Department of Homeland Security – A 240,000 Person Cancer on the American Soul

Screen Shot 2014-09-02 at 4.27.17 PMRegular readers will be intimately familiar with my feelings on the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). Long before it became obvious to millions of people, I wrote about how the DHS was never intended to prevent terrorist attacks, rather it had always been intended to suppress the American citizenry. Over the past decade, it has become a dangerous behemoth of fascism under the guise of the fraudulent “war on terror.”

Going back to 2010, I wrote a piece titled: The Dangers of a Failed Presidency, in which I wrote:


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What War Is Good For

Friday night’s theme episode of The Independents,
titled “The
War on War
,” delved into myriad applications (and
mis-applications) of that murderful word. Cato Executive Vice
President David Boaz,
for example, spoke about the potency of war as an often deadly
policy metaphor:

And former Reagan-administration deputy defense secretary
K.T.
McFarland
and retired
Col. David Hunt
chewed on just what the phrase “War on Terror”
can and should mean in 2014:

Speaking of war, I’m on a star-studded speakers list for an
October 18 conference being held in New York by The Future of
Freedom Foundation. Titled “Stop the Wars
on Drugs and Terrorism
,” the confab will include presentations
from the likes of
Glenn Greenwald
,
Radley Balko
,
Jeremy Scahill
,
Eugene Jarecki
,
Ethan Nadelmann
, and more. (All the hyperlinks on the speakers’
names go to Reason TV interviews that are well worth your time.)
More info at the conference
website
.

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China Will Revise Its GDP Definition Until Its Hits Government “Growth Targets”, Goldman Explains

Previously we have commented that when all it takes for a country to “hit” its GDP target, is to adjust said definition by adding the benefit of estimated ancillary items as prostitution and drugs, GDP loses all relevancy and meaning in its transformation to an arbitrary, goalseeked policy measurement and validation tool straight out of China’s Department of Truth. After all how else would the Spanish political kleptocracy boast the “favorable” impact of its disastrous policies if it wasn’t for a slew of recent definitional revisions. And yet, all throughout our commentary we were doing so tongue-in-cheek: after all, it is taboo for the very serious economists to discuss the hilarious systemic failures that allow their most prized indicator of “growth” to become a mockery of fringe tinfoil blogs.

At least, it was taboo until now, because moments ago, in an example of “very serious phrasing”, none other than the bank that does god’s work on earth (especially when it means providing off balance sheet financing for the bank of the Holy Spirit), just reported that the reason why China will hit its growth target is because of, drumroll, its fudged GDP. Only Goldman is far more serious when it says all of this, with the result being just too hilarious for words: to wit: “In the coming months, China’s National Bureau of Statistics is to make adjustments to the methodology used to calculate GDP. These adjustments are likely to boost real GDP growth by 0.1-0.2pp, thereby making it easier for the government to reach its goal of “around 7.5%” GDP growth in 2014.

But wait there’s more, because the biggest adjusted “contributor” to China’s economy will be the retroactive benefit from R&D that previously was treated as a cost rather than an “investment.” Yup: research and development, which in China has a different name: Piracy and Reverse Engineering, only R&D is sexier than P&RE.

Which brings us to the question of the day: have we finally gone full econotard? Or is changing the rules to hit your target, while fabricating the dumbest possible adjustments, now considered very serious economic policy?

Full note from Goldman Sachs, whose humor value is far higher than the author intended:

China’s statistical adjustments are likely to make it easier to reach the GDP growth target

The coming months will see two changes to China’s economic statistics. First, the government is to adopt the latest version of the international national accounting standard: the System of National Accounts 2008 (SNA 2008). The treatment of R&D as investment instead of a cost is likely to be most important effect of this change. Second, the government has just conducted a census, undertaking a comprehensive measurement of the economy rather than the partial surveys that are normally carried out. In the past, this has led to significant revisions to historical data in terms of both the size and growth rate of the economy.

The SNA 2008 adjustment will likely lift 2014 GDP growth by 0.1-0.2pp

Under the previous SNA 1993 standard, the investment category in GDP accounting mostly captured tangible investment, such as machinery. The new SNA 2008 standard recognises the pitfalls of such a narrow definition of investment, which does not include the contribution to growth from R&D or other fixed investment.
The US and Singapore are among the countries that have adopted this practice in recent years (although the US technically uses its own NIPA rather than the more commonly used SNA), and the impact on their GDP data has been significant. Korea is about to adopt the same standard.

The effects on China’s GDP growth rate of adopting the SNA 2008 is likely to be at least as significant, given that China’s R&D expenditure growth has been particularly fast (Exhibit 1).

The rapid growth in R&D likely reflects the government’s strong focus in this area, and may explain why China’s GDP growth rate accelerated strongly in 2009 even as growth rates in most other economies suffered significantly. Private investment has also contributed, as the private sector has been able to take advantage of the large and relatively cheap talent pool in science and engineering. But private investment probably still plays a secondary role, especially given that the protection of intellectual property rights (IPR) has only just started to improve.

Those sceptical of China’s economic model may question the impact of increased R&D expenditure, since investment expenditure does not necessarily form capital if it is not used efficiently. However, the same could be said about other fixed investment expenditure, and we have seen no evidence that China’s R&D expenditure is spent less efficiently than other fixed investment (although this does not imply that the level of efficiency itself is high or low). Indeed, the number of patents has increased rapidly in recent years, which we view as a reasonable way to judge the impact of R&D in China (Exhibit 3).

Exhibit 2: … and has led to a significant improvement in China’s ranking in global publications …

Source: Nature Publishing Index, OECD, China national bureau of statistics, US national science foundation

Exhibit 3: … and in patent filing

Source: OECD, China national bureau of statistics, US national science foundation

Estimating the potential impact of the move to SNA 2008 is tricky given the lack of information:

  • There is a lack of technical detail on the methodology of the revision. The only details we are aware of appeared in an interview of NBS deputy chief Xu Xianchun by Xinhua News Agency, targeted at a general audience.
  • There is a lack of detailed and up-to-date data. Investment in humanities and social sciences is typically excluded (to the dismay of economists). Without such data, we are only able to use the aggregate R&D figure or exclude ‘basic research’ to estimate the impact of the forthcoming statistical change (basic research accounts for just 5% of total R&D expenditure and its growth has been similar to overall research, which means that the impact is minimal). With almost three-quarters of the year gone, there is no information at all on whether this year’s growth rate has been like last year’s (around 14%), nearer the average growth rate for the past decade (around 20%), or if it has reached the peak level (the mid-20s) of 2004 and 2009.
  • Deflating the nominal series is difficult, as R&D expenditure should be deflated as a component in the various industries. Deflating at the aggregate level is less precise. That said, the problem has been less pronounced in recent years as inflation has been stable and the GDP deflator and CPI have been similar (in 2013, for example, the GDP deflator was 1.8% and CPI was 2.6%. The difference is small historically and small in light of the 15%+ nominal R&D growth rate).

If this year’s R&D growth is similar to last year’s, which was the lowest in the past decade, GDP would be less than 0.1pp higher (slightly more than 2% of additional GDP growth of around 14%yoy). If the growth rate is the same as the average rate over the past 5 or 10 years (18% and 20%) the impact would be around 0.2pp larger. If we use peak growth rates (24% and 26% in 2004 and 2009), the impact would be around 0.3pp. We think the first two scenarios are more likely than the third, given the recent downward trend.

There are other SNA 2008 changes, but these are unlikely to have a significant impact on the size and growth rates of the economy.

* * *

In other words, there is no data about the primary fudge factor, but it will surely boost GDP, which is why you can put your fears about a Chinese hard, or soft or any landing on the backburner. Because suddenly and mysteriously the economy will have been growing faster than previously calculated.

Q.E.D.




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Answers! Teacher Was Not Given Mental Exam Because of Sci Fi Novels

ClassroomHere is an important update in the
story
of
Patrick McLaw
, the Maryland teacher who was the subject of a
very strange investigation last week. Local reporting claimed that
McLaw was suspended from his job and forced to undergo a mental
evaluation, all because he wrote novels about a fictional mass
shooting set 900 years in the future.

That report left out key details, according to a source who is
knowledgeable about the situation. McLaw’s novels were not the
initial or prime factor that led to his suspension. Rather, McLaw
submitted a letter to officials at the Dorchester County school
district where he worked that raised concerns about his mental
health. Wicomico County health department personnel then stepped
in.

Officials have several other concerns about McLaw, apart from
his letter. He was formerly accused of harassment, and may face
charges for a separate allegation of wrongdoing. Privacy laws are
keeping everyone vague about the details, since nothing is official
yet.

The Los Angeles Times
corroborates
:

Concerns about McLaw were raised after he sent a four-page
letter to officials in Dorchester County. Those concerns brought
together authorities from multiple jurisdictions, including health
authorities.

McLaw’s attorney, David Moore, tells The Times that his client
was taken in for a mental health evaluation. “He is receiving
treatment,” Moore said.

Because of HIPPA regulations mandating privacy around healthcare
issues, he was unable to say whether McLaw has been released.

McLaw’s letter was of primary concern to healthcare officials,
[Wiccomico County Attorney Matt] Maciarello says. It, combined with
complaints of alleged harassment and an alleged possible crime from
various jurisdictions led to his suspension. Maciarello cautions
that these allegations are still being investigated; authorities,
he says, “proceeded with great restraint.”

I spoke with Maciarello as well, and he told me that McLaw isn’t
charged with a crime right now and he’s not under arrest.

“There were many circumstances that led law enforcement to come
together wholly unrelated to the books,” said Maciarello. “He was
not under the radar initially because he wrote books.”

Again, the specifics are being kept out of the media for now.
But based on what I’ve learned, it looks like
this local reporter
—who identified McLaw’s books as the reason
for his arrest—jumped the gun, not the police.

Expect to hear more as the details become public.

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The Scariest California Drought Map Yet

Across California, reservoirs are running dry as the drought continues to weigh dramatically on many parts of the economy. The following map, showing the dismally low levels of reservoirs in all their horrible glory could be the scariest drought map yet…

 

 

Source: CDEC




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No, a Democratic Candidate Didn’t Wish Ebola on the NRA

So, here’s a headline out of the right-leaning news site
Rare today:
This Awful Democrat Just Wished Ebola on NRA Members
. Fox News’
Greta Van Susteren tweeted
about the incident, which also got picked up by a bunch of smaller
conservative blogs.

I cannot emphasize this enough: It’s a totally
bogus story
.

Here’s the tweet:

The “awful Democrat” in question is Mike
Dickinson. Rare‘s Douglas Barclay informs us that
Dickinson is a “political lightweight and Virginia candidate for
Congress” in the 7th district. That he is a lightweight is
true: Dickinson has no political experience whatsoever. But he
isn’t a Democratic candidate for anything, either. The local
Democratic Party has emphatically
denied
 any association with the troll. He almost
certainly has no intention of actually running for any office.

Shortly after the above tweet, Dickinson claimed Ben Franklin
was a “well known pervert” with herpes, and insisted that “George
Washington had several well known mistresses and was known to hit
the brothel in many towns.”  But thse weren’t the first
blaring signs of bullshit that he ever put up.

You may recall the man’s last
headline-making stunt a few months ago. A 19-year-old Texas
cheerleader was
getting flak
for lion hunting in Africa, and Dickinson offered
$100,000 bounty for anyone who could find
nude pictures of her
. Conservatives went berzerk.

Before that he appeared on Greta Van Susteren’s show and
declared war on Fox News. Outrage, again.

Conservatives from Sean Hannity to S.E. Cupp continue to fall
for his act, but the irony is that all of Dickinson’s publicity
comes from appearances on conservative media. Folks like Barclay
and Susteren have no one but themselves to blame for 1) not
researching this goober first 2) diverting attention from real
candidates and issues 3) helping him make a cool couple grand off
his fake campaign.

Kudos to Dickinson, though. He actually does a service to our
political system by satirizing it. The fact that someone with zero
credentials can put on a suit, say a few provocative things, and
let the opposite side’s media do the rest is alarming. Dickinson
puts up a mirror into which people from both major parties might
want to look long and hard.

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Does Rand Paul Think the Beheading of American Journalists Justifies War Against ISIS?

On Friday, as Robby Soave

noted
this afternoon, Rand Paul
told
the Associated Press that if he were president, he “would
lay out the reasoning of why ISIS is a threat to our national
security and seek congressional authorization to destroy ISIS
militarily.” But at a
Q&A session
in Dallas earlier that same day, the Kentucky
senator seemed deliberately noncommittal on the question of whether
ISIS is in fact “a threat to our national security.” Asked what the
“strategy” should be with regard to ISIS, he said:

I think the strategy has to be that you have an open debate in
the country over whether or not ISIS is a threat to our national
security. And it’s not enough just to say they are. That’s usually
what you hear—you hear a conclusion. People say, “Well, it’s a
threat to our national security.” That’s a conclusion. The debate
has to be: Are they a threat to our national security?

Our national security doesn’t have to be just stopping at our
borders. It can include our embassy personnel. It can include our
soldiers. It can include citizens, and people involved in business,
and journalists—things like that. So I think it is a real
debate.

What I would do, if you want a strategy, you have to go to
the American people. You have to go to Congress. I would convene a
joint session of Congress, and I would ask for permission from
Congress and say, “These are the reasons why I think ISIS is a
threat to us. This is why we should be involved.” If [President
Obama] doesn’t do that, then I think he doesn’t galvanize support,
we look weak to the world, and in the end we don’t really have a
strategy.

By and large, as I will argue in my column tomorrow, Paul
strikes a much more cautious note on foreign intervention than
national politicians typically do. But his definition of “national
security” to include the safety of Americans in other countries
potentially opens the door to military action anywhere U.S.
citizens live. That does not necessarily mean Paul would treat the
beheading of American journalists as a casus belli, but it sounds
like he might.

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Under ISIL Threat, Erbil Residents Snap Up Black Market Guns

Gun BazaarWhat do you do when psychotic fanatics with
a
taste for beheading people
who piss them off close in on your
home and threaten the lives of yourself, your loved ones, and your
friends? If you’re an unfortunate resident of Iraq, you stock up on
guns and ammunition—either to arm yourself to join the local
defense forces or just to take care of home and hearth. CCTV
America (run by state-owned China Central Television) has an

interesting report
on a firearms bazaar outside the city of
Erbil. Customers include Kurdistan’s organized Peshmerga as well as
private citizens.

The offerings range from World War 2 surplus to lots and lots of
AK variants to pistols of all description. There’s plenty of
ammunition, too, and business is apparently brisk as the threat of
ISIL hovers not too far away. (Lufthansa
resumed flights to the city
a few days ago, but U.S. forces
were
blasting ISIL positions
near there not long ago.)

Interestingly, special restrictions apparently apply to American
sourced weapons—so shoppers have to buy those in the parking
lot.

Iraq’s firearms black market is nothing new. It’s a
long-established sector of the economy
where prices (as always)

vary with demand
. And demand varies with the immediacy of the
threats faced by people who might need to defend themselves.

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Wacko Isolationist Rand Paul Would Seek Congressional Approval to ‘Destroy ISIS’

Rand PaulSen.
Rand Paul expressed support for using U.S. military power to battle
ISIL, but only after receiving Congressional authorization.

After criticizing President Obama’s lack of a plan for dealing
with the terrorist group last Friday, Paul
told the Associated Press
that the correct first move is to ask
Congress:

“If I were President, I would call a joint session of Congress.
I would lay out the reasoning of why ISIS is a threat to our
national security and seek congressional authorization to destroy
ISIS militarily.”

The Weekly Standard reported Paul’s comments while
linking to an older story in which Paul expressed “mixed feelings”
about bombing ISIL. That story ran under the very
Weekly Standard headline, “Rand
Paul Not Sure If U.S. Should Bomb Genocidal Islamist Terrorists in
Iraq.”

One gets the sense that The Weekly
Standard
 is pouncing on Paul’s comments as if to
say, See! Even this nutcase libertarian isolationist is
beginning to understand!
 But Paul’s foreign policy views
have never been as extreme as his neoconservative critics claim.
The decision to deploy American military might
should be difficult. Government leaders
should be conflicted about it. They should also obey our
Constitutional dictates, which require Congress, not the president,
to declare war.

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Islamic State Executes Another Journalist, Germany Bans Uber, Detroit’s Bankruptcy Trial Kicks Off: P.M. Links

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