If The Economy Is So Great, Why Are 78 Million Americans Hustling For Dimes?

Authored by Rex Nutting, op-ed via MarketWatch.com,

Millions of people are working erratic shifts, or scrambling for extra cash

Even though the official unemployment rate has dropped to a 18-year low of 3.8%, the economy is still broken for a great number of Americans who are living a precarious existence – nearly invisible and economically marginalized.

For millions of Americans, the security and income of a steady 9-to-5 job is as far out of reach as it was during the worst of the Great Recession. Some, of course, have simply given up on finding any job, discouraged about their employment prospects after so many years out of work.

Many others have resorted to scrambling for a buck here and a buck there, cobbling together a patchwork of irregular hours and side hustles.

When viewed from 35,000 feet, the economy looks pretty strong, with stellar profits, higher household consumption and a tight labor market. But most of the economic data glosses over these forgotten Americans. This new army of contingent “workers” don’t seem to fit any of the old classifications. They aren’t employees exactly, nor do they act much like entrepreneurs.

How widespread is this phenomenon? Some say these so-called “alternative work arrangements” are pervasive, encompassing tens of millions of workers. Others say the “gig economy” is tiny, amounting to about one of every thousand hours worked in the United States. It’s hard to say what the right answer is because we’re still arguing over the sparse data we have. Nor do we have common definitions of what we’re trying to study.

78 million hustling for dimes on the side

The Federal Reserve has just published a study that sheds some light on this hidden part of the economy. The Survey of Household Economics and Decisionmaking delves into how people feel about their economic lives and why they make the decisions they do. Surveys like this add shadings that the regular data miss.

The SHED found that about 31% of adults participate in what the Fed called “the gig economy” – work done outside of regular employment structures. That looks huge — about 78 million people. However, most of these people are working five hours a month or less on their side hustles, and the kinds of activities this survey considers to be “gigs” is far broader than what other researchers consider, including selling goods and services online or in real life, or picking up a few hours of babysitting.

About 78 million Americans earn some extra money with a hustle on the side.

Other researchers have narrowed their focus to online gigs such as driving for Uber or Lyft. Economist Larry Mishel of the Economic Policy Institute recently published research showing that about 1% of American workers were engaged in online hustles such as Uber or TaskRabbit.

Few are getting rich off their gigs. Mishel found that Uber drivers made $11.77 per hour on average after deducting their overhead and marginal costs but before paying payroll and income taxes. Most work less than 20 hours a week, and turnover is very high.

A majority of the much-larger group identified as gig workers in the Fed study also work at a main job. Gig work is just a side hustle. For three-fourths of them, gig work provides less than 10% of their family income. Only 5% of gig workers get half or more of their income that way.

But that doesn’t mean it isn’t important to them. Gig work is great for smoothing out unexpected changes in income and to meet unexpected expenses. About 45% of gig workers say the money they earn — as little as it is — is important to them.

One of the great advantages of having a side hustle is that it’s flexible. You work when it’s convenient or necessary for you, not when the boss needs you.

When do you sleep?

Millions of workers would love to have that kind of flexibility, or even a regular schedule that they could count on. 

About three-fourths of those with traditional jobs normally work the same hours each shift, but about 16% — 25 million workers — have varied schedules based on the boss’s needs, the Fed study found. Irregular schedules are twice as prevalent in retail, food services, wholesale and entertainment services. These erratic schedules are more common among part-time workers, and among those armed with only a high-school diploma or less.

About half of these workers get less than three days’ notice for their schedule. About a third get a day or less. Many are on call, which means they aren’t working nor can they really make other plans.

Imagine for a second trying to juggle life when you have no idea what time you’ll have to go to work, or even if you’ll be offered a shift at all. How would you fit in school, or family responsibilities, or a second job? Even regular sleep is a challenge.

Some people love this kind of job, especially if they have some flexibility in their lives about when they’ll work, and how much income they’ll get week by week. If you have a bit of a financial cushion and some free time, these jobs can be great.

But for many others, these jobs can be intolerable. In one study, workers were willing to give up about a fifth of their wages in exchange for a more predictable work life. No wonder these jobs have high turnover.

Economy is still failing millions

Not everybody who has a side hustle or who works a erratic shift wants a regular full-time job, of course. But millions of people would like a job — or a better job, with higher pay, more reliable hours, more generous benefits, and more humane working conditions.

The only way that can happen on a broad scale is for the economy to get even stronger. The Fed ought to get out of the clouds and see that the economy is still failing for many Americans.

The Fed might think that 3.8% unemployment is the “Mission Accomplished” signal. Millions of people scrambling for dimes disagree.

via RSS https://ift.tt/2HfIjq1 Tyler Durden

Reports Of “Active Shooter” On Rooftop Halts San Diego’s Rock’n’Roll Marathon

An active shooter has been reported at the Rock ‘n’ Roll marathon in San Diego.

Preliminary reports are that the shooter is on a rooftop overlooking the finish line at City Parkade on C street, according to NBC San Diego.

Massive police response after a possible shooting at Rock ‘n’ Roll marathon in San Diego, California. Early reports indicate at least four people shot and the suspect is in custody.

In a surprising twist, according to scanner traffic, the suspect is a female.

via RSS https://ift.tt/2kONDI9 Tyler Durden

War Erupts Between Italy’s Government And Soros: “You Profited From The Death Of Hundreds Of People”

A feud has broken out between liberal billionaire activist and fervent Clinton supporter, George Soros, and Italy’s anti-immigrant League party, which on Friday formed a  populist movement in coalition with the 5-Star party, and whose leader Matteo Salvini stepped into his new job as Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of the Interior on Friday, pledging to deport hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants.

Salvini’s League and the 5-Star Movement struck a deal Thursday on a coalition government which will work towards “putting Italians first” (and potentially making life for Europe a living hell with the ongoing threat of Quitaly, which according to JPMorgan may be Rome’s best outcome), ending five days of market volatility and political chaos.

In response, George Soros flipped out, openly suggesting that Salvini might be financed by Vladimir Putin, saying he is “very worried about Russia’s influence on Europe in general and on the new Italian government.” 

I do not know if Salvini was funded by Moscow, but the public has a right to know” said Soros.

Soros translated: Any government who puts their citizens ahead of migrants is now a Putin puppet.

The League’s economics policy chief, Claudio Borghi hit back against Soros, stating (translated):

Soros worried by the Italian government? Then it means that we are going in the right direction… We understand that those who have speculated for years on the skin of immigrants, financing NGOs and smugglers to invade Italy. 

The wind has changed for [Soros] and for all those who have profited from the deaths of hundreds of people.

Soros also admits in Italy’s Corriere della Sera newspaper that the League’s growing influence is a reflection on “Europe’s flawed migration policies that imposed an unfair burden on Italy.” His solution? Instead of resettling the migrants, the EU needs to pay Italy. 

“It follows from the voluntary principle that the problem … cannot be addressed by forced resettlement, but only by the EU financially compensating Italy for the migrants that land there,” wrote Soros, who also warned “There is a strong inclination in Europe to use the occasion [of the new government] to teach Italy a lesson … If the EU follows this line, it will dig its own grave by provoking a negative response from the Italian electorate, which would then re-elect Movimento 5 Stelle and Lega Nord with an increased majority.”

Italy is far from the first European nation to reject Soros’s open border ideology. 

Most markedly, Hungary’s prime minister, Viktor Orbán, based his successful re-election campaign this year on attacking a supposed “Soros plan” to flood Hungary with Muslim migrants. In his opinion piece, Soros rubbishes the accusation as “false and ridiculous”.

He said: “Forcibly relocating [migrants] to other countries is neither possible nor desirable. Other countries, particularly Poland and Hungary, would strenuously resist … I have always advocated that the allocation of refugees within Europe should be entirely voluntary.” -The Guardian

Poland and the Czech Republic have also notably resisted Soros’s policies. 

Ironically, the globalist establishment’s stiff resistance against Salvini and Europe’s populist wave (which on Sunday, swept across Slovenia where the anti-immigration SDS party soundly won the local elections) continues to backfire, and as Bloomberg reports, public support for the League strengthened as polls showed Salvini’s party narrowing the lead of its ally, the Five Star Movement, to less than 2%.

Support for the anti-immigrant League grew to 28.5 percent, compared with 17.4 percent of votes received in March 4 general elections, according to an Ipsos poll published Saturday in Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera. Luigi Di Maio’s anti-establishment Five Star saw its support fall slightly to 30.1 percent from 32.7 percent of ballots on March 4, according to the poll.

And with Italy set to send back hundreds of thousands of immigrants to neighboring liberal European countries, we can only wonder how an “enlightened” and “progressive” Europe will get along with their new migrant residents  the next time the global economy coughs up a hairball and people start to pay closer attention to where their tax dollars are going. 

via RSS https://ift.tt/2HgTnTA Tyler Durden

Going Nowhere Fast

Authored by Lance Roberts via RealInvestmentAdvice.com,

Lot’s Of Action, Not A Lot Of Gain

“Sex is like a fish out of water, there is a lot of flopping around and gasping for air.” – Gary Shandling

The markets were much like Shandling’s view of sex during this holiday-shortened week. There was a lot of flopping around to eventually wind up back where we started. We starting out trading this week with a break of the 100-dma on concerns of Italy and an Italian bank debt crisis. On Wednesday, such was no longer a concern as Fed rate hike odds for June plunged keeping rates “lower for longer.” But Thursday saw another plunge as the current Administration revived concerns over international “trade wars.” Then Friday came with a stronger than expected employment report which was reason enough to rally traders once again.

I’m worn out just writing about it.

The good news is that we did gain a VERY small bit of ground over Friday’s close, but not much.

There wasn’t any “bad news,” so to speak, so the “mediocre” news is that despite the solid rise in the markets from Tuesday’s low, we remain very range bound between the 100-dma and the closing highs over the last couple of weeks as shown below. The tan shaded area is the current consolidation process from the March highs.

The daily “sell signal” continues to keep us more cautious on the market currently. More importantly, we are watching the erosion of the gap between the 50-dma and the 200-dma very closely. A negative cross of those two averages has historically been indicative of more extended difficulties for the market.

Importantly, our current equity exposure remains under strict guidelines:

  • Overweight cash in portfolios as the “risk” of a failure has not been absolved as of yet,
  • Positions are carrying a “tighter than normal” stop-loss level, and;
  • We will quickly add negative hedges as necessary on any failure of support. 

In last week’s missive I updated our “pathway analysis” for the current changes to date.

“As shown by the reddish triangle, the ongoing consolidation process continues. Eventually, this will end with either a bullish or bearish conclusion. There is no “middle ground” to be had here.

  • Pathway #1 – a breakout to the upside on heavy volume that pushes the market through resistance at 2780 and back to old highs. (Probability 20%)
  • Pathway #2a and #2b – a breakout to the upside which fails resistance at 2780. The market then either a) retests the 100-dma and then is able to push to old highs, or, b) fails at 2780 a second time and continues the consolidation process through the summer. (Probability 50%)
  • Pathway #3 – the market breaks down next week on continued geopolitical worries, economic data or some unexpected catalyst and retests the 200-dma. (Probability 30%)

I have increased the more “bearish” probability from 20% last week to 30% this week given the potential triggering of a short-term “sell-signal.” (Lower panel) If the market struggles next week, a triggering of that signal will increase the downward pressure on equity prices.

We will continue to hold our cash position until the market makes some determination as to its direction.”

While nothing has changed from last week in terms of “risk versus reward,” the sideways action last week continues to elongate our pathways within the current consolidation process. As shown below the pathways are being pushed further out which coincides with a late summer conclusion and the end of the “seasonally weak” period.

The analysis of the pathways remains the same this week, in terms of the probabilities for the next potential move, I have added the blacked dashed line from the March highs which provided resistance to the market’s advance on Friday.

Despite the improvement of the markets on Friday, there has been little done to solve the issues that plagued the market this week.

  • Italy is still a problem
  • The elected officials in both Spain and Italy are not particularly “EU” friendly with both recent appointments primarily anti-establishment officials. 
  • The “Trade War” is just starting to heat up with tariffs begin levied on multiple countries and products.
  • China is still a “wild card” in the current negotiations.
  • Deutsche Bank, as discussed below, is a major issue of concern.
  • Fed continues to tighten monetary policy despite signs rates are already becoming problematic.

I suspect these issues will likely bubble to the surface again over the next several weeks.

With the daily short-term “sell signal” registered on Thursday, and remaining so on Friday, it keeps our allocations on hold until next week. While we have removed a bulk of our hedges, for now, we will be quick to add them back should the market begin to show signs of further deterioration.

As noted above, we are still giving a 70% weighting to a more bullish outcome for our holdings. While there are those who wish to focus on the other 30% and proclaim we are bearish, I assure you we are not.

However, when it comes to investing, and the financial markets, nothing is a certainty. Disregarding the potential for a negative outcome layers excessive risk into portfolios which can damage long-term returns. As I penned previously:

“It should be obvious that an honest assessment of uncertainty leads to better decisions, but the benefits of Rubin’s approach, and mine, goes beyond that. For starters, although it may seem contradictory, embracing uncertainty reduces risk while denial increases it. Another benefit of acknowledged uncertainty is it keeps you honest.

‘A healthy respect for uncertainty and focus on probability drives you never to be satisfied with your conclusions.  It keeps you moving forward to seek out more information, to question conventional thinking and to continually refine your judgments and understanding that difference between certainty and likelihood can make all the difference.’

We must be able to recognize, and be responsive to, changes in underlying market dynamics if they change for the worse and be aware of the risks that are inherent in portfolio allocation models. The reality is that we can’t control outcomes. The most we can do is influence the probability of certain outcomes which is why the day to day management of risks and investing based on probabilities, rather than possibilities, is important not only to capital preservation but to investment success over time.

As I have stated before, as a portfolio manager, I am neither bullish or bearish. I simply view the world through the lens of statistics and probabilities. My job is to manage the inherent risk to investment capital. If I protect the investment capital in the short term – the long-term capital appreciation will take of itself.

For those that wish to remain ‘reading impaired,’ there is always “hope” as an investment strategy.”

The market continues to tread water currently. The current question is whether it can keep its head above water until it is rescued, or will fatigue finally drag it under.

Why Deutsche Bank Is Important…

I penned this on Friday, but it is important to understand.

On Tuesday, the market tumbled on concerns over Italian debt. (A problem, by the way, I discussed a couple of years ago.) However, on Wednesday, the market reversed course and apparently the crisis was over. Make no mistake, nothing was fixed or resolved, investors just chose to ignore the problem under the belief that Central Bankers will unite in some form of bailout.

It isn’t just Italian debt, which is magnitudes larger than Greece’s debt crisis, but it is also Spain, and a host of other smaller European countries that continue to ramp up debt in hopes that economic growth will someday bail them out. However, sustained economic growth has failed to appear.

As long as interest rates remain low, and negative in some cases, debt can continue to be accumulated even with weaker rates of economic growth. More importantly, as long as rates remain low, the banking system can continue to play the “hide-the-debt game” through derivatives, swaps and a variety of other means.

But rates are rising, and sharply, on the shorter-end of the curve.

Historically, sharply rising rates have been a catalyst for a debt-related crisis. As long as everything remains within the expected ranges, the complicated “math” behind trillions of dollars worth of financial instruments function properly. It is when those boundaries are broken that things “go wrong” and quickly so.

People have forgotten that in 2008 a major U.S. financial firm crashed as its derivative based exposure “blew up.” No, I am not talking about Lehman Brothers, the poster-child of the financial crisis, I am talking about Bear Stearns.

In just 365-days, Bear Stearns stock went from $159 to $2, with about half of the loss occurring within a few weeks.

Bear Stearns was the warning shot for the financial markets in early 2008 that no one heeded. Within a couple of months, the markets dismissed Bear Stearns as a “non-event” and rallied to a higher level than prior to the event, and almost back to highs for the year.

Remember, there was “nothing to worry about” at the time, even though the Fed was increasing interest rates, as the “Goldilocks economy” could handle tighter monetary policy. Sure, housing had been slowing down, mortgage delinquencies were rising, along with credit card defaults, but there wasn’t much concern.

Today, we are seeing similar signs.

Interest rates are rising, along with delinquencies, defaults, and a slowing housing market. But no one is concerned as the “Goldilocks economy” can clearly offset these mild risks. And no one is paying attention to, what I believe to be, one of the biggest risks to the global financial markets – Deutsche Bank. 

Deutsche Bank is clearly showing signs of financial trouble. More importantly, it is magnitudes larger, in terms of derivative-based exposure, than Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers combined. Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers were not banks and did not hold deposits. As such, they posed significantly less risk to the financial system.

As Doug Kass recently noted:

“The collateral risks to Europe are large – most notably to ECB and to Germany. In it’s extreme it could mean Italy separates from the rest of the EU. To me, as I have written in the past, Deutsche Bank is particularly exposed.

But, to this observer, who has consistently warned about Deutsche Bank being the next Black Swan and the imbalances in the European banking system (particularly in Italy), the risks of a possible negative multiplier effect on other European financial intermediaries and on the region’s economic prospects is profoundly real.”

Oh, and just one last chart. During 2007, and into 2008, the S&P 500 traded sideways in a 150-point range. That range was extended to 300-points before the crash actually occurred.

It was believed to be just a “pause that refreshes.”

Since January of this year, the S&P 500 has been trading in a 300-point range (similar in percentage terms to the period preceding Bear Stearns).

It is also believed to just be a “pause that refreshes.” 

Here is a chart from Zerohedge showing the overlay.

“And finally, there’s this – probably nothing though…”

15-Risk Management Rules

This is probably a good time to review the 15-risk management rules we employ in our process. These rules are not new, or different, but they have been learned, and relearned, over my 30-year career.

Why? Because I am human and every so often I let my emotions get the better of me. I hold a position too long, don’t honor a stop as I should, or try to second guess my own analysis. Inevitably, more often than not, I am retaught one of the following lessons and reminded why they are important.

While our fundamental, economic and price analysis forms the backdrop of overall risk exposure and asset allocation, the following rules are the “control boundaries” for all specific actions.

  1. Cut losers short and let winner’s run(Be a scale-up buyer into strength.)

  2. Set goals and be actionable. (Without specific goals, trades become arbitrary and increase overall portfolio risk.)

  3. Emotionally driven decisions void the investment process.  (Buy high/sell low)

  4. Follow the trend. (80% of portfolio performance is determined by the long-term, monthly, trend. While a “rising tide lifts all boats,” the opposite is also true.)

  5. Never let a “trading opportunity” turn into a long-term investment. (Refer to rule #1. All initial purchases are “trades,” until your investment thesis is proved correct.)

  6. An investment discipline does not work if it is not followed.

  7. “Losing money” is part of the investment process. (If you are not prepared to take losses when they occur, you should not be investing.)

  8. The odds of success improve greatly when the fundamental analysis is confirmed by the technical price action. (This applies to both bull and bear markets)

  9. Never, under any circumstances, add to a losing position. (As Paul Tudor Jones once quipped: “Only losers add to losers.”)

  10. Market are either “bullish” or “bearish.” During a “bull market” be only long or neutral. During a “bear market”be only neutral or short. (Bull and Bear markets are determined by their long-term trend as shown in the chart below.)

  11. When markets are trading at, or near, extremes do the opposite of the “herd.”

  12. Do more of what works and less of what doesn’t. (Traditional rebalancing takes money from winners and adds it to losers. Rebalance by reducing losers and adding to winners.)

  13. “Buy” and “Sell” signals are only useful if they are implemented. (Managing a portfolio without a “buy/sell” discipline is designed to fail.)

  14. Strive to be a .700 “at bat” player. (No strategy works 100% of the time. However, being consistent, controlling errors, and capitalizing on opportunity is what wins games.)

  15. Manage risk and volatility. (Controlling the variables that lead to investment mistakes is what generates returns as a byproduct.)

Everyone approaches money management differently. This is just how we do it.

via RSS https://ift.tt/2kL4knJ Tyler Durden

Anti-Immigrant Party Wins Slovenian Elections As Populist Wave Washes Over Europe

In early March, Deutsche Bank wrote that “the Liberal world order is in jeopardy” as a result of a global populist uprising to a level not seen since World War II, with DB strategist Jim Reid adding that “it’s hard to get away from the fact that populism is currently going through an explosion in support at present.” The unprecedented ascent of populism across Europe, where the ECB is rapidly losing the war against anti-globalist forces which made its creation possible, is shown in the chart below: it reveals that whereas in 2000 only 8.5% of the European vote went to populist states, in 2017 that number rose to 24.1%…

… tied with the highest print on record, achieved just before the start of World War II.

Well, as of 2018 we can make it well above 25%, because as of Sunday afternoon, Slovenia’s anti-immigrant, populist party, Janez Jansa’s SDS-EPP, has won the election with 28% of the vote, according to exit polls which were made available after voting ended at 5pm GMT. The preliminary result is due by 9pm.

In the hugely fragmented vote, the Adriatic country’s 1.7 million-strong electorate was set to choose between 25 parties, with final opinion polls putting the centre-right Slovenian Democratic Party (SDS) first on up to 24.5%. And, according to partial results late on Sunday, that estimate may have been low, with the party taking roughly 28% of the vote.

The problem in Slovenia, which now may face a period of government turbulence, is that most other parties have said they are reluctant to join a coalition with the SDS, whose leader Janez Jansa acknowledged any post-election negotiations would be difficult.

“We will probably have to wait for some time (after the election)… before serious talks on a new government will be possible,” Jansa told reporters after voting in Sentilj pri Velenju. Jansa has already served twice as prime minister – from 2004 until 2008 and again from 2012 to 2013. However, he has been hampered by corruption accusations, even serving time in prison in 2014 on graft charges related to Slovenia’s largest-ever corruption scandal, although the country’s Constitutional Court overturned the conviction in April 2015.

As Reuters points out, the election was called in March after centre-left Prime Minister Miro Cerar resigned, weeks before the scheduled end of his term of office, after the Supreme Court ordered a new referendum on a railway investment project championed by his government.

While the final vote details are still pending, the divided nature of the vote means the SDS would need to ally with at least two other parties to gain a majority in the 90-seat parliament, the Telegraph notes. But so far most other parties have demurred at joining forces with the SDS, which has the open support of Hungary’s anti-establishment Prime Minister Viktor Orban, and for obvious reasons:  the SDS wants to follow neighbouring Hungary’s tough anti-migration policies, and according to the just concluded vote, so does a plurality of the Slovenian population.

“We believe that today a first step will be made towards Slovenia becoming a country that will put the well-being and security of Slovenians first,” Mr Jansa said.

* * *

So what happens next as this tidal wave of populist sentiment continues to wash over Europe? Here is what Jim Reid said back in March:

As of now the rise in populism hasn’t yet destabilised markets however we find it difficult to get away from the fact that uncertainty levels are bound to remain high while such power brokers remain in major elections. Indeed the unpredictability of  Trump’s policies is such an example, with the recent tariff threats which have subsequently escalated market concerns about a trade war being one. At a time when global central banks are moving towards an unprecedented era of tightening and dealing with years of massive asset purchases, risks from rising populist support has the ability to seriously disturb the prevailing equilibrium of the last few years and subsequently markets.

While Reid notes that this is more of a slow burning issue over the next few years, he concedes that populism remains the biggest threat “to the post-1980 globalisation/liberalism world order.” But the biggest risk, of course, is that the last time populism and populist anger was this high, the world was wrapped in a war that killed tens of millions of people. One wonders what happens this time when the biggest distraction ever created for mass consumption: the idea of paper wealth and unbooked profits – evaporates following the next market crash, and how many millions will die as a result. One thing is certain: the global drums of war have not beaten louder in almost a century.

via RSS https://ift.tt/2He9cu9 Tyler Durden

Clapper: The U.S. Meddled In Foreign Elections And Conducted Regime Change In The “Best Interests Of The People”

Former head of US Intelligence James Clapper just admitted that the United States was simply looking out for citizens of various countries “when we tried to manipulate or influence elections or even overturned governments,” a statement directly at odds with the moral high ground claimed by President Obama and other US officials on the topic of Russian election meddling.

In an interview with Bloomberg’s Tobin Harshaw published Saturday, Clapper – who is promoting his new book “Facts and Fears,” said “I guess the way I think about that is that through our history, when we tried to manipulate or influence elections or even overturned governments, it was done with the best interests of the people in that country in mind,’ adding that the US has a “traditional reverence for human rights.”

According to a February 2016 report by Dov H. Levin, the United States has engaged in over 80 instances of election meddling or regime change between 1946 and 2000, while a February analysis by the New York Times notes that election meddling is hardly unprecedented. 

“If you ask an intelligence officer, did the Russians break the rules or do something bizarre, the answer is no, not at all,” said Steven L. Hall, who retired in 2015 after 30 years at the C.I.A., where he was the chief of Russian operations. The United States “absolutely” has carried out such election influence operations historically, he said, “and I hope we keep doing it.”NYT

We’ve been doing this kind of thing since the C.I.A. was created in 1947,” said Loch K. Johnson, a University of Georgia professor who began his career in the 1970s investigating the CIA for the Senate.

We’ve used posters, pamphlets, mailers, banners — you name it. We’ve planted false information in foreign newspapers. We’ve used what the British call ‘King George’s cavalry’: suitcases of cash.”

Don’t forget, the United States has been supporting Al-Qaeda linked terrorists in Syria – guys who were undoubtedly high-fiving on 9/11, in order to overthrow Syrian President Bashir al Assad (in the best interests of Syrian people, we’re sure).

And while the United States has been conducting regime change and election meddling for over 70 years, President Obama’s stated foreign policy objectives as summed up in a November 2016 report in the Washington Post: “not every global problem has an American solution.”

“Obama had run on a platform of ending the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and regaining the trust of the world. Facing the most significant financial crisis in generations, he stressed the importance of sharing more of the burdens and responsibilities of global leadership with others.

In other words; the United States will meddle in elections and conduct regime change, but when it comes to dealing with the fallout, not our problem. Hilarious.  

via RSS https://ift.tt/2kLZ6Is Tyler Durden

Barbed Wire & Bullion: South African Officials Scramble To Block 1000s From Gold Rush Frenzy

A new gold rush has begun

…as thousands of South Africans have descended on the tiny village of KwaMachi in the far-south of KwaZulu-Natal hoping that the gold that has been discovered there will change their lives for the better

News24 reports that thousands of men and women, old and young, including school children from the village and surrounding villages, were busy digging for the precious metal with axes, pickaxes, shovels and chisels.

Umuziwabantu Mayor Dixie Nciki told News24 on Tuesday that about 5 000 people had gathered at the site on Monday night.

She said the gold frenzy began over the weekend when news of the discovery in KwaMachi spread to other areas in the province.

She said the site where the “gold” was discovered last Wednesday had been identified to be dug up for quarry stones that would be used to pave the gravel roads in the area.

“But construction workers did not get the usual black quarry that they are used to, instead they discovered a material that looked like gold. They then reported the matter to the area’s inkosi (Zulu chief) Machi,” said Nciki.

Hamza Manuel, 25, of Harding, told News24 that he had come to the village with his friends to get the “gold”, so that they could make quick cash. He said they had arrived in a car on Wednesday morning and had carried lunch with them, because they were going to the site to work.

“We found gold here in Harding. The evidence is right here. As you can see, these stones have got a little bit of gold in them. Some people are actually finding bigger pieces. This is just a small sample of what’s in there,” he says while pointing at the site.

“There’s actually gold here.”

Another “gold” digger, 23-year-old Zithobe Radebe from Umzimkhulu, which is about an hour and a half away from Harding, told News24 that he and his friends had hired a bakkie to get to the “village of gold”.

“I came here to dig gold here in KwaMachi. I used a pickaxe and a chisel to dig for it,” he said.

He told News24 that he would sell his almost fist-sized “gold” stone that he dug up on Wednesday for R300 (around $25 – suggesting this is in fact ‘fool’s gold’ or iron pyrite). He said he would use the stones he dug up on the day to live on since there were no employment opportunities in Harding.

A woman from the village, who spoke to News24 while digging at the site, said the “gold” would turn her family’s life around.

“I’ll be able to sell the gold and make money to buy food and clothes for my family,” she said.

The woman, who asked not to be named, said she believed the stones were real gold.

But of course, where there is entrepreneurial wealth being extracted (fool’s gold or not), the government has stepped in to block the gold-diggers in an effort at pre-confiscation. As more and more gold-diggers poured into the area, Mayor Nciki then reported the unusual find to the Ingonyama Trust Board, which then instructed that the site be secured.

She said it had not been proven that the material on sale at the site was real gold, but samples of the stones had been taken to Pretoria for testing, as there were no available labs in the province where the tests could be conducted.

The local Zulu chief told News24 on Tuesday that a fence had been erected around the site to prevent people from going into the area at night.

Police have been deployed in the area, but they can’t deal with the high number of people who go to the site. Today there was a boy who was injured when a rock fell on him and he was rushed to hospital,” Machi said at the time.

He condemned those who had come to the area in droves to buy the “gold”.

“People from outside the area are coming in their cars in large numbers to buy the gold. That’s making the situation worse,” said Machi.

But, as News24 reports, a man who walked past the police while they were busy putting up the fence, exclaimed…

“We will return at night. Let them close it now, we don’t care. This is our gold. Now government wants to take away what’s rightfully ours,”

via RSS https://ift.tt/2Hi5PlT Tyler Durden

“Unacceptable”: China Blasts Mattis For “Irresponsible Comments” About South China Sea Islands

A Chinese general on Saturday defended Beijing’s military build-up in the South China Sea, blasting the “irresponsible comments” made by U.S. Defense Secretary James Mattis, who on Saturday accused  Beijing of threatening its neighbors in the heavily disputed waters and warned China of “consequences” if it continues weaponizing the South China Sea.

“Any irresponsible comments from other countries cannot be accepted,” Lieutenant General He Lei told  reporters at the IISS Shangri-La Dialogue, a civilian and military defense summit in Singapore, after Mattis warned that “there are consequences that will continue to come home to roost if China does not find a way to work more collaboratively with nations that have interests in the disputed region.” He then clarified that “as long as it is on your own territory you can deploy the army and you can deploy weapons”, indicating that to China the “contested” islands are anything but.

Lieutenant General He Lei speaking to reporters on Saturday at the IISS Shangri-La Dialogue. (Source: CCTV+)

“We see any other country that tries to make noise about this as interfering in our internal affairs,” General He said, referring to the Pentagon chief’s comments.

Beijing’s recent deployment of anti-ship cruise missiles, radar-jamming equipment, and strategic bombers to the disputed islands have dramatically increased geopolitical tensions around the region. In an attempt to counter rising territorial tensions, the Chinese general said Beijing’s militarization of the islands were for “national defense” purposes.

“They are for the purpose of avoiding being invaded by others … As long as it is on your own territory you can deploy the army and you can deploy weapons,” he said.

For years Washington has agitated Beijing by claiming “freedom of navigation”, sailing its military vessels and flying its warplanes around the heavily disputed islands in the South China Sea. Last Sunday, we reported that the U.S. Navy conducted its “freedom of navigation” patrols near the islands to demonstrate the right to sail through the international waters.

“We did not do freedom of navigation for America alone,” Mattis said in his speech while referencing the recent freedom of navigation drill. “We do freedom of navigation, give freedom for all nations, large and small, that need to transit those waters for their own prosperity and they have every reason to do so,” he added, but what he really meant is that the US continues to engage in ultimately futile attempts to spook China into military submission, even though such overtures are clearly having the opposite ffect.

Beijing, meanwhile, claims that most of the resource-rich sea, which overlaps claims from Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan, and Vietnam, belongs to China. To reinforce such claims, Beijing quickly built artificial islands and erected military bases on Parcels and Spratly islands. Regarding trade, more than U.S. five trillion dollars in shipping trade flow through the region per annum.

“China’s policy in the South China Sea stands in stark contrast to the openness our strategy promises, it calls into question China’s broader goals,” said Mattis, accusing Beijing of “intimidation and coercion.”

IISS Shangri-La Dialogue 2018 – James N. Mattis delivers opening plenary speech. (Source: IISS) 

General He made it obvious in his interview that all islands in question are “part of China’s territories,” referencing historical records to underscore China’s claim: “It is undeniable that… there are soldiers that are stationed there and there are weapons that are deployed there. It is a symbol of China’s sovereignty,” the general said. “The weapons have been deployed for national defense.”

General He also called out Washington’s “provocative” freedom of navigation tactics as nothing more than the “true root of the militarization of the South China Sea.”

“It is those that are shouting about ‘the militarization of the South China Sea’ who are militarizing the South China Sea,”He added. US military patrols and fly-bys “jeopardize China’s security and challenges China’s sovereignty,” the general explained.

He also pointed out that there have been no military vessels that encountered commercial vessels while sailing through the heavily disputed waters.

“I’ve never encountered any comments that commercial, military vessels were obstructed when they traverse the South China Sea…There are no problems with freedom of navigation.”

From Mattis to General He militant jawboning, followed by China’s warning that any tariffs by Trump would kill a trade deal between the US and China, it appears that Sino-American relations continue to stumble, even as the heavily disputed waters in the South China Sea emerge as the next potential geopolitical and military flashpoint. Which, when one considers that according to the RAND Corp, and the IMF, China will surpass the US as the world’s leading military superpower some time in the next 2 decades…

… it is hardly surprising that, as Thucydides Trap lays out, it is only a matter of time before armed conflict between the two nations breaks out.

Watch: Chinese Military Official: Territorial Integrity China’ s Core Interest

via RSS https://ift.tt/2JpXyBG Tyler Durden

New Jersey Abruptly Freezes Spending As It Nears Financial Disaster

New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy’s administration ordered an immediate halt to state spending and hiring, because of what NJ.com describes as “an esoteric accounting maneuver caught up in charged state budget talks.”

In short, if the state doesn’t quit non-essential spending or the state Legislature doesn’t allow the Murphy administration to shuffle spending from one part of the budget to another, they risk ending next month’s fiscal end-of-year in the red, according to the New Jersey Treasury Department.

State Treasurer Elizabeth Muoio on Friday ordered the immediate hold on both spending and hiring “until further notice,” according to a news release. –NJ.com

We have to reserve all available resources in order to ensure we close out the general fund in a positive position,” said Muoio.

While more than half of New Jersey state funding comes from the general fund, the other half is generated through gross income taxes – which are currently unable to be spent on anything aside from property tax relief. Muoio has been sounding the alarm on the general fund of late, saying it will run into the red unless she can shift $788 million in utilities revenue. 

It is essential that we freeze all discretionary spending to ensure we can support the crucial functions that keep the state operating — everything from caseworkers for children in foster care to the operation of our developmental centers to the safety and protection provided by the State Police,” she said.

The ability to shift the revenue has become a key bargaining chip in New Jersey legislature, with State Senate President Stephen Sweeny (D) demanding that the governor restore $123 million in funding to various programs which the Murphy administration previously slashed from the budget.

The administration needs to do what they need to do. We’re not saying no. We’re just saying ‘Listen, you’ve shown us your priorities. We’d like a commitment on our priorities’,” Sweeney said Friday. “It’s part of a negotiation.”

At the end of the day, there’s things that the Legislature feels are important and they stand for. $20 million in additional funding for people who work with the disabled and poor and needy. They’re things that matter to us,” he continued. “I didn’t think I’d have to fight with a Democrat to fund programs that help sexually abused kids.”

While a spending and hiring freeze isn’t the same as a government shutdown, the governor’s office circulated a letter to Cabinet officers on Friday giving them a heads up to prepare contingency plans in case a shutdown occurs. 

The letter to Murphy’s cabinet members, obtained by NJ Advance Media, asked them to update contingency plans for their departments.

It was sent shortly after top staffers in the state Senate and Assembly met with Murphy’s senior staff Friday morning amid ongoing negotiations about Murphy’s first state budget proposal — which so far have been fraught.

The meeting was tense and unproductive, according to six sources with knowledge of the event who would speak only on the condition of anonymity. One source described it as “ugly.”NJ.com

As we noted in March, New Jersey’s fiscal situation is so dire that new Governor Phil Murphy has proposed taxing online-room booking, ride-sharing, marijuana, e-cigarettes and Internet transactions along with raising taxes on millionaires and retail sales to fund a record $37.4 billion budget that would boost spending on schools, pensions and mass transit.

The proposal which is 4.2% higher than the current fiscal year’s, relies on a tax for the wealthiest that is so unpopular it not only has yet to be approved, but also lacks support from key Democrats in the legislature, let alone Republicans. It also reverses pledges from Murphy’s predecessor, Republican Chris Christie, to lower taxes in a state where living costs are already among the nation’s highest.

Murphy, a Democrat who replaced term-limited Christie on Jan. 16, said his goal is to give New Jerseyans more value for their tax dollars; instead he plans on bleeding them dry. He has promised additional spending on underfunded schools and transportation in a credit-battered state with an estimated $8.7 billion structural deficit for the fiscal year that starts July 1.

“If we enact another budget like the one our administration inherited, our middle class will continue to be the ones shouldering the burden, while seeing little in return,” Murphy said Tuesday in his budget address to lawmakers. His solution? Socialist wealth redistribution: “A millionaire’s tax is the right thing to do –- and now is the time to do it.”

A better way of putting it, as Bloomberg has done, is that New Jersey’s budget “would raise taxes on almost everything.”

On the bright side, Murphy agreed to cut sales tax in half in five New Jersy cities; Bridgeton, Camden, Newark, Plainfeld and Trenton, restoring a decades-old program allowing the cities to levy half the state’s sales tax to help economically struggling areas. 

For the remaining residents of New Jersey, one wonders what the sales tax rate will need to rise to in order to offset the change. While the state sales tax currently sits at 6.625%, Murphy has proposed returning it to 7% – reversing a deal both Christie and Democratic lawmakers struck in 2016 in exchange for a .23c gas tax hike. 

Then there’s the state pension – which just hiked its expected return to an ambitious 7.5%. From March: 

New Jersey’s acting state treasurer Elizabeth Maher Muolo said that she will increase the expected rate of return for the state’s struggling public pension system which manages over $76 billion in assets, from 7% to 7.5%, “then lower it again over time” in hopes that the recent market surge persists indefinitely into the future and quietly wipes away some of the state’s massive underfunding.

The announcement prompted Bloomberg’s Muni expert Joe Mysak to simply exclaim that “this is madness.

Madness indeed.

via RSS https://ift.tt/2sCufRR Tyler Durden

Illinois Taxpayers Face $172 Million Bill For ‘Obama-land’

Authored by Mark Glennon via Wirepoints.com,

A day of phone calls by Barack Obama to his Hollywood buddies.

Obamaland rendering, coming to Chicago

That’s probably all it would have taken to find enough of them anxious to have their names on one of the rooms, hallways or whatever in the Obama Center being built in Chicago.

Instead, Illinois taxpayers from Cairo to Galena will pay $172 million towards construction. It’s in the new budget just passed, to be signed shortly by Governor Rauner.

Remember when we were told, “Construction and maintenance will be funded by private donations and no taxpayer money will go to the foundation”? That’s what an Obama Foundation spokesperson said. Oh, I guess that didn’t mean re-configuring roadways around the center, which apparently is what the state money will go towards.

It’s not a presidential library, by the way, since the archives for his papers and such will be somewhere else.

It’s Obamaland, as the Chicago Sun-Times’ Lynn Sweet predicted it would be known.

It’s real purpose is teaching Obama’s politics, courtesy of taxpayers. From the Chicago Tribune: “As he’s long maintained, Obama said he envisions his center as a place where young people from around the world can meet each other, get training and prepare to become the next generation of leaders.”

Actually, it seems appropriate somehow for Illinois taxpayers to get whacked for this. Think of it as a monument of sorts to decades of Obama-style government in Illinois. The black unemployment rate in Illinois is the worst in the nation and almost twice the rate for whites. The national economy is booming while Illinois races deeper into insolvency.

That’s all the consolation I can offer. You’ll be funding a monument.

via RSS https://ift.tt/2JrB9Uu Tyler Durden