Presenting The Worst-Capitalized Central Bank In The West (Hint: Not The Fed)

Submitted by Simon Black via Sovereign Man blog,

As the world’s top central bankers gathered at their annual jamboree recently, the governor of Bank of Canada, Stephen Poloz, undoubtedly received envious comments from his fellow money magicians for Canada’s perceived status as a global financial safe haven.

This newly found perception was perhaps best exemplified during a Bloomberg interview, when the CEO of RBC Wealth Management – the biggest financial institution in Canada said that “Canada is what Switzerland was 20 years ago, and the banks in Canada are what Swiss banks were 20 years ago.”

This is the new flavor of Kool-Aid. Canada is seen as the new banking safe haven and an “island of safety and stability” because of its perceived sound fiscal position, commodity wealth and solid economic performance.

Now, anytime I see central bankers slapping each other on the back, I’m going to be skeptical. But here at Sovereign Man, our conclusions are all data driven… so we dove into the numbers.

First, the Big Daddy himself—Canada’s central bank.

Any strong, healthy banking system requires a central bank with a pristine balance sheet… specifically, substantial net equity as a percentage of assets.

So how strong is the balance sheet for Banque du Canada? Not very.

As it turns out, Banque du Canada is actually the most pitifully capitalized central bank in the western world. They’re in such bad shape they actually make the Fed look healthy.

Hong Kong’s Monetary Authority Exchange Fund is a good example of a strong balance sheet; their latest figures as of 30 June show a whopping capital reserve equal to nearly 22% of total assets.

This is a massive margin of safety for the central bank.

The US Federal Reserve, on the other hand, shows a capital reserve of just 1.27%. And Canada? A tiny 0.47%… as in less than one half of one percent.

This isn’t safety and stability. It’s a rounding error.

Moreover, Canada also has ZERO reserve requirements for its banks; this means that Canadian banks are not obliged to hold any of their customers’ deposits.

So yes, it’s legally permissible for a Canadian bank to loan out 100% of its customers’ funds.

Not to worry, though. The Canadian Deposit Insurance Corporation (CDIC) is standing by to insure bank deposits up to $100,000.

But when you look at it closely, there isn’t much there for depositors at all. There’s roughly $646 billion of eligible deposits in the Canadian banking system. Yet the CDIC only has $2.8 billion in cash available to insure it all… a ratio of just 0.43%.

Even more troubling is that Canada has legislated an actual Cyprus-style confiscation of deposits in the event that Canadian banks deplete their capital.

Buried deep into the government’s Economic Action Plan 2013 is a provision that would implement a “bail-in” regime for “systemically important banks”.

This would legally allow the banks to tap into customer deposits if the banks get into trouble… something I don’t find particularly safe.

Last, the Canada myth really starts to become apparent when you look at the country’s gold reserves.

At the beginning of this century Canada held 46.19 tonnes of gold. Now they hold only 2.99 tonnes. That’s a whopping 93.5% decline in gold reserves in just over a decade!

In other words, Canada’s monetary leadership has made a conscious decision to reject real assets in favor of paper assets that can be conjured out of thin air.

They’ve managed to run their central bank into borderline insolvency.

It’s important to look at facts and not rely on sentiment.

To anyone who rationally looks at the data, the obvious conclusion is that Canada is certainly NOT the safe-haven it’s been built up to be.




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

Pull Your Hair Out As You Learn the Common Core Way of Doing 6 + 10

Parents in New York are having trouble helping their kids with
math homework now that the curriculum is aligned to the national
Common Core standards, so a local news channel has
released
some videos explaining the new lessons.

Ready to pull your hair out? Here’s the fancy pants new way of
figuring out 9 + 6.

Instead of just, well, adding 9 and 6, students must
run a gauntlet of extra addition, “decomposing” 6 into 1 and 5,
“anchoring” 9 to 1 to make 10, and then adding the leftover 5. The
new way requires a lot more time, a higher vocabulary, and more
work. But it’s somehow supposed to be “more comfortable” for young
learners, in the estimation of standards peddlers.

How parents must long for the good old days of rote
memorization! (Incidentally, a
recent Stanford University study
found that rote memorization
is important for developing brains.)

The videos also illustrate why adapting to Core-aligned
curriculum is a difficult—and expensive—process for schools. New
instructional materials must be purchased, teachers retrained,
tests rewritten, etc.

Read more from Reason on Common Core
here
.


Hat tip
: Eric Owen / The Daily Caller

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/1CrhqJ4
via IFTTT

A Visit to the Numerous ‘Fiefdoms’ of St. Louis County

Downtown St. Louis, an area many St. Louis residents probably don't recognize.If you read only one more
analysis of the state of government and policing in the St. Louis
area today (besides this blog post) make it former Reason editor
Radley Balko’s
lengthy look today
over at The Washington Post.

Before delving in to some of Balko’s observations, a somewhat
relevant disclosure: I lived for nearly a decade in St. Louis
County during my college years and I have family who still live
there. I haven’t written much about St. Louis from a first-person
perspective in the wake of Michael Brown’s shooting for the same
reason I haven’t written about Sanford, Florida, where I went to
middle and high school, from a first-person perspective: Despite
all my time there as a lower-middle-class white guy, I never ran in
the same circles as my minority peers in these compartmentalized
communities. I can’t even claim to extrapolate the kinds of things
they went through. I don’t believe I ever even set foot in Ferguson
during my entire time there.

And that is partly what Balko’s piece, focusing on how
communities in St. Louis County are balancing their books on the
backs of their poor residents, is about. St. Louis is a
compartmentalized—almost Balkanized—community. It’s
segregated not just by race, but by class and a whole host of other
signifiers. Googling “Where
did you go to high school?”
is a good way to understand the odd
ways in which St. Louis’ culture manifests. I had a friend who
spent most of his life in St. Louis County and had been downtown
fewer times than I had been. The sports teams, toasted ravioli, and
really bad pizza are all that unite the city.

Balko’s piece focuses on how all the dozens of little
municipalities within St. Louis County popped up, the racial
politics and migration patterns behind them, and the consequences
of each of these municipalities looking for ways to bankroll the
government jobs they’re insisting they need. Ferguson isn’t an
anomaly. Ferguson is the system. Balko opens with the
story of what happened to Nicole Bolden, a woman who was in a crash
that wasn’t her fault but was nevertheless arrested:

The officer found that Bolden had four arrest warrants in three
separate jurisdictions: the towns of Florissant and Hazelwood in
St. Louis County, and the town of Foristell in St. Charles County.
All of the warrants were for failure to appear in court for traffic
violations. Bolden hadn’t appeared in court because she didn’t have
the money. A couple of those fines were for speeding, one was for
failure to wear her seatbelt, and most of the rest were for what
defense attorneys in the St. Louis area have come to call “poverty
violations” — driving with a suspended license, expired
plates, expired registration, and a failure to provide proof of
insurance.

The Florissant officer first took Bolden to the jail in that
town, where Bolden posted a couple hundred dollars bond and was
released at around midnight. She was next taken to Hazelwood and
held at the jail there until she could post a second bond. That was
another couple hundred dollars. She wasn’t released from her cell
there until around 5 pm the next day. Exhausted, stressed, and
still worried about what her kids had seen, she was finally taken
to the St. Charles County jail for the outstanding warrant in
Foristell. Why the county jail? Because the tiny town of 500 isn’t
large enough to have its own holding cell, even though it does have
a mayor, a board of aldermen, a municipal court, and a seven-member
police department. It’s probably most well-known locally for the
speed trap its police set along I-170.

By the time Bolden got to St. Charles County, it had been well
over 36 hours since the accident. “I hadn’t slept,” she says. “I
was still in my same clothes. I was starting to lose my mind.”
That’s when she says a police officer told her that if she couldn’t
post bond, they’d keep her in jail until May. “I just freaked out,”
she says. “I said, ‘What about my babies? Who is going to take care
of my babies?” She says the officer just shrugged.

“It’s different inside those walls,” Bolden says. “They treat
you like you don’t have any emotions. I know I have a heavy foot. I
have kids. I have to work to support them. I’ve also been taking
classes. So I’m late a lot. And when I’m late, I speed. But I’m
still a human being.”

Balko notes that most of these municipalities, not just
Ferguson, rely on citations against its own citizens in order to
balance its budget. He notes that in some communities, the number
of outstanding arrest warrants exceeds the number of residents.

The racial politics of the migration of whites and blacks within
St. Louis County is fully documented in Balko’s piece, but there’s
more. Black migration to Ferguson is relatively recent, which helps
explain why black residents are not well represented in government
and police. But what about other communities where blacks are well
represented in government? Turns out those communities are still
looking to fines and fees to pay for its employees:

The town of Berkeley, for example, has unusually high black
political participation. For about a century, there was a
historically black enclave in northwest St. Louis County called
Kinloch. In the 1980s, most of Kinloch was erased due to an
expansion of the St. Louis airport. Much of Kinloch’s population
wound up in nearby Berkeley, infusing the town with black residents
who had been in the area for generations, and had well-established
traditions of political participation and self government.
Currently, Berkeley has an all-black city council, a black mayor, a
black city manager, and majority-black police force.

If any town could overcome the legacy of structural racism that
drew the map of St. Louis County, then, it would be Berkeley. And
yet this town of 9,000 people still issued 10,452 traffic citations
last year, and another 1,271 non-traffic ordinance violations. The
town’s municipal court raised over $1 million in fines and fees, or
about $111 per resident. The town issued 5,504 arrest warrants last
year, and has another 13,436 arrest warrants outstanding. Those are
modest numbers for St. Louis County, but they’re high for just
about anywhere else.

What makes Balko’s research additionally compelling is that he
also explores the horrific business regulatory schemes that make it
next to impossible for the poor to turn to entrepreneurship to
improve their fate. Remember, the City of St. Louis managed to

fine a Lyft driver within 90 minutes
of them launching their
services.

I do bring up the regulatory burdens because of a personal
connection (which is why I broke from my pattern of non-comment).
Balko brings up a horrific case in 2008 where a black businessman,
unable to deal with the regulatory burdens placed on businesses by
the City of Kirkwood, snapped and shot up a Kirkwood City Council
meeting:

In 2008, Charles Lee “Cookie” Thornton shot up city
hall in the town of Kirwood
, killing two city council members,
a city planner, and two police officers. He also badly wounded the
mayor. When the mostly white Kirkwood annexed the unincorporated
black community of Meacham Park 15 years earlier, the construction
business Thornton had built and run out of his home ran afoul of
his new town’s zoning regulations. Thornton didn’t have the money
to move his business to another part of town. Over the next decade,
he accumulated $20,000 in fines, lost his business, declared
bankruptcy, and was reduced a community punchline. He was the guy
with the signs on his van, who interrupted city council meetings
with grand conspiracies, and filed lawsuits that were barely
readable. His friends and family say the constant harassment cost
him his sanity.

My family lives in Kirkwood. I didn’t know any of the victims of
the shooting, but my family did, and I endured the dreadful
experience of having to call them to make sure they were okay.
Balko brings it Thornton up in the context of describing the
absolutely insane experiences of a black man in Pine Lawn who keeps
getting cited for having operating a business without a license,
even though he does actually have a license. (I hope Los Angeles
residents read that section and keep it in mind as the city moves
forward with its
administrative citation program
, but I doubt it.)

I’ve probably quoted far too much of Balko’s piece beyond basic
fair use. I recommend everybody read it, especially those who want
to simply classify St. Louis’ problems as racial issues. That’s not
untrue, but it’s incomplete. It’s the power of government to
implement policies that end up making life miserable and nearly
impossible for poor people that has a devastating impact on
minorities.

And below, when Reason TV went to Ferguson, residents were quick
to describe how they had been targeted for minor problems by
police:

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/1oEtxIg
via IFTTT

Connecticut Town Approves “Free” Military Vehicle For Cops That Will Cost $54,000 in Asset Forfeiture Funds to Modify, Because Police Say Mass Shootings Are Up

Welcome to Connecticut signAs reader Timothy M. points
out, the following story from The Hartford Courant has a
lot to upset Reason readers. The Courant reports on a vote

in Newington, Connecticut
:

The town council has approved a bid waiver that will allow the
police department to modify a mine- and ambush-proof military
vehicle that they acquired from a government surplus program.

Police plan to send the six-wheeled BAE Caiman, which was
designed to carry troops into combat in Afghanistan, to a
specialized firm for $54,000 worth of modifications. Changes to the
vehicle include removal of its firing ports and installation of
running lights and a radio system. The council voted unanimously
earlier this month to allow the work to proceed without
bidding.

The town’s police chief said he was pleased the vote was
unanimous. He called
the vehicle “free” despite the $54,000 price tag for (no-bid) modifications.
That’s going to be paid for through the asset forfeiture
fund
. Why does Newtington need this military vehicle? Mass

shootings have been up
, the chief says. Connecticut, home to
some of the strictest gun control laws in the country, passed a new
set of them this year, laws so draconian and unenforcably they were

mostly ignored
, leaving politicians
shocked
. Oh, and Connecticut is home to cops like
this
. And state’s attorneys who protect bad cops like
this
. Oh, and a court in Connecticut recently
ruled
police can arrest you for being too physically close to
someone being arrested.

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/1t14d2U
via IFTTT

“Deflation In Europe Is Just Beginning”… And How To Trade It

From Francesco Filia, CEO and CIO of Fasanara Capital, excerpts from September 1 Investment Outlook letter

Deflation in Europe is Just Beginning

Differently than Russia/West crisis, the problem of deflation in Europe is far more structural of an issue, likely to hold the stage for the foreseeable future.

As often stated, we believe Europe looks like Japan in the early 90’s. Similarly to Japan, Europe has few unmistakable connotations at interplay:

  • High level of indebtedness, drawing resources away from productive investments into sterile debt service.
  • Overvalued currency, especially to peripheral European countries (30% overvalued against D-Mark, 40%+ overvalued against the rest of the world). Peripheral Europe is experiencing a currency crisis as if they borrowed in foreign hard currency.
  • Secular trend of falling working population mixed with falling productivity rates.

The data released in the past few weeks provided evidence of European growth having grounded to a halt for most countries, including Germany. Italy dipped in triple-dip technical recession, while France slowed down concerningly and even Germany contracted in Q2. All the while, inflation averaged 0.3% for the Euro Area as a whole, well below the ECB target and on a clear downtrend.

In Japan in the early 90’s, it took four years for disinflation to become deflation, under the push of a strong Yen and with the help of an inactive Central Bank dismissing such risk until late.

Likewise in Europe, the EUR is far too strong when measured against GDP growth prospects and productivity trends. A misleading current account surplus of 200bn only managed to make it stronger (overshadowing imbalances across countries in Europe), together with a shrinking balance sheet of the ECB for almost Eur 1 trn on deleverage flows and LTROs repayments.

In crafting crisis resolution management, European policymakers blamed the lack of reforms for the low levels of productivity, whereas Europe was suffering from a structural lack of demand. A much more dominant problem. Given that, the ECB balance sheet was allowed to shrink for almost two years now, the EUR was allowed to strengthen against most currencies around the world (which were actively engaging in the opposite effort, one of bold currency debasement, ranging from the US, to the UK, to Japan.. including even Switzerland and Norway), and austerity was imposed to shrink fiscal deficits. The candidly stated goal was to drive Internal Devaluation across peripheral European countries, so as to close the competitiveness gap to northern Europe: output contractions, wage declines, fall in prices. Almost the opposite of what should have happened if the problem was diagnosed as one of deficient demand. Tightening fiscal and monetary policies took place in Europe for two consecutive years, all the while as most other large economies were engaging in the polar opposite.

Nomen omen. Internal Devaluation in Southern Europe is itself an intentional form of deflation. It should have been confined there where it mattered to level off imbalances across nations in Europe. Instead, the laboratory experiment failed as it metastasized around.

Globally, other structural forces were inductive of deflation, from robotics and technological advances shedding jobs and depressing input prices (the Amazon effect), to low energy prices (on shale gas revolutionary discoveries and the end of the Commodity super-cycle), to weaker than potential growth, slack in the labor market, weaker dollar on ZIRP policies, Yen devaluation exporting deflation, China slowing down, etc.

The result is that Germany’s GDP itself is in tatters, even before considering the damage to be from trade wars with Russia. Deflation took hold and derailed the improvement in the soft data and surveys projected earlier on.

The problem with deflation is that minuscule levels of GDP growth are unable to drive unemployment lower and unable to prevent debt ratios from grinding higher and posing a larger threat down the line. Mathematically, as primary budget balances are lower than the difference between real GDP growth and real interest rates on public debt, the debt/GDP ratio is set to rise, from already alarming levels.

Italy, is the main vulnerability here, as a debt/GDP ratio might reach 140% by the end of this year, thanks to disinflation and GDP contraction, and despite austerity and a 2% primary surplus on GDP. By the same token, thanks to zero inflation rates, real rates are too high in Italy, standing at over 200bps above France and 250bps above Germany.

Zero inflation is like death penalty to debt-laden countries. It has been estimated that Italy would need a primary surplus of ~8% if it wanted to stabilize its debt/GDP at zero inflation, which means just stopping it from moving even higher. Spain would need a primary surplus of 2%+, instead of current negative 1.44%. Which means more austerity and more contractionary policies, to cause more internal devaluation than it is currently the case, more declines in unit labor costs, more salary cuts, more unemployment, less consumer spending, less corporate investments. In Italy, for example, average salary would have to be cut by an additional 30%/40% before closing the competitive gap to Germany. This does not account for the fact that inflation in Germany is itself on the verge of becoming negative, making the necessary adjustment even more painful than that.

The good side of the story is that we believe that the ECB and fiscal authority will be forced into further action from here, in an attempt to avoid a fully-fledged debt crisis and a long period of Japan-style depression.

Germany is the key determinant of European policymaking, all too obviously, and we believe they might be about to give in to request for expansionary policies, both fiscal and monetary.

Few reasons for it:

  • The German economy itself is contracting, hardly a satisfactory result after many years of implementation of their policy recipe.
  • German inflation itself is borderline negative. Europe-wide inflation expectations have dis-anchored from 2% desired line, falling off 20bps in August alone (both 10y and 5y5y forward inflation swap curve). Any concern about price stability and Weimar-style inflation risk should have been put to rest by now.
  • German concerns with moral hazard on the side of weaker European member states should have abated by now, as most political parties have embraced structural reforms as essential, and married their political agendas to it. Government in France, Greece and Spain have already spent their political capital embracing the German agenda, being now certain to lose in future elections, while the Italian government is close to do the same, having credibly committed itself to reforms. Germany faces the best mainstream political parties in Europe they can aspire to; any future coalition is most certain to be less receptive of German’s diktat than these ones. The calendar of national elections across Europe next year and beyond should serve as a countdown. Thus, we believe Germany should be prepared now for a relaxation of austerity policies and spreading the adjustment process of fiscal consolidation over a longer time horizon, while opening up to real monetary stimulus.
  • Confrontation with Russia, while it may ease over time, surely highlights the urgent need for a common defense policy / energy policy across Europe, helping the case for integration in Europe in the short-term, softening German resistance to more expansionary policies.

In summary, we believe the ECB will be allowed to engage in non-conventional monetary policies, their version of QE, pushing equity and bonds higher in Europe, compressing spreads and yields further, within the next 6/12 months.

Whether it is going to be enough to avert a currency/debt crisis in Europe in the long run is a different matter. We think that there is a genuine case to be made for seeing dissolution of the currency union down the line, in an attempt to save the European Union. Early days to visualize that, though. What matters to the financial markets is the next twelve months – the foreseeable future – and we believe the next twelve months to be highly supporting of financial assets in Europe, both bonds and equity.

Incidentally, we have for European assets and the ECB the same feeling we have for Japan and the BoJ. Abenomics has a high chance of failure, in the long term. Nevertheless, on the road to perdition, chances are that efforts will be stepped up and more bullets shot in an attempt to avert the end game. As stakes are raised, financial assets will be supported and melt-up in bubble territory, doing so at the expenses of a more turbulent end-game in the years ahead.

* * *

Implications of Deflation + ECB’s Activism: Yields & Spreads to Compress to Minuscule Levels, Equity Melt-Up First

As discussed in our previous Outlook, ECB policies and deflationary forces are two weapons firing in the same direction. From here, odds are high for European rates to move lower, credit spreads to narrow, risk premia to implode, interest rate curves to go flatter. That is financial repression at its best, with the added help of deflationary forces, putting any sort of risk premia and rate differentials under attack.

Without the ECB policy move, such process was less obvious. In the absence of an active ECB, such deflationary forces could have failed to drive rates lower and spreads narrower, as credit and risk spreads could have widened massively on fears of a replay of the sovereign and liquidity crisis of late-2011, mid 2012. Credit spreads could have widened out well in excess of base rates moving lower. An active ECB, moving decisively and unanimously (including Weidmann), helps generate the expectation of mutuality across Europe, rendering deflationary expectations even across European countries.

From our June Outlook: ‘’Pushing lower a 10year German bund yield of 1.35% might be difficult (although Japan shows the downside is still wide), but forcing lower a 2.75% yield on a BTP is easier, as it offers twice the yield of a Bund, for the same Central Bank. So it is easier to push down a 6% yield on a Greek govie (and its CDS at 450bps over), on the presumption of mutuality and ECB backstop. For the time being, until further notice’. Fixed income-wise, we expect yields to plummet, spreads to narrow further: Italian BTPs at 2%, and at 100bps spread over Bunds, 60bps over French OATs; 10year Greek yield at 5% and below, soon enough’’.

The impact on equity we expect is one of melt-up, at least in a first phase, pushing them into bubble levels, not supported by fundamentals but rather by the mix of lower yields, zero inflation rates, modest economic growth. Against this backdrop, we believe that the activism of the ECB can lead into 20%/30% upside for equities in Southern Europe, especially in the financial industry. Our favorite markets are Italy and Greece, which we think have the potential of being best performers in the next 12 months, although with heavy (realized) volatility along the way.

* * *

European Deflation Trades

Disinflation is just about to turn into outright Deflation in Europe. The ECB is active but most likely already late in the game, behind the curve, and unable to prevent deflation from kicking in. There are important consequences for rates and spreads in Europe, together with the level of the EUR itself:

  • Rates to reach new lows, especially in the far end of the interest rate curve, especially in Germany. Bunds 10yr yields moving flat to JGBs, Bunds’ 30yr yields below JGBs
  • Spreads to compress, both between peripheral debt and core European debt, and across the curve. Italian 10yr BTPs at 2% yield by year end, and at below 100bps spread over Bunds, below 60bps over French OATs; Greek 10yr GGBs at below 5%
  • Risk premia to implode, interest rate curves to flatten. Curve spreads to tighten, volatility spreads to compress, cross-spreads to narrow.




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1qpal6N Tyler Durden

AAPL’s Worst Dump In 7 Months Sparks Nasdaq Slump

Treasuries closed practically unchanged today after yields spiked higher on 'ceasefire' news then rallied lower all day long (30Y -2bps 2Y unch). Credit markets surged tighter on the news then collapsed wider to the lows of the week by the close (diverging from stocks). The USDollar slipped lower on the day, led by EUR strength. Gold ($1,270) and silver limped higher all day but WTI crude took off, gaining back all the flush losses from yesterday (above $95). In stock-land, the cease-fire sparked exuberance to new record-highs. That strength began to fade as soon as the US opened with notable selling in the holiest-of-holies – AAPL. This wesighed on Nasdaq heavily (to red on the week) and Russell high-beta stocks tumbled. Despite the standard late-day VWAP ramp, stocks were unable to recover as USDJPY was no help after breaking back below 105.00 and ended with the worst day in 5 weeks. And finally, of course, the S&P 500 closed with a 2,000 handle – so crucial to maintain the dream.

 

S&P 2,000 remains all that matters…The last 7 days => 1997.92, 2000.02, 2000.12, 1996.74, 2003.37, 2002.28… and today…2000.75

 

USDJPY was in charge of stocks (as AUDJPY correlation broke down)…

 

From the ceasefire headlines, stocks juimped but gave it all back once the US opened…

 

On the week the USD is up 0.15%, and the broad US equity market is down 0.15%…

 

With homebuilders and Energy underperforming…

 

High-beta momo had a very volatile day…

 

Treasury yields rallied back from 'ceasefire' spike high yields…

 

Credit remains unamused by the exuberance in stocks…

 

FX markets had a change of trend today as recent USD strength faded with EUR strength and some JPY buying…

 

PMs traded flat to very slightly higher, copper faded, but WTI crude took off…

 

Brent tracked WTI pretty tightly all day…

 

It's all AAPL's fault!!! Worst day in 7 months on heavy volume…

 

AAPL up close…the machines were extremely active

 

Charts: Bloomberg

Bonus Chart: Small Caps continue to underperform…

 




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1A6WHWZ Tyler Durden

Damon Root on Fatal Police Shootings and Self-Serving Police Narratives

Last week The New York
Times
published a widely read op-ed titled “How the Supreme
Court Protects Bad Cops.” According to the author, one of the key
ways SCOTUS shields the police is by consistently extending the
benefit of the doubt to law enforcement agents who employ deadly
force against criminal suspects. Thanks to such deferential
decisions, the op-ed declared, the high court has made it “very
difficult, and often impossible, to hold police officers and the
governments that employ them accountable for civil rights
violations.”

Perhaps the Supreme Court should take a few pointers from the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit,
suggests Reason Senior Editor Damon Root. Last
Thursday that court refused to let one California police department
off the hook for a fatal shooting that claimed the life of an
unarmed suspect. Declining to accept at face value what he
characterized as the “self-serving” police narrative, 9th Circuit
Chief Judge Alex Kozinski ruled that not only is there reason to
doubt the officers’ version of the facts; there is reason to
“conclude that the officers lied.”

View this article.

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/Yck8mc
via IFTTT

Brothers Exonerated After 30 Years in Jail, Alaskan Dem in Trouble for ‘Willie Horton-style’ Ad, Duck Dynasty Ready for War with ISIL: P.M. Links

  • Duck DynastyHalf-brothers Leon Brown and Henry McCollum were

    set free this week
    after DNA evidecne exonerated their 1983
    convictions for rape and murder. They spent 30 years in
    prison.
  • Sen. Mark Begich (D-Alaska)
    yanked a controversial re-election campaign ad
    after much
    criticism. The “Willie Horton-style” ad accused Begich’s Republican
    challenger, former Attorney General Dan Sullivan, of letting
    convicted sex offenders escape with light sentences, causing the
    death of an elderly couple.
  • A New Jersey town
    will not rename
    its John F. Kennedy Center the Barack Obama
    Center after all. Some people were offended.
  • If it comes to war with ISIL,
    foreign policy expert Phil Robertson
    (of “Duck Dynasty” fame)
    is ready, he told Sean Hannity.
  • Polls show
    resurgent support for Hamas
    among Palestinians.
  • The
    Russian sex geckos
    all died, because the universe is cold and
    lonely and cruel.

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
.

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/Yck7Pj
via IFTTT

Apple Doesn’t Take Customer Security Seriously – 5 Irresponsible and Shocking Lapses

Screen Shot 2014-09-03 at 2.35.22 PMI’m the furthest thing in the world from a technology or security expert, but what I have learned in recent years is that a dedicated, sophisticated and well funded hacker can pretty much own your data no matter how many precautions you take. Nevertheless, the major technology companies on the planet shouldn’t go out of their way to make this as easy as possible.

In the wake of the theft of private images from several prominent celebrities, many people are rightly wondering whether how vulnerable their data is. The answer appears to be “very,” and if you use Apple, the following article from Slate may leave you seething with a sense of anger and betrayal.


Protect your wealth – Buy Gold and Silver Bullion with Goldbroker.com


continue reading

from Liberty Blitzkrieg http://ift.tt/1A6Xgjx
via IFTTT

The Most Hated Rally Ever?

It appears not…

 

As FBN notes,

Sentiment has reached an extreme as  Bears according to Investors Intelligence fell to the lowest level since 1987. The markets persistent grind higher is a constant pain for any bear. The few that remain are the classic perma-bears and adjusting for them we are near rock bottom for bears. The history of Sentiment reminds us that it’s more dangerous to have an evaporation of bears compared to a plethora of bulls.

h/t @Not_Jim_Cramer (welcome back)




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1lInJD4 Tyler Durden