The Cosmopolitan’s Case Against Donald Trump or, Make Mine Mises! [Reason Podcast]

Donald Trump has promised to slash taxes, junk regulations, repeal Obamacare, and expand school choice.

Given all that, shouldn’t libertarians give him at least a little (maybe even a whole lotta) love?

No, says Reason Senior Editor Brian Doherty in the latest Reason podcast, because Trump is actually trafficking in a “Dangerous Anti-Libertarian Nationalism” that is actually the antithesis of classical liberalism. “Free trade and free migration are…the core of the true classical liberal (libertarian) vision as it developed in America in the 20th century,” says Doherty, author of Radicals for Capitalism: A Freewheeling History of the Modern Libertarian Movement. “If you don’t understand and embrace them, you don’t understand liberty, and you are not trying to further it.”

In a wide-ranging conversation, Doherty and Nick Gillespie talk about the rise of Trump and the role of Steve Bannon in the president’s administration; why being a “rootless cosmopolite” isn’t in any way antithetical to patriotism; and why the great Austrian-born economist Ludwig Von Mises—a Jew who escaped Nazism—provides the strongest possible case against Trump’s “America First” message.

Produced by Mark McDaniel.

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CPAC: Fiorina Offers a Welcome Counterpoint to Trump’s View of Small Government Conservatism

It says a lot about the Republican Party that when their voters went looking for a political outsider presidential candidate, they picked Donald Trump over Carly Fiorina.

Fiorina, the former head of software company HP who briefly sought the presidency last year (and even more briefly ran, weirdly, as Ted Cruz’ vice presidential nominee during the primaries), before being overwhelmed by the unstoppable force that was Donald Trump.

Both Trump and Fiorina spoke at the Conservative Political Action Conference on Friday, but the two appearances could not have been more different.

Trump was brash, as always, and continued to talk about his victory over Hillary Clinton—and how the media, pollsters, pundits, the professional political class, and everyone else failed to see it coming. No one knows when, if ever, Trump will shift out of campaign mode.

When he did talk about policy, not much of it sounded very conservative, at least not in the sense that you might expect at an event like CPAC, which brings together right-wing activists and power brokers from around the country. He talked about expanding the power of the federal government to round up illegal immigrants, to spend untold billions of dollars on the construction of an unnecessary border wall, and to spend more money on the military (though he also bemoaned how tax money is wasted by that very same military).

Perhaps the most stunning thing: he got applause for all of it.

Fiorina never once mentioned Trump’s name, but clearly aimed to strike a different tone. Rather than recapping the past six months, she was looking forward.

“It’s fun to have a fight and its’ really fun to have a fight when you win, but now that we’ve won, it’s important to bring people along,” she offered.

While it would be hard for a libertarian or a libertarian-leaning Republican to find much to like about Trump’s speech, Fiorina talked about taking “big ideas” like free market capitalism and turning it into something meaningful for people—relating a story about going to New Delhi, India, to help entrepreneurs start a business.

She advocated for decentralized planning, local control, and letting individuals and markets solve problems because that’s the best way to get results.

“We know that, in life. You don’t need to be political to know that,” she said. “You put too much power in the hands of a bureaucrat somewhere, that power is going to be abused.”

That’s all standard CPAC fare, or at least it would be in any other year.

Would Fiorina have been a better president than Trump? Who knows. She almost certainly would have been a better advocate for small government. Draw your own conclusions about what that says about the conservative movement in 2017.

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CNN Responds To Being Blocked From White House Press Briefing

Predictably, those members of the media who were locked out of a Q&A session with White House spokesman Sean Spicer, have reacted furiously, led by CNN who on Friday sharply condemned the White House’s decision to block it and several other outlets.

“This is an unacceptable development by the Trump White House. Apparently this is how they retaliate when you report facts they don’t like. We’ll keep reporting regardless,” CNN said in a statement.

As discussed previously, on Friday afternoon Spicer held an off-camera “gaggle” with reporters in his West Wing office, as opposed to the regular briefing in the White House briefing room. CNN, together with the New York Times, The Hill, Politico, BuzzFeed and the Los Angeles Times, was barred from the briefing, while outlets such as ABC, CBS, NBC, Fox, Reuters, Bloomberg, McClatchy and Breitbart, The Washington Times and One America News Network were all allowed in.

The hand-picked gaggle came hours after President Trump lashed out at the press during his speech at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in Maryland, telling the audience, “I want you all to know that we are fighting the fake news,” a term he has used toward both CNN and The New York Times.

“I called the fake news the enemy of the people,” Trump told CPAC. “They are the enemy of the people, because they have no sources. They just make them up when there are none.”

Since neither Trump, nor CNN or any other media outlets are likely to de-escalate, we look forward to finding what mushroom clouds this particular nuclear war between the Trump administration and the “enemy of the people” press will bring. We certainly anticipate an angry Trump tweet in the most immediate future.

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Weekend Reading: Errant Thinking

Submitted by Lance Roberts via RealInvestmentAdvice.com,

Last week, I penned a post entitled “You Can’t Time The Market?” which was subsequently picked up on the Seeking Alpha website. It is always interesting for me to read the comments on the articles as it gives me a lot of insight as to the psychology of individuals currently investing in the markets. Specifically, it also tells me much about individuals who have never been through a “reversion” in the markets.

The article was addressing an individual’s ability to capture the upside in the market while missing a bulk of the downside by employing even a simple moving average strategy. To wit:

“While there are many sophisticated methods of handling risk within a portfolio, even using a basic method of price analysis, such as a moving average crossover, can be a valuable tool over the long term holding periods. Will such a method ALWAYS be right? Absolutely not. However, will such a method keep you from losing large amounts of capital? Absolutely.”

“By using some measures, fundamental or technical, to reduce portfolio risk by taking profits as prices/valuations rise, or vice versa, the long-term results of avoiding periods of severe capital loss will outweigh missed short term gains. Small adjustments can have a significant impact over the long run.”

Of course, this is where, despite seeing the chart posted above, this comment was left.

“Completely disagree since the market can trade at or near a record top for months or years. Yes, much of the time. Check a monthly chart of SPX. “

Okay, we can do that. As shown, while markets during the FIRST HALF of the market cycle can certainly elevate to extremely overvalued levels as exuberance displaces underlying fundamentals, the SECOND HALF takes generally wipes out all of the gains from previous break-even levels.

Unfortunately, given the fact that investors don’t live forever, unless they have contracted vampirism along the way, the issue of time horizons are a major problem of the recovery process.

It is this errant thinking that continually leads investors to believe that somehow this time is different.

While exuberance in the markets currently reigns as prices continue to reflect economic and fundamental perfection, this time is likely no different than the last. The only difference will be that those with experience will leave the markets with the money from those whom will ultimately gain the experience.

In the meantime, here is what I am reading this weekend.


Fed/Economy


Markets


Research / Interesting Reads


“Stock market bubbles don’t grow out of thin air. They have a solid basis in reality, but reality is distorted by a misconception.” – George Soros

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Trump Speaks at CPAC, Cracking Down on Protesters, College Rape Case Verdict: P.M. Links

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Best Political Speech by an Entertainment Celebrity: New at Reason

Forget the Oscars, the Golden Globes, and the Emmys: the stars are all out for the Hollywood Awards. But who will take home the prize for Best Political Speech by an Entertainment Celebrity?

Click below for full text, links, and downloadable versions.

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Late-Day Panic-Buying Sends Dow To Longest Record Streak In 30 Years

Millions of investors cried out today…

 

"Pause that refreshes" or "Time to panic"?

Of course utter panic buying into the close ensure a green close and an 11th record in a row – the longest streak in 30 years – because everyone knows stocks don't close red into the weekend –

The Dow went green for the first time of the day with 7 seconds to the close!

But this was the 3rd up-week in a row for The Dow (and 5th up-week in a row for the S&P and Nasdaq). Biggest weekly drop for Small Caps in 5 weeks

 

After 15 straight days higher, the S&P tech sector suffered its biggest decline of the year…

 

Financials worst day in 5 weeks, Goldman worst day in Feb, worst week in 5 weeks…The Big Banks were all red on the week…

 

Stocks and Bonds are both up 5 days in a row…

 

But while stocks actually having a down day was briefly possible, it was precious metals that stood out…

Gold rose above $1250 this week for the first time since the election – Gold is up 8 of the last 9 weeks… Silver is up 9 weeks in a row, back above its 200DMA – longest streak since May 2006

 

Bitcoin hit a new record high…

 

Crucially, anxiety in Europe – ignored by most – has sparked panic bids into short-dated German paper

 

Dragging global DM yields lower across the curve…

 

Leaving Treasuries 'cheapest' to Bunds since 2000…

 

Even as 10Y yields tested 3-month lows…

 

This was the 10Y Bond Future's best week since June 2016…

 

The Dollar dropped on the week – the 7th weekly drop of the last 9…

 

Yen was the biggest driver (stronger against the greenback) but we note Cable had been until it tumbled today…

 

Copper was clubbed but bounced back, Precious metals were the week's big winners…

*  *  *

As we asked earlierWho's Right?

The 30Y Yield just dropped back below 3.00% once again and 10Y is back at February lows – what happens next?

 

Despite the exuberance of hope, protection is heavily bid…

 

And if Utility stocks' demand is anything to go by, bond yields have a long way to fall…

 

Finally – absent the hope-strewn soft-survey data, 'hard' data has decidedly deteriorated…

 

So who's right? Stocks… or VIX and Bonds and Real macro data?

 

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Data Fraud At Chinese Province Suggests Local GDP Numbers As Much As 20% “Overcooked”

One month ago, in delightful, if anticipated, confirmation that much if not all of China’s data has been cooked and fabricated as so many skeptics suspected, we reported that according to the People’s Daily, the rust-belt province of Liaoning had admitted to fabricating fiscal numbers from 2011 to 2014. The fabricated economic data was meant to show a state of economic strength with fiscal revenues inflated by at least 20%, and some other economic data were also false, the paper said, without specifying categories.In short, the fabrication opened a hornet’s nest: if one Chinese was doing it, then why not all, and by how much was the real data off?

But why manipulate the numbers to paint a rosier picture? For obvious reasons: the data were made up “because officials wanted to advance their careers.” The fraud misled the central government’s judgment of Liaoning’s economic status, he said, citing a report from the National Audit Office in 2016.

Yet while it was this confirmation of data fraud was gratifying, what was absent was the scale of the fraud, as having the real and fake numbers would provide a useful rule of thumb into just how cooked all of China’s books are, not just those in Liaoning. Conveniently, today we got the answer courtesy of the FT, which reported that the economic output of the province in question shrank by 23% in nominal terms last year, according to official statistics, showing the extent to which officials had previously exaggerated performance in China’s struggling rust-belt.

The sudden drop in provincial gross domestic product is only partly due to a fall in the real economy: in inflation adjusted terms, GDP fell by 2.5 per cent according to the national statistics bureau. The rest was undoing the book cooking: “The main reason for the decline, analysts say, was officials’ attempts to undo the effects of previous over-reporting.”

Further evidence of data fabrication can be seen in Liaoning’s fixed-asset investment figures, which fell 64 per cent in 2016. China International Capital Corporation, a partly state-owned investment bank, said the drop in investment raised doubts about previous years’ figures.

The Lianoing scandal also appears to have convinced even those not overly skeptical, that no Chinese data can be trusted going forward.

“The sharp decline was not only a result of economic downturn but also reflected the correction of its previously inflated data,” wrote CICC last week.

“Liaoning have had stark issues with their data over the past few years. Does that mean other provinces do too? That’s definitely the case — provincial GDP is always higher than national GDP,” said Jonas Short, head of China research at NSBO, an investment bank.

It gets more ironic: the current Premier Li Keqiang was the top official in Liaoning from 2004 to 2007, and once decried GDP data as “man-made” and therefore unreliable. Instead, he preferred three indicators of industrial activity: electricity consumption, railway cargo volume and loans extended by banks. However, such indicators are less relevant to measuring China’s economic output now that the dominance of traditional industries is fading.

While it is still too early to extrapolate, if all of China’s data is “overcooked” by 20%, assuming the country’s debt statistics are reliable, it would mean that instead of 300% as per the IIF’s latest estimate, China’s real debt/GDP is roughly 375%, and fast approaching the world record holder, Japan, which remains untouchable at 400%. The implications for the global economy and capital markets – once a bubble of this magnitude bursts – hardly need elaboration.

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Feminism Needs Firearms, Say ‘Armed and Fabulous’ Women of CPAC

Lawyer Kristi McMains was getting into her car after work when the stranger tackled her. “I fought like hell,” McMains says. “I was doing all that I could, and I still couldn’t get him off of me. .. That’s why I grabbed my gun.”

McMains was one of five women speaking on a Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) panel Friday titled “Armed and Fabulous: The New Normal.” Joining her were gun advocate and writer Antonia Okafor, Kimberly Corban of the National Rifle Association (NRA), Ms. Wheelchair USA 2013 Ashlee Lundvall, and Townhall.com‘s Katie Pavlich, as moderator. Together they extolled the virtues of female firearm ownership as a means for self-protection and slammed liberal feminists who object to their pro-gun stance.

Okafor, who twice cast ballots for Barack Obama before voting Trump in the last election, told the crowd at CPAC that “real female empowerment” must include firearms and the protection of Second Amendment rights.

Education and empowerment are “the crux of the feminist movement, right?” asked Corbin. “Well, we want women to be educated and empowered” about firearms, and yet “we’re being shamed for it.”

McMains also mentioned another kind of shaming: that she experienced after her assault. “People shamed me after my attack—well, you were wearing heels. You looked like a girl!” The experience left her sympathetic to why women are reluctant to come forward when they experience violence.

Talking about violence against women, McMains sounded much like her liberal counterparts. But where their strategy to stop this violence relies on more government, McMains—and her co-panelists—emphasized personal responsibility, urging women to take self-protection into their own hands by learning to use a firearm properly, and keeping it near.

Violence “can happen anywhere, anytime,” said McMains when asked to explain why she supports concealed carry. “I should be able to save my own life anywhere, anytime.”

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Here’s What Happens When Trump Finds Culprit Behind Flynn Intel Leaks

Submitted by Ronn Blitzer via LawNews.com,

Information leaks from within the federal government led to the revelation that now-former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn spoke to the Russian ambassador about U.S. sanctions against his country soon after President Obama announced them. Flynn’s communication has led to speculation that he may have broken the law by talking to a foreign government about a dispute without U.S. authority. He was asked to resign after word got out that he lied to Vice President Mike Pence when he insisted that he didn’t discuss the sanctions with the ambassador.

But to President Donald Trump, the big story is that we know the story. Flynn was caught by U.S. intelligence officials after they wiretapped his communications with the ambassador. They also made transcripts of the conversations, but it wasn’t until that information mysteriously found its way to the Washington Post that anyone knew about it. On Twitter and in public statements, Trump has railed against the leaks, which the Post has only attributed to “current and former U.S. officials,” and heads will roll if he learns who’s behind them. As it turns out, the law is on his side. However, these leaks are notoriously hard to prosecute and are rarely pursued. But, if there are, here’s what could happen to the culprits.

First, there’s the prohibition against disclosure of classified information. This is the obvious one, since any publication of classified material to an unauthorized party is illegal. Under the Espionage Act, 18 U.S.C. § 798, a person guilty of this can end up in prison for 10 years and face a fine. If the leaks involved classified information that was sent to members of the press, the source could end up behind bars if they’re caught. Opponents of Hillary Clinton argued that she violated this with her handling of emails on a private server, but the FBI determined they did not have a strong enough case to prosecute. As LawNewz.com contributor Philip Holloway wrote, the information regarding Flynn’s wiretapped phone calls is Signals Intelligence (SIGINT), which is highly classified, so if one of the “current and former U.S. officials” is identified, they could be in trouble.

The form of the leaks could also determine whether additional charges appropriate. If information was merely spoken to a reporter, that’s one thing, but if actual files or physical materials were transferred, then 18 U.S.C. § 641 could kick in. That law says that anyone who steals or provides for another person’s use “any record, voucher, money, or thing of value of the United States or of any department or agency” is guilty of a crime. If a source of a government leak turned over a physical record, they could face 10 years in prison and a fine for it.

In addition to laws against revealing certain information, if the President discovers a source behind a leak, they could face additional charges if they lie about it. Besides perjury, which applies to anyone who lies under oath, false statements or covering up material facts in a federal investigation, either by the Department of Justice of Congress, can lead to five years in prison.

However, one thing to keep in mind is how rare these type of prosecutions are.  Of all prior administrations, President Obama was the most aggressive when it came to prosecuting leakers. According to a report from the Committee to Protect Journalists, six government employees, plus two contracts including Edward Snowden, were the targets of felony criminal prosecutions for leaking information. Prior to Obama, there were only three such prosecutions in history! And the prosecutions themselves are no easy task. For example, Jeffrey Sterling, a former CIA employee, was charged under the Espionage Act and it took the feds five years to get a conviction. Sterling was sentenced to 3 1/2 years behind bars. The case involved a seven year legal fight over whether James Risen, a New York Times reporter, would be forced to identify his confidential sources and testify.

Of course, none of this matters if Trump doesn’t discover any of the sources behind the leaks. Lately, that seems to be the only information not getting out of the White House.

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