Stocks Suddenly Stumble As Bond Yields Spike Into “Danger Zone”

US equity markets – after an impressive surge early in the day – have suddenly hit a speed-bump…

And the selling is very broad based…

No major news catalyst struck to mark the top but we note that the Treasury yield spike has been very violent…

Which, as Bloomberg’s Cameron Crise notes, means this yield move is entering the “danger zone” for stocks.

The 30bps spike in the last 5 weeks falls into the cohort where average and median equity performance has been negative over the following five weeks.

As Cris concludes, do with that information what you will, but realize that with this kind of price action the bond market is not the equity market’s friend.

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Amazon Ends Stock, Bonus Awards To Pay For Raises

Earlier today we suggested that for all its pompous generosity, Amazon’s announcement to boost minimum wages to $15/hour was i) just another brilliant PR stunt by Jeff Bezos and ii) was meant to punish the company’s retail competitors, most of whom would see hits to their margins if they tried to piggyback on Amazon’s move.

It now appears that the more cynical take was indeed correct, because just one day later, Amazon announced that it would cut stock and bonus awards to pay for the raises.

In a statement, Amazon said that “the significant increase in hourly cash wages more than compensates for the phase out of incentive pay and RSUs. We can confirm that all hourly Operations and Customer Service employees will see an increase in their total compensation as a result of this announcement. In addition, because it’s no longer incentive-based, the compensation will be more immediate and predictable.”

And while some hourly employees will see an increase in their total comp, it appears that many others will see a decline. As Yahoo Finance reports, several Amazon warehouse workers talked about how the change will negatively affect them. They said that after the removal of these perks, some workers would be making less. Most of the workers who voiced concerns have been working for the company for more than two years, and have been earning close to $15 an hour before the raise.

While these workers’ hourly rates will rise modestly, they said that they would lose thousands of dollars that they would have collected from the stock and monthly-bonus programs. Amazon said those who are already making $15 an hour will see an increase in pay but did not specify how much.

One employee earning $15.25 an hour who has worked for Amazon for more than three years in Arizona crunched the numbers. He said that although he is getting a $1 an hour raise, which would equate to as much as $2,080 in additional pay a year, he could have earned a few thousands of dollars more from the incentive programs. “Amazon isn’t giving its employees a raise, they’re taking money from us,” he told Yahoo Finance. “It only looks good if folks don’t know the truth.”

According to Yahoo Finance, in the past, Amazon had used stock options as a major selling point during the recruiting process.

“One of the ways we foster ownership among employees is through Restricted Stock Unit (RSU) awards. RSUs are a key part of our global compensation program, which has been carefully designed to help us attract, motivate and retain employees of the highest caliber,” according to an Amazon brochure about the program.

Under the RSU program, full-time warehouse workers usually receive two or three shares each year after a two-year vesting period. This could explain why Bezos has been quietly shifting away from paying in stock – which is soaring and last traded at $2000, having tripled since 2016 – and instead choosing to pay in cash. Amazon said it’ll replace RSU with a “direct stock purchase plan” but didn’t offer any specifics.

The other key perk that Amazon is phasing out is employee’s monthly bonuses, called Variable Compensation Pay (VCP). An employee can earn up to 8% of their monthly income, but it depends on how many hours they work and the facility site’s production goals. An average worker usually receives $1,800 to $3,000 a year through the VCP program, according to employees. Some said it’s especially frustrating to see the program removed now, since VCP doubles during peak months in the holiday season.

And despite complaints that Amazon’s decision would ultimately result in less worker pay, the company said its decision to eliminate the financial incentive program was based on employees’ feedback.

“We’ve heard from our hourly fulfillment and customer service employees that they prefer the predictability and immediacy of cash to RSUs,” the company wrote in a blog post. “The net effect of this change and the new higher cash compensation is significantly more total compensation for employees, without any vesting requirements, and with more predictability.”

Predictability yes, but “more compensation”, we doubt it: Jeff Bezos did not become the world’s richest man by generously handing out money…

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New Zealand Law Is an Affront to Travelers’ Privacy, but Things Aren’t Much Better Here

A New Zealand law lets border officials demand that travelers entering the country unlock their electronic devices so agents can search them. Refusal to do so could mean a hefty fine.

The guidelines in New Zealand’s Customs and Excise Act are believed to be the first of their kind in the world. But with the law taking effect this week, it’s a good time to remember that even in the U.S., privacy protections for travelers are virtually nonexistent.

New Zealand’s law says that if customs officers have “reasonable cause” to suspect that a traveler—citizen or noncitizen—is in the process of or about to break the law, they can search that person’s electronic device and force the user “to provide access information,” which in this case means “codes, passwords, and encryption keys.”

Travelers who don’t comply can be prosecuted and/or fined up to NZ$5,000 (US$3,269). Customs agents can also conduct a “full search,” meaning the device can be seized and the data on it “copied, reviewed, or evaluated.”

The New Zealand Customs Service claims in a press release that the legislation is necessary because it “uses modern language that is easier to understand and interpret.” According to Customs Service spokesperson Terry Brown, “the travelling public is unlikely to notice much different at the border.”

The New Zealand Council for Civil Liberties (CCL) disagrees, explaining in a statement of its own that the bill’s “reasonable cause” requirement isn’t enough. “The law now says they have to have reasonable cause, but they do not have to prove this before confiscating your device, nor is there a way to meaningfully protest or appeal at the time of confiscation,” the group notes.

Criminals with something to hide can back up their data to the internet and delete it from their phones when they travel. It’s “normal law-abiding people” whose privacy will be breached, the CCL says.

Laws like these are why Americans are lucky to live in the land of freedom, right? Not so fast.

While the Fourth Amendment is supposed to protect “against unreasonable searches and seizures,” your rights can be put on hold at the border. As the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) points out, federal authorities claim not to need a justification to search both immigrants and American citizens at “ports of entry,” such at international airports.

According to the Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) website, authorities can seize your device and copy the data on it. So what happens if your device is locked and you don’t want to unlock it?

“U.S. citizens and returning green card holders can’t be denied entry for refusing to provide a password,” ACLU attorney Esha Bhandari told The Guardian in March 2017. But border agents can still make your life difficult. “There’s a risk you could be held, detained…for hours in an unpleasant, windowless secondary inspection room,” Naathan Freed Wessler, another ACLU lawyer, told CNN last year.

Things are even worse for foreign nationals. Those travelers might not be able to get into the U.S. at all if they don’t want to give border agents access to their locked devices.

Entering the U.S. often means abandoning your right to privacy. Soon, things might not be much better if you’re trying to leave the country. The Washington Post reported last month that at 15 airports around the nation, travelers’ faces are electronically scanned before they leave the United States. And CBP says facial recognition scanning will be coming soon to each international airport in the U.S.

If you’re an American looking for privacy when you travel, avoiding New Zealand might be a good idea. Unfortunately, avoiding the U.S. is a lot harder.

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Health Experts: Video Game ‘Fortnite’ Is As Addictive As Heroin

Authored by Mac Slavo via SHTFplan.com,

Health experts have come out declaring the video game Fortnite to be just as addictive as the drug heroin. And with millions of daily active players, Fortnite Battle Royale is currently the most popular game on the globe, heightening the concerns.

According to VGR, the Fortnite hype has taken the world over, and almost everyone has heard of it. Unfortunately, some people are addicted to this video game, and the latest report indicates that this addiction can be very harmful. It appears that there are some Fortnite players who can’t live without the game, and their addiction is even being compared to that of a heroin addiction.

Just last month, there have been several reports about how Fortnite has ruined numerous marriages. According to a report by The New York Post, over 200 marriages have been ruined by the highly addictive video game. This time, experts are comparing Fortnite to heroin because of how bad it is, and it doesn’t seem that things are getting any better.

 “These numbers equate to roughly 5% of the 4,665 petitions we have handled since the beginning of the year,” a Divorce Online spokesperson wrote in a press release.

It is no surprise to us that more and more people are having relationship problems because of our digital addictions.

Health experts also state that the popular video game can “get in the way of your child’s brain development.” Further explaining what exactly happens with kids in a video game addiction situation, Fortnite gets kids’ dopamine system involved and it releases addictive chemicals. These chemicals are very similar to a drug addiction, and the game creates cravings some people can’t live without. 

“I am obsessed,” one 13-year-old gamer told The Post in March.

“‘Fortnite’ is special. I never wanted to play so much in my life.” 

Some of the kids who were tested by health experts for a gaming addiction were teenage boys, and one of them actually admitted that he was so addicted to the game that he continued to play Fortnite while a tornado was sweeping through his neighborhood.

In June, the World Health Organization announced that compulsive gaming has been classified as a mental health condition as well.

Taking personal responsibility for all addictions, whether they be drug or alcohol related, or behavior, such as social media and gaming addictions is not something many are prepared to do. And as society increasingly becomes more and more dependent on technology, these types of addictions will continue to worsen.

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FBI Lacks Approval To Interview Kavanaugh Or Ford; Senate Testimony Deemed “Sufficient” 

The FBI hasn’t interviewed Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh or his accuser, Christine Blasey Ford, according to Bloomberg, citing “two people with knowledge of the matter,” who added that the agency doesn’t have clear authority from the White House to do so. 

Instead, Ford’s testimony that Kavanaugh attempted to rape her at a high school party in 1982 was deemed “sufficient,” according to the sources who asked not to be identified. 

The White House on Monday reportedly instructed the FBI to expand their investigation.

In a Tuesday letter to FBI Director Christopher Wray, Ford’s attorneys said that the FBI still hadn’t contacted them after five days since the Judiciary Committee and White House announced that the FBI had been directed to conduct a supplemental investigation into Ford’s claims. 

“We have received no response from anyone involved in this investigation, and no response to our offer for Dr. Ford to be interviewed. This afternoon, we learned of media reports that the FBI does not intend to interview either Dr. Ford or Judge Kavanaugh. We hope this reporting is inaccurate,” reads the letter. 

During Tuesday’s White House press briefing, spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders noted: 

As we’ve said several times, the President indicated that whoever the FBI deems necessary to interview, he’s fine with that, but he’s also asked that the Senate be the ones that determine the scope of what they need in order to make a decision on whether they vote Kavanaugh up or down. I can also tell you, both Judge Kavanaugh and Dr. Ford were questioned in the most public way possible by the members of the Senate who are ultimately the ones who have to make the determination on whether or not they vote for Judge Kavanaugh. If they have additional questions for either one of them, they had a time and an opportunity certainly to ask those.

The FBI probe, which is expected to conclude on Wednesday, while the report won’t be released to the public according to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY). 

We’ll get an FBI report soon. It will be made available to each senator and only senators will be allowed to look at it,” McConnell told reporters on Tuesday, adding “That’s the way these reports are always handled.” 

An FBI investigation was launched after Senator Jeff Flake (R-AZ) derailed Kavanaugh’s confirmation by refusing to vote “yes” pending a probe demanded by Senate Democrats.

The White House and Republican senators asked the FBI to reopen a background investigation on Kavanaugh the day after Flake’s line in the sand, as Flake and two other GOP senators remain undecided on Kavanaugh’s confirmation pending the results of the FBI’s investigation. 

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Bad Financial Moon Rising: OECD Chief Economist Warns World On “Extremely Dangerous Path”

Authored by William White via Project Syndicate,

A decade after the collapse of Lehman Brothers, global debt levels are higher than in 2008, lending has moved into the opaque realm of asset management and private equity, and the dollar is surging. Given the proliferating risks, another financial crisis and downturn could be in store.

No one should overestimate economists’ powers of understanding. Just as the magnitude of the global downturn that began in mid-2008 took most economists completely by surprise, so did the sclerotic nature of the recovery. Similarly, economic forecasts today appear to be nothing more than hopeful extrapolations of recent growth.

In reality, all is not well beneath the surface. Should another financial crisis materialize, the subsequent recession might be even costlier than the last one, not least because policymakers will face unprecedented economic and political constraints in responding to it.

Some take comfort in post-crisis improvements to global financial regulation, on the assumption that these measures will prevent financial distress from spilling over into the real economy. This is an ill-advised stance. The analytical foundations of many of these “improvements” appear shaky, and the challenges of implementing the new regulatory regime have proven formidable.

Perhaps most important, ultra-easy monetary policies have encouraged precisely the risky financial behavior that regulations were supposed to limit. With monetary policy firmly on the accelerator, and regulatory policies firmly on the brake, the likeliest result is heightened instability.

The most worrisome side effect of recent monetary policies has been a continuous increase in the ratio of non-financial debt to global GDP. Though the 2008 crisis offered an opportunity for deleveraging, the opposite has happened. Debt has piled up worldwide, with the biggest increases found in emerging-market private sectors.

The recovery in emerging-market economies was supposed to be part of the post-crisis solution. Now, these economies are part of the problem. The fact that much of this dollar-denominated debt has been issued by non-US residents means that another costly currency-mismatch crisis could be in store.

In addition to ballooning global debt levels, sky-high property prices seem to be heading for a turn, and “risk-free” long-term rates remain unusually low in many countries. Very low credit risk and term spreads, along with record-low measures of volatility, have invited still more risky behavior. Should these spreads normalize, the risks would come home to roost.

The record-high percentage of “covenant-lite” new loans (lacking many basic protections for the lender) further attests to excessive risk-taking. Of course, it also implies that recovery rates on bad loans (and associated collateralized loan obligations) could be unexpectedly high. The fact that asset-management companies and private-equity firms have increasingly displaced regulation-constrained banks as lenders has made it increasingly difficult to see what is actually going on, and to anticipate how future financial retrenchment might play out, particularly with respect to emerging markets.

Should financial markets begin to tighten, either spontaneously or in response to tighter monetary conditions, there is good reason to worry about overshooting. Owing to the major central banks’ unconventional monetary policies over the past decade, the process of “price discovery” in financial markets has long been curtailed.

At this point, even “efficient” financial markets would struggle to adapt to normalization. And there have been many indications of financial-market inefficiency in recent years, including continuing anomalies such as the violation of covered interest parity conditions in foreign-exchange markets, bouts of reduced liquidity (partly owing to new regulations), and recurrent flash crashes. And to these “known knowns” we must add the “known unknowns” associated with algorithmic trading and passive investing.

A final major risk to the global economy is US President Donald Trump’s administration, whose protectionist policies are threatening to slow real (inflation-adjusted) growth and drive up inflation. And while fiscal expansion in the United States might temporarily offset growth impediments, it, too, will exacerbate inflationary pressures and undermine longer-term debt sustainability. Moreover, both protectionism and fiscal expansion are strengthening the dollar, and thus squeezing US exporters and foreigners who have borrowed in dollars.

Complicating matters further, Trump’s statement that he is not “thrilled” at the prospect of higher interest rates points to the risk of a too-compliant Federal Reserve ending up behind the inflationary curveball. When that happens, a recession typically follows.

Lastly, the Trump administration is increasingly using the dollar – and access to dollar clearing and funding – as a geopolitical weapon, risking retaliation and perhaps even jeopardizing the future of the dollar-based global monetary system.

All of these risks are raising the likelihood of a mass “hunkering down” in the face of future shocks. Worse, should the global economy experience another significant downturn, policymakers will find it much harder to respond than they did before. Initially low policy rates mean that central banks will have very little room for traditional monetary easing.

As for unconventional monetary policies, there is still much disagreement about their effectiveness. At any rate, new measures would imply further increasing central banks’ balance sheets, which many (not least in Central Europe) already consider to be a potential source of future inflation.

Likewise, regardless of their merits, fiscal policies will almost certainly be constrained by leaders’ fears of rapidly rising sovereign debt, especially in the major advanced economies. Another bank bailout would of course produce a severe political backlash. But even if the Fed was willing to risk it, provisions in the 2010 US Dodd-Frank financial reform legislation explicitly limit its discretion in such matters. Whether those provisions apply to the Fed’s technical capacity to provide dollars to foreign central banks – as it did on a massive scale in late 2008 – remains to be seen.

An even bigger political constraint has emerged in the last decade. Whereas the 2008 crisis was a global phenomenon that elicited a global response, the growth of nationalist sentiment in many countries would likely impede similar cooperation. Would the US Congress now allow the Fed to lend trillions of dollars to “freeloading foreigners”?

Add to that the rise of China and India, and the US role in global leadership is less clear-cut than it was a decade ago. If another economic downturn were to fuel further nationalist gains and faster erosion of international cooperation, we could find ourselves on an old, familiar, and extremely dangerous path.

* * *

William White, a former deputy governor of the Bank of Canada, and a former head of the Monetary and Economic Department of the Bank for International Settlements, is Chairman of the Economic and Development Review Committee at the OECD.

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After UN Top Court Rules In Favor Of Iran, Pompeo Terminates Decades-Old Treaty

The drums of war are beating over Iran and Syria as Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Wednesday morning responded to the United Nations’ top court ordering the US to lift sanctions on “humanitarian” goods to Iran. Pompeo made a series of threatening statements targeting Iran as well as Syria, which also comes after the latter received delivery of Russian S-300 anti-air defense missiles early this week.

Pompeo said in his State Department press briefing, “I’m announcing that the United States is terminating the 1955 treaty of amity with Iran. This is a decision that is 39 years over due.” 

He was referencing a 1955 “friendship treaty” or so-called Treaty of Amity which had been established long before the 1979 Islamic Revolution brought the Ayatollahs to power. 

In July Tehran had pulled the US before the International Court of Justice (ICJ) to demand that the UN immediately suspend economic sanctions leveled by Washington after Trump ordered US pullout of the 2015 nuclear deal and the reimposition of far-reaching rounds of sanctions targeting Iran’s energy and other vital sectors. 

The ICJ’s ruling is a huge blow to Washington (though perhaps largely symbolic) and a diplomatic win for Iran as it unanimously ruled that Washington “shall remove by means of its choosing any impediments arising from the measures announced on May 8 to the free exportation to Iran of medicines and medical devices, food and agricultural commodities” as well as airplane parts, said judge Abdulqawi Ahmed Yusuf. The court pointed out that targeting aviation parts created the “potential to endanger civil aviation safety in Iran and the lives of its users”.

The decision essentially gives UN-imprimatur and legal cover for countries and companies seeking to still do business with Iran amidst threats of punitive action by the US should they proceed. But Pompeo slammed the international court’s decision as null and void and Iran’s clinging to the “decades overdue” treaty “absurd” in announcing the “termination”

The ICJ rules on disputes between UN member states, but its decisions are ultimately largely symbolic and non-binding as it has not way to enforce them. The United States has no higher chain of appeal now that the ICJ has finally ruled on the issue. 

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif had previously this week called the sanctions a form of “psychological warfare” aimed at regime change. “The economic warfare that the United States and some of its regional clients are conducting against Iran is psychological warfare more than real economic warfare,” he told the BBC in an interview.

Elsewhere in Pompeo’s Wednesday remarks he took aim and Iranian actions in the broader Middle East saying intelligence is “solid” that Iran is to “blame” for the attack on the US embassy in Baghdad’s ‘green zone’ in early September.

He also referenced gunfire on the US consulate in Basra, which late last week the US shuttered by ordering all non-essential personnel to evacuate. “We can see the hand of the Ayatollah and his henchmen supporting these attacks on the United States,” Pompeo said. 

“Iran is the origin of the current threat to Americans in Iraq,” he added. And he also made reference to Syria, noting that after Russia on Wednesday published photos of its S-300 transfer to the Syrian government, that the US is “concerned” with this “serious escalation”.

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Dramatic Photos Show Chinese Warship’s “Unsafe And Unprofessional” Encounter 45 Yards From US Destroyer

Dramatic photos have emerged of a confrontation we reported on Monday between the USS Decatur and the Chinese destroyer Luyang, which came within 45 yards of each other in the South China Sea. The photos of the two warships, obtained by gCaptain, reveal the “unsafe and unprofessional maneuver” that almost resulted in a collision “in the vicinity” of the Graven Reef in the Spratley Islands on Sunday morning at 8:30 a.m.. 

According to a Navy spokesman, during the incident, the Chinese warship “approached within 45 yards of Decatur’s bow, after which Decatur maneuvered to prevent a collision.”

As was reported over the weekend, the USS Decatur on Sunday conducted the U.S. Navy’s latest freedom of navigation operation in the South China Sea, coming within 12 nautical miles of the Gaven and Johnson Reefs claimed by China. –gCaptain

On Tuesday, China accused the US of violating its “indisputable sovereignty” over the Spratley islands, saying in a statement “We strongly urge the U.S. side to immediately correct its mistake and stop such provocative actions to avoid undermining China-U.S. relations and regional peace and stability.” 

It is unclear how the photos were obtained, however they were deemed to be legitimate according to Stars and Stripes, citing a US Navy official. 

***

The encounter, which comes at a time of strained relations between the world’s two largest economies driven largely by Trump’s aggressive trade policy, was characterized as “unsafe and unprofessional” by Navy officials.

“At approximately 0830 local time on September 30, a PRC LUYANG destroyer approached USS DECATUR in an unsafe and unprofessional maneuver in the vicinity of Gaven Reef in the South China Sea,” said Capt. Charlie Brown, a U.S. Pacific Fleet Spokesman.

Gaven Reef is located in the Spratly Islands chain in the South China Sea where China claims seven man-made islands as its own.

The close encounter with the Chinese warship occurred as the American destroyer was carrying out a freedom of navigation operation (FONOPs) in the Spratlys, the U.S. said.

The U.S. Navy routinely undertakes FONOP missions worldwide to challenge excessive territorial claims of international shipping lanes.

USS Decatur had sailed within 12 nautical miles of Gaven and Johnson Reefs in the Spratly Islands when it was approached by the Chinese destroyer.

During the brief encounter, the Chinese destroyer’s aggressive maneuvers were accompanied by demands that the Decatur leave the area.

The Chinese Navy “destroyer conducted a series of increasingly aggressive maneuvers accompanied by warnings for DECATUR to depart the area,” Brown added.

“The PRC destroyer approached within 45 yards of DECATUR’s bow, after which DECATUR maneuvered to prevent a collision,” said Brown.

A U.S. defense official characterized the close encounter as having been of short duration.

Chinese vessels have approached U.S. Navy ships during previous FONOPs in the South China Sea, but Sunday’s encounter appears to the be the closest one yet.

“U.S. Navy ships and aircraft operate throughout the Indo-Pacific routinely, including in the South China Sea,” said Brown. “As we have for decades, our forces will continue to fly, sail and operate anywhere international law allows.”

Earlier Monday, reports surfaced that China had called off a security conference with US officials. The cancellation was later confirmed by the US. This latest sign of a deteriorating relationship came after the US Air Force flew a B-52 bomber on a mission through the East China Sea while two other B-52 flights were carried out through the South China Sea.

While the notion of a shooting war between the US and China may seem remote to casual observers, some market observers have noted the time honored progression of economic tensions like trade wars and currency wars eventually leading to a full-on hot war.

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Watch Live: White House Holds First Press Briefing In Weeks; Kavanaugh In Spotlight

The White House is holding its first on-camera press briefing since September 10, according to Bloomberg White House reporter Jennifer Epstein. 

The focus will undoubtedly be on the Kavanaugh confirmation circus playing out between the House Judiciary Committee, Kavanaugh accusers, GOP holdouts spearheaded by Sen. Jeff Flake (R-AZ), and the FBI – which is slated to conclude its brief investigation into allegations of sexual misconduct levied against the Supreme Court nominee. 

White House reporters are sure to ask press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders about Trump mocking Kavanaugh accuser, Christine Blasey Ford, at a Mississippi rally Tuesday night – drawing wide criticism from both sides of the aisle. 

Also in focus is sure to be a Tuesday story from the New York Times accusing the Trump family of engaging in “questionable” and “dubious” tax strategies, “including instances of outright fraud” that greatly increased the fortune Trump inherited from his father, Fred Trump. 

The White House responded Tuesday night, with Sarah Sanders noting: “Fred Trump has been gone for nearly twenty years and it’s sad to witness this misleading attack against the Trump family by the failing New York Times,” adding “Many decades ago the IRS reviewed and signed off on these transactions.”

Watch: 

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Remy — Banana (Havana Parody): New at Reason

Remy brings back the banana industry with protective tariffs.

Written and performed by Remy. Video produced by Austin Bragg. Music tracks, background vocals, and mastering by Ben Karlstrom.

Click here for full lyrics and downloadable versions.

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