoy in August was loudly condemned by Ukrainian officials as an invasion, but this time around Lysenko simply called the move “illegal.” The country’s top leaders have remained silent, underscoring how dramatically the mood has shifted in the Kiev government since a cease-fire deal was struck.

 

The last truck crossed onto Ukrainian soil early Saturday from the Russian border town Donetsk, some 200 kilometers (120 miles) miles east of the Ukrainian city with the same name, Rayan Farukshin, a spokesman for Russia’s customs agency, told the Associated Press by phone.

 

The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe’s observer mission to the Russian-Ukrainian border said 220 trucks had crossed into Ukraine. Only 40 trucks were checked by the Russian border guard, while the other 180 were waved straight through, it said. None of the vehicles were inspected by the Ukrainian side or by the ICRC.

 

“Ukraine border guards and customs were not allowed to examine the cargo and vehicles,” Lysenko said. “Representatives of the Red Cross don’t accompany the cargo, nobody knows what’s inside.”

 

The Russian emergency ministry, which coordinated previous humanitarian aid deliveries to Ukraine, could not be reached for comment about the convoy.

Even the AP is confused by the change in rhetoric:

In August, Ukrainian officials said that a first convoy of humanitarian aid from Russia would be seen as an invasion of the country, and loudly protested any attempts by Russia to unilaterally bring in the aid. Eventually Russia sent its trucks across the border and into rebel-held territory without the oversight of the International Red Cross, contrary to an agreement signed between Ukraine and Russia.

 

A representative of the ICRC’s Moscow office said they had not been informed about the current convoy, either.

 

“We were not officially notified of an agreement between Moscow and Kiev to ship the cargo,” Galina Balzamova said Saturday.

Others were also quick to point out the inconsistencies in a narrative that changes day to day:

Back in Kiev, the confused Western-puppet government, while reiterating the generic talking points, had no idea how to frame the second Russian humanitarian “invasion” so it just kept silent.

At a conference with politicians and business leaders in Kiev, Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk said that Ukraine was “still in a state of war” with neighboring Russia and struck out against President Vladimir Putin, whose goal he said was to “take the entire Ukraine.” “He cannot cope with the idea that Ukraine would be a part of a big EU family. He wants to restore the Soviet Union,” Yatsenyuk said.

 

Despite the tough talk, often heard among Ukrainian politicians as they gear up for parliamentary election, Yatsenyuk made no mention of the Russian convoy.

RIA reports that the distribution of Russian humanitarian aid will start as early as Monday, according to the First Deputy Premier Minister of the self-proclaimed Luhansk People’s Republic Valery Potapov: “We will start giving out [humanitarian aid to the population] on Monday,” the official said. He also noted that the Luhansk authorities have designed a system of humanitarian aid distribution following the previous Russian humanitarian aid convoy, delivered to the Eastern Ukrainian city in late August. Which suggest that the convoy will remain around Donetsk for at least 48 hours, something with the Kiev regime of a month ago would loudly label as a undisputed invasion, and yet this time, nobody says a word.

Which goes back to what we wondered about last week: why the push by both sides, Ukraine and Russia, to mask the ongoing events in eaat Ukraine under a blanket “ceasefire” regime, when clearly nothing has changed and when the fighting between the Ukraine army and separatists is waged daily: who is it that benefits the most from a facade of fake clam and what happens next?




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

Eli Lehrer: Hiking the Minimum Wage Won’t Help the Poor

WalletThe ground has been shifting in the battle over
the minimum wage. With President Obama’s proposal to hike the
national minimum from $7.25 to $9 an hour stalled in Congress,
local labor activists have been aiming even higher, getting behind
a vastly higher minimum wage of $15 an hour. The proposals are
gaining steam. The small city of SeaTac, Wash., which includes
Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, already has a $15 minimum in
force, while Seattle plans to implement one over time. Similar
“super-minimum” proposals also are under consideration in cities
like San Francisco and Chicago. Recent state-level legislation will
phase in a minimum wage of greater than $10 in California,
Connecticut, Maryland, Hawaii and Vermont. Massachusetts’ minimum
will rise to $11 by January 2017, while the District of Columbia’s
is set to rise to $11.50 by July 2016.

Raising the minimum wage is simply a terrible way to help the
poor, writes El Lehrer. Even if it’s not as disastrous as some
market advocates claim, it’s likely to do more harm than good.

View this article.

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Eli Lehrer: Hiking the Minimum Wage Won't Help the Poor

WalletThe ground has been shifting in the battle over
the minimum wage. With President Obama’s proposal to hike the
national minimum from $7.25 to $9 an hour stalled in Congress,
local labor activists have been aiming even higher, getting behind
a vastly higher minimum wage of $15 an hour. The proposals are
gaining steam. The small city of SeaTac, Wash., which includes
Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, already has a $15 minimum in
force, while Seattle plans to implement one over time. Similar
“super-minimum” proposals also are under consideration in cities
like San Francisco and Chicago. Recent state-level legislation will
phase in a minimum wage of greater than $10 in California,
Connecticut, Maryland, Hawaii and Vermont. Massachusetts’ minimum
will rise to $11 by January 2017, while the District of Columbia’s
is set to rise to $11.50 by July 2016.

Raising the minimum wage is simply a terrible way to help the
poor, writes El Lehrer. Even if it’s not as disastrous as some
market advocates claim, it’s likely to do more harm than good.

View this article.

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/XcR78O
via IFTTT

Although I’ve always been an active individual, a few years ago I was sidelined and unable to move my body due to a pretty serious back injury from a car wreck. Talk about a depressing time in my life. Also, a good time to self-loathe, feel sorry for myself, and get fat for the first time in my life. I lost all motivation and nearly felt like I had lost my identity. Nearly a year later, I got the okay to get back into it and it’s been a slow process gaining strength without risking further injury, but I’ve been consistent and have been able to increase my deadlift to #245 now. I never thought I’d be able to achieve that kind of weight again with my back screwed, but it’s a testament to what a hard work, patience, and determination can do. The girl in the right photo is who I really am on the inside; the broad in left is someone I will never see again. I murdered her and her piss poor attitude two years ago when I committed myself to changing my mindset and put in the work to make it happen. Excited to see what my body is capable of achieving in the next two years. Bring on the gainz. #DontQuit #FailureIsNotAnOption

@hooper_fit

Although I’ve always been an active individual, a few years ago I was sidelined and unable to move my body due to a pretty serious back injury from a car wreck. Talk about a depressing time in my life. Also, a good time to self-loathe, feel sorry for myself, and get fat for the first time in my life. I lost all motivation and nearly felt like I had lost my identity.
Nearly a year later, I got the okay to get back into it and it’s been a slow process gaining strength without risking further injury, but I’ve been consistent and have been able to increase my deadlift to #245 now. I never thought I’d be able to achieve that kind of weight again with my back screwed, but it’s a testament to what a hard work, patience, and determination can do. The girl in the right photo is who I really am on the inside; the broad in left is someone I will never see again. I murdered her and her piss poor attitude two years ago when I committed myself to changing my mindset and put in the work to make it happen.
Excited to see what my body is capable of achieving in the next two years. Bring on the gainz.

#DontQuit #FailureIsNotAnOption

LIKES: 6
 COMMENTS:3

tags
#fitmom,
#fitfam,
#flagnorfail,
#selfie,
#chickswholift,
#fitchicks,
#245,
#girlswithmuscle,
#transformationtuesday,
#throwbackthursday,
#nola,
#fitlife,
#progress,
#dontquit,
#transformation,
#failureisnotanoption,

»WEBSTA

from @hooper_fit – WEBSTA http://ift.tt/1wq43av
via IFTTT

Although I've always been an active individual, a few years ago I was sidelined and unable to move my body due to a pretty serious back injury from a car wreck. Talk about a depressing time in my life. Also, a good time to self-loathe, feel sorry for myself, and get fat for the first time in my life. I lost all motivation and nearly felt like I had lost my identity. Nearly a year later, I got the okay to get back into it and it's been a slow process gaining strength without risking further injury, but I've been consistent and have been able to increase my deadlift to #245 now. I never thought I'd be able to achieve that kind of weight again with my back screwed, but it's a testament to what a hard work, patience, and determination can do. The girl in the right photo is who I really am on the inside; the broad in left is someone I will never see again. I murdered her and her piss poor attitude two years ago when I committed myself to changing my mindset and put in the work to make it happen. Excited to see what my body is capable of achieving in the next two years. Bring on the gainz. #DontQuit #FailureIsNotAnOption

@hooper_fit

Although I’ve always been an active individual, a few years ago I was sidelined and unable to move my body due to a pretty serious back injury from a car wreck. Talk about a depressing time in my life. Also, a good time to self-loathe, feel sorry for myself, and get fat for the first time in my life. I lost all motivation and nearly felt like I had lost my identity.
Nearly a year later, I got the okay to get back into it and it’s been a slow process gaining strength without risking further injury, but I’ve been consistent and have been able to increase my deadlift to #245 now. I never thought I’d be able to achieve that kind of weight again with my back screwed, but it’s a testament to what a hard work, patience, and determination can do. The girl in the right photo is who I really am on the inside; the broad in left is someone I will never see again. I murdered her and her piss poor attitude two years ago when I committed myself to changing my mindset and put in the work to make it happen.
Excited to see what my body is capable of achieving in the next two years. Bring on the gainz.

#DontQuit #FailureIsNotAnOption

LIKES: 6
 COMMENTS:3

tags
#fitmom,
#fitfam,
#flagnorfail,
#selfie,
#chickswholift,
#fitchicks,
#245,
#girlswithmuscle,
#transformationtuesday,
#throwbackthursday,
#nola,
#fitlife,
#progress,
#dontquit,
#transformation,
#failureisnotanoption,

»WEBSTA

from @hooper_fit – WEBSTA http://ift.tt/1wq43av
via IFTTT

New Missouri Abortion Regs Are Insulting to Women

Earlier this week, Missouri passed
a new law
mandating a 72-hour waiting period for women seeking
abortions. Advocates for the law argue that this will give women
sufficient time to make the decision with a clear head, but this
logic is insulting. Reason.com editor Elizabeth Nolan Brown

writes
:

Surely many women spend ample time agonizing over the decision
to abort before actually calling a clinic. For others,
it isn’t a difficult decision at all
. In either case, what
incredible arrogance and paternalism to suggest that without the
good hand of government to guide them, these women aren’t capable
of fully considering their choices and actions.  

In effect, waiting-period rules like the one Missouri
Republicans are pushing just make it logistically harder for women
to exercise their right to an abortion. Yesterday I wrote about a
Pennsylvania
woman who ordered the abortion pill illegally online
because
the nearest clinic was more than 70 miles away. Some on social
media scoffed at the idea that 70 miles was too far to travel—but
because of mandatory waiting periods and other bureaucratic
nonsense, what could be a one- or two-visit procedure actually
requires three or four separate visits. 

This is why it’s such bullshit when anti-abortion types talk
about how it’s just an extra day or two wait; it’s just a
requirement that only a physician can physically hand a woman the
abortion pill; it’s just one or two clinics that will close down
due to hospitals refusing admitting-privileges to abortion
doctors… Taken individually, none of the restrictions may seem
that nefarious. But these restrictions don’t exist in a vacuum. And
the cumulative effect is absolutely to create a climate where the
time and capital required to terminate a pregnancy becomes
prohibitive for large numbers of women.

Regulations that raise costs for both abortion clinics and women
as a way to circumvent the 14th amendment are becoming all to
common. Last year, Reason TV reported on new regulations for
abortion clinics in Virgina:

“Abortion Rights vs. Women’s Safety in Virginia,”
produced by Amanda Winkler
About 4 minutes.

Original release date was December 16, 2013, and the original
writeup is below.

Last April, the Virginia Board of Health
approved
 strict new regulations for abortion providers.
Unlike most similar laws, the regulations cover not just new
facilities but existing ones too. Clinics have until October 2014
to comply, but a high-stakes legal challenge in the Old Dominion
may change that early next year.

Senate
Bill 924
 reclassifies any health clinic that provides five
or more first trimester abortions a month as an outpatient surgical
center rather than a physician’s office, which is the current
classification. The law sets standards for the number of
parking spaces, width of hallways, size of janitor closets, and
more, all which could cost millions of dollars in renovations per
facility. Abortion clinics throughout the state have said
compliance costs will force many of them to close and
two out of 20
abortion clinics have already shut down, citing
financial burdens related to the new regs.

In a reversal of conventional positions, SB 924 has political
conservatives arguing for increasing regulations on small
businesses and liberals arguing against them. The bill initially
passed the Democratic-controlled state senate in 2011 by a vote of
20-20 (Lieutenant Gov. Bill Bolling, a pro-life Republican cast the
tie-breaking vote). Republican Gov. Bob McDonnell eventually signed
it into law after numerous rounds of political
back-and-forth. 

Supporters of abortion rights believe that pro-life legislators
in Virginia and
elsewhere around the country
are using retroactive regulations
to get around constitutional guarantees to abortion on demand
during the first trimester of pregnancy. Defenders of the new
regulations say that they are simply protecting the safety of
women.

“This is really necessary to ensure that woman are treated with
care consistent with their human dignity,” says Mallory Quigley of
the Susan B. Anthony List
(SBL), a pro-life organization. A woman who chooses to have an
abortion, says Quigley, should be able to do so without fearing for
her health and safety. Quigley and other supporters point to the
deplorable conditions in abortion clinics such
as the one run by Kermit Gosnell
in Philadelphia. Gosnell, who
ran an operation described as a “horror house,” was convicted of
murder and other crimes after several patients died at his
clinic.

“Physicians that are practicing in Virginia have been
outspoken
about the lack of medical evidence that is deciding
[this legislation],” says Sara Wallace-Keeshen of Falls Church
Health Care Center (FCHC). Located in northern Virginia, FCHC has
filed an administrative
appeal
 against the new regulations, claiming that
renovations would cost the center $2 million and potentially force
them out of business. 

FCHC has had no deaths since opening in 2002, an outcome that is
similar to the generally low rate of complications related to
abortions performed in clinics. Indeed, since 1974 state data show
only three deaths during legal abortions. For first-trimester
abortions, the complication rate is 0.3
percent
, throwing doubt on the safety argument.

A court date is set for April 2014.

Approx. 4 minutes. Produced by Amanda Winkler. Camera by Winkler
and Joshua Swain. 

Scroll down for downloadable versions and subscribe
to Reason TV’s
YouTube Channel
to receive automatic updates when new material
goes live.

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Baylen Linnekin: Food Freedom Fest Offers Reasons for Optimism

CowLast weekend was the Farm-to-Consumer Legal Defense
Fund
‘s first annual Food Freedom Fest. The two-day
Food Freedom Fest, held in Staunton, Virginia, brought together an
estimated 200 supporters of food freedom from as far away as
California.

FTCLDF, which advocates on behalf of small farmers and their
customers on many issues, including the rights of farmers to sell
raw milk, billed Food Freedom Fest as “a fun, educational gathering
for anyone who celebrates and appreciates freedom of choice in
agriculture.”

Journalist and author David Gumpert, writing
up
 the event at his blog, described Food Freedom Fest as
centered “on overcoming the sense of an expanding, and
ever-more-controlling, food regulatory structure.”

The optimism was palpable, according to Baylen Linnekin.

But optimism, while important, only goes so far, writes
Linnekin. There’s also the need for vigilance.

View this article.

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