Clinton Bemoans Those Who ‘Try to Destabilize the World’, But That’s What She’s Done

Hillary Clinton tried to present an image of herself as a steady hand ready to be leader of the free world, criticizing Donald Trump for questioning the wisdom of the United States’ various foreign entanglements and insisting the U.S. remain commited to them.

“Words matter when you run for president, and they really matter when you are president,” Clinton said. “And I want to reassure our allies in Japan and South Korea and elsewhere that we have mutual defense treaties and we will honor them.” America’s word, Clinton argued, had to “be good.” Clinton asserted that the world was following the presidential campaign “so closely,” to “get hints about what we will do.”

“Are we going to lead the world with strength and in accordance with our values?” she asked. “That’s what I intend to do.” Clinton said she would “stand up to bullies” abroad and at home, and that the U.S. could not “let those would try to destabilize the world to interfere with American interests” get away with it.

Perhaps she should start closer to home than she thinks. A global survey of residents in 68 countries in 2014 found that 24 percent ranked the United States as the greatest threat to peace, putting it in first place. That included 37 percent of residents in Mexico. The poll was taken in 2014, almost a year before Donald Trump announced his candidacy for president and nearly two years before a President Trump was acknowledged as a distinct possibility by most people.

American leaders need not look far to find “those who would try to destabilize the world to interfere with American interests”—the United States does a good job of that on its own. The U.S. war in Iraq helped to create the space for the metastasis of ISIS in the region, and U.S. interventions in Libya and the continued occupation of Afghanistan created the space for ISIS in those countries. A counterterrorism campaign in Yemen once hailed by the Obama administration as a model for a new way to wage the war on terror eventually yielded a collapse of the government and a prolonged proxy war waged by Saudi Arabia against allegedly Iranian-backed rebels. Hillary Clinton’s “accomplishment” in Libya didn’t just help ISIS set up shop there, it spread weapons from Mali to Syria, helping to destabilize countries and aggravate conflicts across North Africa and the Middle East.

Donald Trump, on the other hand, insisted at the debate that the U.S. could not be the “policeman of the world.” Unfortunately, while he presents himself as a skeptic of past wars, he appears to be a booster for new ones. An honest debate about intervention is another conversation American voters won’t get to see on the debate stage if third party candidates like Gary Johnson, who describes himself as a “skeptic of interventionism,” are excluded, hosts continue to ask softball questions on U.S. foreign policy, and progressives continue to marginalize the damage that candidates and presidents they support have wrought internationally.

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/2dq4cZM
via IFTTT

Alt-Right Turns on Trump a Little, College Protesters Disrupt Debate Watch Party: P.M. Links

  • JonesThe alt-right was not thrilled with Donald Trump’s performance in the debate last night.
  • The Huffington Post says “national Treasure Leslie Jones” is “the only [debate] commentator we need.” Because she did a really good job yelling at Trump to STFU. What a treasure!
  • Protesters disrupted a debate watch party hosted by conservative students at the University of Michigan.
  • Lawrence of Arabia Is a Prime Example of Old Hollywood Sexism,” says New York magazine. Why? Too many dudes in the desert.
  • The University of Tennessee has decided not to punish Professor Glenn Reynolds, the Instapundit, for his controversial Tweet last week.

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/2di1nsK
via IFTTT

The FT Goes Full Fearmonger: Electing Trump “Would Unravel The World”

It would appear that, despite the tsunami of 'spin' across every major media platform since the end of the debate, the establishment is gravely concerned at Donald Trump's proximity to 'their gal' in the polls. With Hillary herself questioning "why am I not 50 points ahead?", The Financial Times has unleashed Martin Wolf to explain to the ignorant mass of deplorables just how apocalyptic a Trump presidency would be…

Buckle up…

Sometimes history jumps. Think of the first world war, the Bolshevik revolution, the Great Depression, the election of Adolf Hitler, the second world war, the beginning of the cold war, the collapse of the European empires, Deng Xiaoping’s “reform and opening up” of China, the demise of the Soviet Union, and the financial crisis of 2007-09 and subsequent “great recession”.

 

We may be on the brink of an event as transformative as many of these: the election of Donald Trump as US president. This would mark the end of a US-led west as the central force in global affairs. The result would not be a new order. It would be perilous disorder.

 

The fact that Mr Trump can be a credible contender for the presidency is astounding. In business, he is a serial defaulter and litigator turned reality TV star. He is a peddler of falsehoods and conspiracy theories. He utters racist calumnies. He attacks the independence of the judiciary. He refuses to reveal his taxes. He has no experience of political office, and incoherent policies. He glories in ignorance. He even hints at a federal default. He undermines confidence in the US-created trade order, by threatening to tear up past agreements. He undermines confidence in US democracy by claiming the election will be rigged. He supports torture and the deliberate killing of the families of alleged terrorists. He admires the former KGB agent who runs Russia.

 

Evidently, a huge number of US voters have lost confidence in the country’s political and economic systems. This is so to an extent not seen even in the 1930s, when voters turned towards an established politician. Yet, for all its challenges, the US is not in such terrible shape. It is the richest large country in the history of the world. Growth is slow, but unemployment is low. If voters were to choose Mr Trump — despite his failings, displayed again in the first presidential debate — this would tell us grim things about the health of the US.

 

It is the world’s leading power, so this is not just a domestic US concern. What might a Trump presidency mean? Forecasting the policies of someone so unpredictable is impossible. But a few things seem at least reasonably clear.

 

The US and its allies remain immensely powerful. But their economic dominance is in slow decline. According to the International Monetary Fund, the share of the high-income countries (essentially, the US and its chief allies) will fall from 64 per cent of global output (measured at purchasing power) in 1990 to 39 per cent in 2020, while the US share will fall from 22 per cent to 15 per cent over this period.

 

While the US military might is still huge, two caveats must be made. One is that winning a conventional war is quite a different matter from achieving one’s aims on the ground, as the Viet­nam and Iraq wars showed. Furthermore, China’s rapidly rising defence spending could create serious military difficulties for the US in the Asia-Pacific region.

 

It follows that the ability of the US to shape the world to its liking will rest increasingly on its influence over the global economic and political systems. Indeed, this is not new. It has been a feature of US hegemony since the 1940s. But this is even more important today. The alliances the US creates, the institutions it supports and the prestige it possesses are truly invaluable assets. All such strategic assets would be in grave peril if Mr Trump were to be president.

 

The biggest contrast between the US and China is that the former has so many powerful allies. Even Vladimir Putin is not a reliable ally for China. America’s allies support the US largely because they trust it. That trust is based on its perceived commitment to predictable, values-based behaviour. Its alliances have not been problem-free, far from it. But they have worked. Mr Trump’s cherished unpredictability and transactional approach to partnerships would damage the alliances irreparably.

 

A vital feature of the US-led global order has been the role of multilateral institutions, such as the IMF, the World Bank and the World Trade Organisation. In binding itself by the rules of an open economic system, the US has encouraged others to do the same. The result has been extraordinary growth in prosperity: between 1950 and 2015, average global real output per head rose sixfold. Mr Trump does not understand this system. The results of repudiation could be calamitous for all.

 

The Iraq war has damaged trust in US wisdom and competence. But the global financial crisis has been even more destructive. Many have long suspected US motives. But they thought it knew how to manage a capitalist system. The crisis devastated that confidence.

 

After all this damage, election of a man as unqualified as Mr Trump would call into question something even more fundamental: belief in the capacity of the US to choose reasonably well-informed and competent leaders. Under a President Trump, the democratic system would lose much of its credibility as a model for the organisation of a civilised political life. Mr Putin and other actual or would-be despots would cheer. Their belief that talk of western values is just hypocrisy would be vindicated. But those who see the US as a bastion of democracy would despair.

 

If Mr Trump were to win, it would be a regime change for the world. It would, for example, end efforts to manage the threat of climate change, possibly forever. But even his candidacy suggests that the US role in the global order risks undergoing a transformation. That role depended not only on American economic and military prowess, but also on the values it represented. For all its mistakes, the ideal of a law-governed democratic republic remained visible. Hillary Clinton is an imperfect candidate. Mr Trump is something else altogether. Far from making America great, his presidency might unravel the world.

So that's it y'all – vote for the corrupt, serial warmonger or the world gets it!

via http://ift.tt/2dppAyN Tyler Durden

Howard Dean Stands By Tweet Accusing Trump Of Snorting Blow, Wants An Answer

We previously observed that among the reasons why last night’s debate broke all TV and social media popularity records, was Donald Trump’s recurring sniffling, which promptly became a viral phenomenon and was dubbed #Trumpsniffle on Twitter. While the discourse was mostly in good humor, and some say Trump had it coming after all the focus on Hillary’s health – with good reason – over the past month, things escalated last night when democrat Howard Dean suggested that Trump is sniffing because he may be a “coke user.”

Moments ago, Dean appears on MSNBC where he was asked to explain the comment and whether he would apologize and delete his tweet. His answer: “no, absolutely”, and added that “the sniffling, the grandiosity, the delusions, the pressured speech — you know, this guy’s already proven himself to be unstable, the question is, why is he unstable?”

The full exchange below.

KATE SNOW: Why did you go there?

 

HOWARD DEAN: Well, you can’t make a diagnosis over the television, I would never do that, but he has some interesting — that is actually a signature of people who use cocaine. I’m not suggesting that Trump does…

 

KATE SNOW: Well, you are suggesting it, actually, in a tweet.

 

HOWARD DEAN: No, I’m suggesting we think about it, because here’s the interesting constellation — he sniffs during the presentation, which is something that users do, he also has grandiosity, which is something that accompanies that problem, he has delusions — I’m not talking about being crazy, but for example when he told everybody he was very smart not to pay taxes then denied he said it after he said it in front of a hundred million people, it’s not that he’s delusory about it, it’s that he thinks somehow he’s not going to get caught. That is delusional. He has trouble with pressured speech. He interrupted, as you pointed out, Hillary Clinton 29 times, he couldn’t keep himself together. So look, do I think at 70 years old he has a cocaine habit? Probably not, but you know, it’s something I think it’d be interesting to ask him and see if he ever had a problem with that.

 

KATE SNOW: So, as a physician and as a medical person yourself, you’re suggesting that we ought to look at whether the Republican candidate for president has a cocaine habit.

 

HOWARD DEAN: No, I don’t think he has a cocaine habit, but again I don’t make any diagnoses over the television. I don’t, I think that’s wrong, I think doctors shouldn’t do it, doctors have done it in the past and they shouldn’t do it. But I just was struck by the sniffing and then by his behavior, which all sort of came together, these four symptoms. Do I think he has a cocaine habit? I think it’s unlikely that you could mount a presidential campaign at 70 years old with a cocaine habit, but it was pretty striking.

 

HOWARD DEAN: Something funny was going on with Trump last night. Do I think it was cocaine? Probably not. But again, the sniffling, the grandiosity, the delusions, the pressured speech — you know, this guy’s already proven himself to be unstable, the question is, why is he unstable?

 

KATE SNOW: You’re not going to delete the tweet? You’re not going to — you don’t regret it? And…

 

HOWARD DEAN: No.

 

KATE SNOW: — you don’t apologize for it, is that right?

 

HOWARD DEAN: No, absolutely right.

All we can say, again and again, is best… election… ever.

via http://ift.tt/2dpH6OP Tyler Durden

US Bonds, Stocks Rally As Most Systemically Dangerous Bank In The World Collapses

It's probably nothing…

 

But hey, Hillary 'reportedly' won the debate so buy stocks?

 

Which reminds us…

 

Don't think Deutsche Bank matters?

 

Post-Fed, Gold was shellacked today (despite very modest move higher in the USD Index) leaving long-bonds the big winner…

 

Post-Fed, Trannies are outperforming  with today's bounce shifting The Dow positive…

 

On the day Trannies and Nasdaq were best, all helped by a panic bid around 12ET…

 

VIX was monkey-hammered to a 12 handle once again to ensure momentum carried stocks higher…

 

The Treasury curve flattened further today with the short-end unch as long-end yields fell 2-4bps…

 

The USD Index rose very modestly on the day with CAD weakness offset by Yen strength…

 

Crude whipsawed around again on headlines from Algiers, but ended near the lows on 'no deal' but Silver was worst hit…

 

Crude back at where it started last week before the API inventory surge (which hits again tonight)

 

Charts: Bloomberg

via http://ift.tt/2d7GSfX Tyler Durden

Russian Hackers Breached Democrats’ Cell Phones: FBI

Those Russian hackers never sleep.

Having had most of their computers hacked, a new threat has emerged for Democrats. Reuters reports that FBI investigators believe “foreign hackers” have targeted mobile phones used by “a small number of Democratic Party figures, possibly including elected officials” according to four political and government sources said on Tuesday.

Reuters notes that the hacking attempts occurred within the last month or so, and adds that two sources said investigators believe that, like hackers who earlier attacked the central data servers of key Democratic Party organizations, the mobile phone attacks were carried out by hackers connected to the Russian government.

One source said that some of those whose phones were targeted by hackers had been asked by the FBI to turn over their phones so that investigators can “image” them.

While this amusing, and seemingly never-ending barrage, of accusations aimed at the Kremlin long ago entered the twilight zone of McCarthyist paranoia, we point out that such media “warnings” – most recently in the case of the DC Leaks hack of Soros’ Open Society Foundation – usually take place just before a major data dump is revealed or leaked. Which suggests that we may be due for another such notable disclosure.

There is of course, a more conspiratorial explanation: should enough compromising data leak, especially if it includes information that can pressure Hillary in the polls, then the DHS can simply accuse Russia of electoral interference and call off the elections as a matter of national security. We can only hope that this particular conspiracy theory will remain purely in the realm of “theory”, and not “fact.”

via http://ift.tt/2dxm3dZ Tyler Durden

The Onion Fact-Checks Last Night’s Debate

Addressing issues ranging from national security to trade to their personal controversies, Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton and Republican nominee Donald Trump squared off in the first presidential debate Monday. The Onion takes a look at the validity of their bolder claims:

"I don’t believe she does have the stamina. To be president of this country, you need tremendous stamina.” -Donald Trump

  • Stamina is actually one of Clinton’s highest attribute categories in terms of skill points, after agility and metallurgy.

“I was against [the Trans-Pacific Partnership] once it was finally negotiated and the terms were laid out.” -Hillary Clinton

  • False. She was against the TPP once it was finally negotiated and it was clearly electorally unviable.

“My father gave me a very small loan.” -Donald Trump

  • It is true that $1 million does not get you far in New York City.

“Manufacturing jobs went up also in the 1990s, if we’re actually going to look at the facts.” -Hillary Clinton

  • No one is actually looking at the facts.?

“No wonder you’ve been fighting ISIS your entire adult life.” -Donald Trump

  • It is well-documented that Hillary Clinton was pro-ISIS from 1982 to 1985.

“We need to move on.” -Lester Holt

  • True.

“[NAFTA] is the single worst trade deal ever approved in this country.” -Donald Trump

  • This is false. The worst trade deal in this country’s history was when the SuperSonics dealt Scottie Pippen to the Bulls for Olden Polynice.

“We were born before the wind, also younger than the sun.” -Hillary Clinton

  • Confirmed by Van Morrison in 1970.

“The 28 countries of NATO.” -Donald Trump

  • You’ve got to give credit where credit is due; there are in fact 28 countries in NATO.

“Violent crime is one half of what it was in 1991.” -Hillary Clinton

  • Come on, is this really going to change what you think one way or another?

“I say who makes these? We lose on everything. All I said, that it’s very possible that if they don’t pay a fair share, because this isn’t 40 years ago where we could do what we’re doing. We can’t defend Japan, a behemoth, selling us cars by the million.” -Donald Trump

  • What he doesn’t tell you is, and this by the way, if you have any doubt in your whatever mind, look it up, because anyone can know this or tell this as the case had been, that you have these alliances and they are making America to where we lose.

Source: The Onion

via http://ift.tt/2d1rwL4 Tyler Durden

Elon Musk Wants You To Be Able To Afford To Move to Mars

Right now, Space X founder Elon Musk is giving a Steve Jobs–style presentation of his plan for Mars colonization. It’s part science lecture (“Here’s a slide with the different types of rocket fuel”), part time-share presentation (“It’ll be, like, really fun to go, you’ll have a great time.”), part TEDtalk (“Technology does not automatically improve, it only improves if a lot of really strong engineering talent is applied to the problem”), part in-joke extravaganza (the slide marked FUNDING starts with “Steal Underpants”).

Here’s a good writeup of what we already know about the technical specs of the mission: He’s talking about a 2018 start with a 2024 launch to Mars building on tech Space X is already using to provision the International Space Station.

From the presentation, here are three key Venn Diagrams. They are simultaneously duh and oooh:

This notion, that a vanity project for the rich could become a new frontier for the middle class, is too often overlooked. It’s central to Musk’s motivation and it should always have been central to our understanding of space colonization and exploration. It hasn’t been, until now.

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/2cTtz1F
via IFTTT

Elon Musk Wants You To Be Able To Afford To Move to Mars

Right now, Space X founder Elon Musk is giving a Steve Jobs–style presentation of his plan for Mars colonization. It’s part science lecture (“Here’s a slide with the different types of rocket fuel”), part time-share presentation (“It’ll be, like, really fun to go, you’ll have a great time.”), part TEDtalk (“Technology does not automatically improve, it only improves if a lot of really strong engineering talent is applied to the problem”), part in-joke extravaganza (the slide marked FUNDING starts with “Steal Underpants”).

Here’s a good writeup of what we already know about the technical specs of the mission: He’s talking about 2024 launch and a goal of a million people on planet in relatively short order.

From the presentation, here are three key Venn Diagrams. They are simultaneously duh and oooh:

This notion, that a vanity project for the rich could become a new frontier for the middle class, is too often overlooked. It’s central to Musk’s motivation and it should always have been central to our understanding of space colonization and exploration. It hasn’t been, until now.

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/2cTtz1F
via IFTTT

Nashville Cops Don’t Want to Enforce Airbnb Regulations Because They’d Rather Focus on Stopping Actual Crime

Police in Nashville, Tennessee, have been asked to train at least 10 officers to enforce new regulations targeting users of homesharing websites like Airbnb, but the cops say they would prefer to focus on preventing crimes that actually have victims.

In a letter to Mayor Megan Barry, more than two dozen members of the Nashville Metro Council have asked for police to be deployed to enforce the city’s year-old rules that limit how many guests can stay in residential homes, The Tennessean reports. Nashville’s homesharing regulations also require hosts to obtain a permit from the city government and cap short-term rentals at no more than 3 percent of all homes in a given neighborhood—so if 3 percent of your neighbors are listing their homes through a room-sharing service, you won’t be allowed to get a permit even if you meet all the other qualifications the city has set.

The members of the Metro Council are frustrated that there’s no easy way to enforce those rules. Their solution is to have a specially-trained police force that could go door-to-door in the city to make sure no one is illegally granting permission for strangers to sleep in their homes. Currently, the city’s codes enforcement officers are responsible for the short term rental regulations.

“No law is going to be effective if we don’t have better enforcement,” wrote Metro Councilman Colby Sledge on his website this week in support of having police enforce short-term rental regulations.

Sledge also sponsored legislation that passed the Metro Council last week reducing the number of guests allowed in a residential home from 12 to eight.

In a statement to Reason, Metro Police spokesman Dan Aaron said enforcement of short term rental issues is not something law enforcement should be doing.

“With Nashville’s continued growth, our police officers have plenty on their plates answering calls for service and proactively working to deter criminal activity,” Aaron said.

He said the police department already responds to noise complaints and other “quality of life issues” like vehicles blocking driveways—two of the examples given by the Metro Council members in their call for additional policing aimed at Airbnb users.

The police should enforce Airbnb laws by focusing on noise and nuisance violations, just as they enforce those laws for other homeowners, says Mark Cunningham, a spokesman for the Beacon Center of Tennessee, a free market think tank in Nashville that’s involved in a lawsuit challenging the city’s per-neighborhood cap on short-term rentals.

“This is yet another example of local government wasting the money of taxpayers and putting Nashvillians’ safety at risk,” Cunningham told Reason via email. “Instead of making our police work to enforce illegal and unconstitutional laws that take away property rights from citizens, they should be focused on stopping real crime.”

Mission creep is a very real problem for America’s police forces. That’s how you end up with Department of Homeland Security cops busting unlicensed massage therapists. In Nashville, the police department deserves credit for resisting the politically-driven effort to use force against people who aren’t committing any crimes by renting their homes or spare bedrooms.

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/2d7iYTw
via IFTTT