Masterpiece Cakeshop Is Fighting for the First Amendment, Not Against Gay Marriage: New at Reason

A case about compeling someone to design a wedding cake is about free expression, not opposition to gay marriage.

David Harsanyi writes:

This week, the Supreme Court agreed to hear the case of Masterpiece Cakeshop owner Jack Phillips, the man who refused to create a specialty wedding cake for a same-sex couple in Colorado in 2012. Yet the stories that dominate coverage distort the public’s understanding of the case and its serious implications.

For one thing, no matter how many times people repeat it, the case isn’t about discrimination or challenging gay marriage. But when the news first broke, USA Today, for example, tweeted, “The Supreme Court has agreed to reopen the national debate over same-sex marriage.” The headline (and story) on the website was worse; it read, “Supreme Court will hear religious liberty challenge to gay weddings.” Others similarly framed the case. (And, don’t worry, “religious liberty” is almost always solidly ensconced inside quotation marks to indicate that social conservatives are just using it as a facade.)

There is an impulse to frame every issue as a clash between the tolerant and the closed-minded. But the Masterpiece case doesn’t challenge, undermine or relitigate the issue of same-sex marriage in America. Gay marriage wasn’t even legal in Colorado when this incident occurred.

View this article.

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WTF Chart Of The Day – Chicago PMI Spikes To 3 Year High, Beats By 7 Standard Deviations

Even as the rest of the 'soft' survey data catches down to 'hard' data's ugly reality…

Someone or something in Chicago is exuberantly celebrating Trumpmania as the city collapses under a hail of bullets.

Beating expectations by 7 standard deviations, June PMI spike to 65.7 – the highest since May 2014.

 

This is the fifth consecutive increase in busines confidence with new orders at their highest since May 2014 and order backlogs spiking to their highest since July 1994.

The Employment indicator slipped slightly to 56.6 from 57.1 in May. Panelists were concerned about finding reliable and well qualified workers and there was a rise in temporary hires, a growing job market trend in recent months.

Inflationary pressures at the factory gate remained broadly stable after easing for three consecutive months. Panelists reported a continued rise in the price of steel and plastic products, although they mentioned that suppliers were holding off passing through prices increases.

"June's MNI Chicago Business Barometer Survey is a testament to firms' expectations of a busy summer. With Production and New Orders touching levels not seen in three years, rising pressure on backlogs and delivery times has led to higher optimism among firms both in general business conditions and the local economy," said Shaily Mittal, Senior Economist at MNI Indicators.

How long before they 'revise' this farcical print?

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MSNBC’s Donny Deutsch Calls Trump a ‘Disgusting, Vulgar Pig’ In Response to Morning Joe Tweets

 

Content originally published at iBankCoin.com

Donny took the low road, because that’s what gentlemen of his caliber do. Whilst attempting to teach America’s youth about decorum and how to handle adverse conditions, Mr. Deutsch decided to scorch earth his teevee career and partake in a vulgar rant against the President.

Fun Times.

BONUSI: Moron in the background cheering him on.

BONUS II: He challenges his to a schoolyard fight too!

Mark Levin’s take on this kerkuffle, saying MSNBC has a problem.

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Furious China “Outraged” By U.S. Sale Of $1.4BN In Weapons To Taiwan

One day after the US announced it would sell $1.42 billion in weapons to China’s offshore nemesis Taiwan, Beijing lashed out at the United States, saying it was “outraged” and demanded the US revoke immediately its “wrong decision”, saying it contradicted a “consensus” President Xi Jinping reached with his counterpart, Donald Trump, in talks in April in Florida.

The proposed U.S. package for Taiwan includes technical support for early warning radar, high speed anti-radiation missiles, torpedoes and missile components.

The sales would send a very wrong message to “Taiwan independence” forces, China’s embassy in Washington said in a statement. A U.S. State Department spokeswoman said on Thursday the administration had told Congress of seven proposed sales to Taiwan, the first under the Trump administration. “The Chinese government and Chinese people have every right to be outraged,” the embassy said.

Besides token bluster, however, this time China also warned that Trump’s action was counter to the agreement reached with Xi in Palm Beach, suggesting retaliation will likely be imminent. “The wrong move of the U.S. side runs counter to the consensus reached by the two presidents in and the positive development momentum of the China-U.S. relationship,” the embassy said.

This was the second major diplomatic escalation between the US and China in just the past 24 hours, with the US announcing late yesterday the first sanction imposed on Chinese entities for ties with North Korea, a move which likewise was slammed by the Chinese press.

As a reminder, one of Trump’s initial diplomatic snafus was to implicitly recognize Taiwan when he spoke over the phone with its president Tsai Ing-wen shortly after the election, in the process infuriating Beijing. China regards Taiwan as a wayward province and has never renounced the use of force to bring it under its control. China’s Nationalists fled to the island after losing the civil war with China’s Communists in 1949.  The United States is the sole arms supplier to Taiwan.

In the meantime, China’s Defense Ministry said Taiwan was the “most important, most sensitive core issue in Sino-U.S. ties”, warning the United States to end such sales to avoid further damaging peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait.

Trump’s relationship with China has been quite complex: Trump was initially critical of China during his successful 2016 presidential campaign but his meeting at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida with Xi raised hopes for warmer relations. Trump later played up his personal relationship with Xi, calling him a “good man”, and stressed the need for China’s help in reining in a defiant North Korea’s development of nuclear weapons and missiles.

And now, according to the latest report, Trump is allegedly preparing to go back to square 1 and unleash trade war on China and others.

As Reuters notes, China’s anger over the U.S. plan to supply Taiwan with weapons risks undermining Trump’s attempts to press China to help on North Korea.  Beijing’s relationship with Taiwan has been frosty since President Tsai Ing-wen took power in Taipei last year. Tsai leads an independence-leaning party that refuses to recognized Beijing’s “one China” policy.

* * *

Asked about the sales at an event on Thursday evening in Washington, Chinese Ambassador Cui Tiankai said the United States was “incorrigible” when it came to Taiwan, the official Chinese Communist Party People’s Daily newspaper reported on its website.

“But we should still continue to instruct (them) and continue advancing on the right track of China-U.S. relations because this is what truly fits for both countries’ long term interests,” the paper quoted Cui as saying. The sales, which require congressional approval, would be the first since a $1.83 billion sale that former President Barack Obama announced in December 2015, also to China’s dismay. The previous package included two navy frigates in addition to anti-tank missiles and amphibious attack vehicles.

Trump is expected to meet and perhaps chat with Xi Jinping during next week’s G-20 meeting. Since Putin will also be present, and will meet with the US president, there will be plenty of drama.

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Michigan’s Pension Reforms Are Kind of a Big Deal

With a signature from Gov. Rick Snyder, Michigan will be home to some of the most robust pension reforms in the country.

The Michigan Public School Employee Retirement System has on hand about 60 cents for every dollar promised to current workers and retirees and faces more than $29 billion in unfunded liabilities thanks years of inadequate and flawed pension funding.

As in all defined benefit pension plans, Michigan taxpayers are on the hook for the shortfall.

The reforms on Snyder’s desk won’t save taxpayers from that burden, but they will shift future risk away and are designed to prevent the current crisis from getting worse or being repeated, advocates say.

Pension analysts from the Reason Foundation (which publishes this blog and advocated for passage of SB 401) say no other state in the country has embraced reforms that go as far as Michigan’s.

Under Senate Bill 401, new hires will be enrolled in a 401(k)-style pension plan, giving those workers the chance to control their own retirement planning while removing the threat of future unfunded liabilities. That’s similar to reforms signed into law earlier this month in Pennsylvania and in Florida earlier this year.

What makes the Michigan proposal unique is it allows future hires to choose a so-called “hybrid” pension system retaining some elements of the old system with a provision requiring pension system to be shuttered if the gap between the fund’s liabilities and assets falls below 85 percent for two consecutive years.

The mixed approach, allowing teachers to choose between a traditional pension and a 401(k)-style retirement plan, could be a model for other states to follow as they grapple with similar pension troubles, according to the Reason Foundation.

That novel requirement should prevent the state from running up massive pension deficits in future years. Only 13 states enjoyed funding ratios above 85 percent in 2015, the most recent year for which complete data is available, according to the Pew Charitable Trusts. The average state-run pension fund is funded at only 72 percent, according to Pew, which tracks pension debt and advocates for reforms.

“It’s a better system for new teachers. It’s a better system for the taxpayer, and it offers predictability,” state Sen. Phil Pavlov (R-St. Clair Shores), the bill’s lead sponsor, told The Detroit News. “Hopefully going forward, we’ll be able to drive more dollars into the classroom because of the reforms we’re working on.”

The bill cleared the state House by a narrow margin, 55-52, last week after passing the state Senate earlier in the month. Democrats were unanimously opposed to the bill in both chambers, with 13 Republicans joining them (six in the Senate; seven in the House) in opposition.

Opponents of the bill said it was an attack on secure retirements for Michigan teachers, but the current status of the state’s pension fund is anything but secure. Thanks to years of underfunding and a reliance on unrealistic assumptions about future investment returns, Michigan’s teachers’ retirement system lacks the funds necessary to fulfill those retirement promises and is threatening to bankrupt school districts too. In 2002, school districts in the state spent about 12 percent of their budgets on retirement costs. Today, the average is more than 30 percent.

Paying down those obligations will take time—all current teachers and public school employees will remain enrolled in the current pension system and retirees will continue to collect benefits from it—but Snyder’s signature would make a big difference in the state’s long-term fiscal outlook.

“This reform limits the ability to promise benefits now and pay for them later,” said James Hohman, assistant director of fiscal policy at the Mackinac Center, a free market think tank that supported the reforms. “Underfunded pensions have stretched governments thin and provide no value to residents.”

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‘Morning Joe’ Hosts Respond To Trump’s “Bleeding Face” Tweet

Having replied to President Trump's outburst with a snarky tweet yesterday, 'Morning' Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski made a more considered response this morning suggesting…

"We believe it would be better for America and the rest of the world if he would keep his 60-inch-plus flat-screen TV tuned to ‘Fox & Friends.’"

As The Hill reports, The hosts of MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” accused President Trump of lying and called on him to end his “unhealthy obsession with our show” in a Friday morning op-ed responding to the president’s Twitter attack the day before.

“For those lucky enough to miss Thursday’s West Wing temper tantrum, the president continued a year-long habit of lashing out at ‘Morning Joe’ while claiming to never watch it,” Mika Brzezinski and Joe Scarborough wrote for The Washington Post, saying Trump “fit a flurry of falsehoods in his two-part tweetstorm.”

Brzezinski and Scarborough call it "false" that they asked to join Trump three nights in a row, "laughable" that he refused to see them and "a lie" that she was bleeding from a facelift.

"Putting aside Mr. Trump's never-ending obsession with women's blood, Mika and her face were perfectly intact, as pictures from that night reveal…," the co-hosts write. "Mika has never had a face-lift. If she had, it would be evident to anyone watching 'Morning Joe' on their high-definition TV."

 

They add: "She did have a little skin under her chin tweaked, but this was hardly a state secret."

 

Scarborough and Brzezinski said in their Friday op-ed Trump is clearly “not mentally equipped to continue watching our show” if it so upsets him.

We suspect this feud is far from over and with a long holiday weekend ahead, we're sure President Trump will have some downtime to tweet a response.

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“The Fed Is Preparing To Make The Rich Poorer”: BofA

Remember when – for years and years after the grand, global QE experiment started – any suggestion that central bankers are the primary cause behind global wealth inequality, and thus directly responsible for such political outcomes as Brexit and Trump – was branded as a conspiracy theory  by bloggers living in their parents’ basement? We do, because we were accused over and over of just that (our position on the Fed and other central banks should be familiar to all by now).

Well, as of this morning, none other than the chief investment strategist at BofA, Michael Hartnett, is a basement dwelling, tinfoil hatter because in his latest Flow Show report, writes that “central banks have  exacerbated inequality via Wall St inflation & Main St deflation.”

Of course we knew that, you knew that, and pretty much everyone else knew that, but those whose jobs depended on not admitting it, kept their mouths shut terrified of pointing out that the central banking emperor is not only naked, but an idiot. Well, the seal has been broken, and even the biggest cowards from within the financial establishment, most of whom can be found on financial twitter for some inexplicable reason, can speak up now.

However, it’s what Hartnett said next that was more notable, namely that the “massive outperformance of deflation assets versus inflation assets shows central bank failure in War on Deflation…they have failed to boost wage expectations, inflation expectation, “animal spirits” on Main St.”

And, according to the Bank of American, now that central banks are in full reverse mode, there are “two ways to cure inequality…you can make the poor richer…or you can make the rich poorer…” 

So for anyone still confused, about what is taking place right now, the “Fed/ECB are now tightening to make Wall St poorer” because it is “no longer politically acceptable to stoke Wall St bubble.”

Sooner or later the market will get it, and when it does, those who sell first will be happy. Everyone else will be stuck with a market that is locked limited down, with no position sales possible indefinitely, maybe in perpetuity.

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Trump Sending Feds to Chicago, ‘Morning Joe’ Hosts Say ‘Trump Is Not Well,’ Germany Legalizes Same-Sex Marriage: A.M. Links

  • Trump’s Twitter tear this mornings has targeted Republican legislators and Chicago crime, which has “reached such epidemic proportions that I am sending in Federal help,” Trump tweeted.
  • Meanwhile, Mika Brzezinski and Joe Scarborough have been taking to talk shows and The Washington Post (title: “Donald Trump is not well“) in response to the president’s Thursday Twitter rant insulting them.

Follow us on Facebook and Twitter, and don’t forget to sign up for Reason’s daily updates for more content.

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Savings Rate Soars To 8-Month Highs As Trumphoria Fades

Following the collapse in UK savings rate (to 54 year lows) this morning, US Real Personal Spending rates disappointed in the US (rising just 0.1% MoM – the weakest since February). While incomes rose slightly more than expected, spending growth was just 0.1% MoM – the weakest since August 2016.

 

The PCE Deflator grew at its slowest since Nov 2016…

All of which sent the savings rate to its highest since September…after plunging into year end 2016 on Trump confidence it has since surged as spending has slowed down

 

Not exactly the signal that everyone is exuberantly buying the Trump trade.

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What Really Happened When Gold Crashed, Monday June 26?

Let’s establish three facts up front. One, the volume of contracts traded was not “millions” (as at least one conspiracy theorist is claiming). During the 1-minute window when the price of gold dropped from $1,254.10 to a low of $1,236.50 and recovered to $1,247, 18,031 August gold contracts traded. There was negligible volume in the October and December contracts.

Two, the Earth is round. This did not occur while “everyone” was sleeping (as at least one conspiracy theorist asserted). It happened when Europe was open and the UK had come online, at 9:01am British Summer Time (BST). China and Singapore were also open for business at that time.

Three, there was no single large futures trade that “smashed” the price but a large number of smaller trades, with the largest trade being 296 contracts (close to 1 ton or $36 million). The chart below shows milliseconds (1/1000th of a second) from 9:01:00 to 9:01:30 – 30 seconds.

At this timescale a lot of the trading is computer to computer, a fight between algorithms. We say fight, because the trading wasn’t entirely one way. Some time slots show upticks in price.

So what did happen?

We do not believe that one should try to look at whether spot or futures moved first, to determine which one is the driver of a price move. The timing is very close, due to high-speed fiber optic lines connecting market makers’ servers. And errors in timing, especially of a third party observing from the outside, could be greater than the timing of the events being measured.

We have a better way to answer this question. If the price of spot is falling relative to futures, then we know there was selling of spot. If the price of futures is falling relative to spot, then we know there was selling of futures.

This spread, future price – spot price, is called the basis.

Here is a chart of the gold price overlaid with the August gold basis, showing the London trading day (times are GMT, so the chart beginning at 7am is really 8am as the UK is on daylight savings right now). The crash occurred at 8:01AM GMT, which is 9:01 BST.

We see a clear picture: as the price falls, so does the basis. This move was led by selling of futures. No, not a massive conspiracy. Indeed not massive at all.

And it should be noted that the basis did not move all that much. 10 bps. This suggests that though the move may have been driven by futures, there was plenty of selling of metal too.

Of course, if people were buying metal even holding the price constant while some nefarious party was selling futures, such that futures went down by $14, there would be nearly a $14 backwardation in the August contract. That is over 1%, or about 6% annualized.

Now let’s look at the silver price along with the September silver basis, which behaved differently.

A 25-cent drop in price and a 15 bps drop in the basis also seem moderate. Futures sold off a bit, but the selling was by no means exclusive to paper.

And then, an hour later, look at the basis action. Someone—or many someones—is bidding up paper. Buying the dip. However, that had no impact on price, so there was also selling of metal. An hour after the buying began, it subsided. But then began anew. And for the next 5 hours, we see sufficient buying of silver paper, that the basis is pushed up above where it had started even though price peaked below the start and then subsided another nickel.

This is what it looks like when exuberance in the futures market meets selling of physical metal. Especially from around 13:30 GMT.

We call ‘em like we see ‘em.

 

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