“A Decade Of Ignoring Risk Is Confronting Face-To-Face An Exogenous Shock”

“A Decade Of Ignoring Risk Is Confronting Face-To-Face An Exogenous Shock”

Authored by Richard Breslow via Bloomberg,

An ugly start to the day.

With the possible exception of those owning gold, even investors who held onto their safe haven assets are probably just feeling less unsettled. Buying bonds with yields where they are has been a great trade, but not a lot of fun. And while it is so ingrained in traders’ psyches to keep looking for places to fade these moves, it’s getting harder to be aggressive about it. At least on a Friday.

The real problem with moves that feature massive position liquidation, is that we can’t really know when investors have gotten back on side and the supply will abate.

A decade of ignoring credit is confronting, face to face, an exogenous shock that few felt they could afford to hedge against.

Watching the markets trade today, there has been a steady march lower in risk. Then sharp mini-reversals seen by short-term traders as proof that things were overdone. Only for the moves to reassert themselves. That’s a key feature of trend days and it’s best not to try to fade them unless you are as fast as a computer. If it is right to do so, you probably don’t want to be trying to buy the absolute extreme. Price action, not sticker shock, should be the determinant. Or if you are absolutely sure this is wrong, wait until the end of the day and make that the last trade you do before going home.

There have been any number of people who have described this week’s trading as “buy the rumor, sell the fact”. I’m not sure why.

It’s been more, tilting at the wrong windmill. Traders were looking at a down stock market and expecting the Fed’s old fashioned reaction function to kick in.

But, the Fed wasn’t fighting a down stock market. It was trying to make sure credit and funding markets didn’t go into full-scale panic. Other central banks will follow. The practical take-away is that the tendency to look at the investible world only through the prism of the S&P 500 isn’t operative here.

The USD FRA/OIS spread will tell you more about market stress than the next percent or two in the S&P e-mini.

The dollar has been under a lot of pressure. It doesn’t mean that it is no longer a safe haven. But it is an indication of just how many U.S. assets were bought unhedged by foreign investors. There are no free lunches in this environment and a price is being extracted. Few think they can afford to sell their bonds, so they are dumping their dollars. This has little to do with changing rate differentials. It’s position liquidation. And the extent of the dollar washout is a testimony to the size of the positions. I would have a hard time selling down here.

Many have said today’s nonfarm payrolls is old news. That events have moved on. There’s some truth in that. But it does still matter. What the economy’s trajectory was before the body blow is relevant.

There is also no shortage of Fed speakers today. They unanimously cut rates. They will couch it as insurance. Which hopefully is true. But the fact of the matter is, until further notice, they all have no choice but to be doves.

They know the size of the positions out there better than we do and are having to own up to the fact that it does matter while investors are better sellers than buyers.


Tyler Durden

Fri, 03/06/2020 – 10:30

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Sexism Didn’t Kill the Warren Campaign. The Warren Campaign Killed the Warren Campaign.

Even before Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D–Mass.) announced on Thursday that she is ending her campaign for president, her supporters began offering a simple one-word explanation for her failure to win a single primary race, much less the Democratic nomination: sexism. And if it wasn’t that, it could only be sexism’s even more evil twin: misogyny.

The feeling is nicely summed up by Jason Stanley, professor of philosophy at Yale and author of How Fascism Works: The Politics of Us and Them. “To repeat the obvious: there is no other explanation except for misogyny for what has happened to Senator Warren this year,” Stanley tweeted after Warren suffered across-the-board losses on Super Tuesday. He called this “profoundly depressing.”

This feeling was mirrored by feminist writer Jessica Valenti, who wrote in an essay that Warren had been “outright erased and ignored” by both media and voters. “Don’t tell me this isn’t about sexism,” Valenti wrote. “I’ve been around too long for that.” Sure, Warren may have been the most exhaustively covered female candidate since Hillary Clinton, and she may have one of the biggest war chests in the race, and she may have had among the most stage time at the debates, but still! She lost. The only explanation is that she’s been systematically ignored and erased.

The candidate herself addressed the issue of sexism at a press conference outside her home Thursday, when a reporter asked about the role gender (née “sex”) played in the campaign.

“Gender in this race?” Warren said. “You know, that’s the trap question for everyone. If you say, ‘Yeah, there was sexism in this race,’ everyone says, ‘Whiner!’ If you say there was no sexism, about a bazillion women think, ‘What planet do you live on?'” 

I live on the planet where the Democratic electorate chose a woman to be their candidate in 2016—and where that same woman won the popular vote. I suppose it’s possible that the last four years of President Donald Trump have turned Democrats more sexist than they were before, but did that just temporarily stop for the several months Warren was at the top of the polls before Democrats realized they actually don’t want a woman after all? I doubt it.

At the same time, I find it curious that while Warren’s campaign was apparently cut down by sexism and/or misogyny, when other female candidates in the race dropped out, sexism didn’t often come up. One would assume that all female candidates would be subject to the same systemic prejudice, and yet few people claim that Tulsi Gabbard (D–Hawaii) or Amy Klobuchar (D–Minn.) have failed––or, in Gabbard’s case, will fail––because American voters hate women. 

When it comes to Gabbard or Klobuchar or the men in the race, people evaluate their campaigns and generally determine it’s the candidate, not the voter, who is at fault. Gabbard isn’t losing because of sexism, she’s losing because she’s a fill-in-the-blank homophobe/cult follower/Bashar Assad apologist. Klobuchar wasn’t a victim of misogyny, she was an uninspiring candidate who abuses her staff and eats her salads with a comb if she can’t find a fork (a quality I personally find highly electable). 

So why is Warren’s loss called sexist when Klobuchar’s was not? When I asked this question on Twitter, a number of people answered something along the lines of “because she is really a man”––a great example of actual sexism. But I think the answer is something else: Warren’s followers are both primed to see sexism everywhere and so enamored with their candidate—so sure of her (and their own) righteousness—that they are unable to see any of the flaws that are so apparent to anyone outside their bubble.

Ironically, this tendency to blame all of Warren’s failings on sexism comes across as somewhat…sexist. Every time she loses, she is portrayed by some of her most ardent defenders as a victim, as though she has no control over her own campaign or her own choices. It’s not just infantilizing and patronizing, but it also removes agency and responsibility from the candidate herself. And yet, claims that “sexism did it” are repeated so often it’s taken as a fact, even when no evidence is offered to support it. 

Some people seem to think it’s just obvious: If a man with Warren’s qualifications, intellect, and talent ran for office, he would have won. That may be true, although the results of the last election make me fear that qualifications, intellect, and talent don’t matter all that much in American politics. So here’s an alternate explanation: Elizabeth Warren didn’t lose this race simply because of sexism but because she made a series of political miscalculations, starting with the disastrous unveiling of her DNA test, which managed to anger progressives and make conservatives point and laugh. Then there was her refusal to go on the most popular cable news network in America in order to make a political point, the condescending manner in which she spoke about voters she disagreed with, her bungled Medicare for All plan, and the fact that she positioned herself to split the progressive vote with Bernie Sanders—a candidate with grassroots momentum and a campaign that has been ongoing since 2015. Had she pitched herself as a capable, qualified, less ancient and more moderate Democrat instead of Bernie Lite, it’s possible it would be her running against him right now instead of Joe Biden. 

Unlike most Reason readers, I was a Warren fan before this campaign—such a Warren fan, in fact, that six months before Trump was elected, I made a bet that Clinton would lose and Warren would be the first female president. But then she pivoted from the reformer who went after banks and stood up for the consumer into the sort of social media justice warrior who thinks she speaks for marginalized people while actually speaking over them. Despite this ill-advised rebranding, she still had plenty of ideas that I liked, from universal preschool to boosting small business to ending for-profit prisons and getting rid of the Electoral College. But her good ideas were too easily overshadowed by her bad ones. 

Take, for instance, the LGBTQ town hall (which was a bad idea in the first place). Warren was asked by a 9-year-old trans boy named Jacob what she, as president, would do to keep kids like him safe. Instead of telling him the truth (“Jacob, bullying is sort of a local issue but I recommend a kickboxing class”), she said that she would let this 9-year-old kid vet the next secretary of education. This may have played well in that room, but she wasn’t running to be the president of the Gay-Straight Alliance; she was running to be president of the United States.

Now, I don’t think she actually would have marched Jacob into the Senate confirmation hearings any more than I think she would have passed Medicare of All with or without raising taxes. She was just pandering, and I don’t really fault her for that—pandering is part of campaigning and all politicians do it—but it doesn’t matter whether or not she would have actually let a third grader veto her cabinet picks. What matters is that she said it on live television, and had she won the nomination, it would have come back to bite her in the ass in the general election. There were a mountain of moments like this, and against Trump, she would not have stood a chance. 

Warren could have focused on the working class; instead, she focused on the wokest class. She advocated for social positions that may resonate with highly educated, largely white activists, but just don’t appeal to a broad base of Americans across race and class. She talked about nonbinary driver’s licenses and advocated for trans women to play women’s sports and used the term “traffic violence” when the rest of us simply say “car crash.” She’s out of touch—or at least, her advisers are—and there aren’t enough Oberlin grads for her to win Ohio, much less the swing states that will likely determine the outcome of the 2020 race. So here’s why I didn’t vote for Elizabeth Warren: Because she would have given us four more years of Trump. That isn’t sexism; it’s math.

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‘Bloomberg Could Have Given Every American $1Million’ – Liberal Media Math Exposed In Stunning Interview

‘Bloomberg Could Have Given Every American $1Million’ – Liberal Media Math Exposed In Stunning Interview

They’re not sending their best.

During a Thursday discussion over the amount of money Mike Bloomberg has spent on advertising during the 2020 election – some $500 million, MSNBC‘s Brian Williams and New York Times editorial board member Mara Gay promoted a Twitter user’s very incorrect math.

“Somebody tweeted recently that actually with the money he spent he could have given every American $1 million,” said Gay.

“I’ve got it, let’s put it up on the screen,” replies Williams.

“When I read it tonight on social media it kind of all became clear,” added the MSNBC host, who then reads the actual (now-deleted) tweet.

“Bloomberg spent $500 million on ads. The U.S. population is 327 million. He could have given each American $1 million and still have money left over,” Williams read.

Watch:

In reality, Bloomberg’s advertising dollars would have amounted to roughly $1.53 per American.

Keep in mind – Williams and Gay obviously don’t understand math. But that tweet made it all the way through MSNBC‘s editorial process – and was made into an in-show graphic. And none of them caught the obvious error.

The author of the original tweet has set her account to private. Her bio now reads “I know, I’m bad at math.”


Tyler Durden

Fri, 03/06/2020 – 10:15

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/2IoyRn3 Tyler Durden

Black Swan-Dive

Black Swan-Dive

Submitted by Michael Every of Rabobank

Markets continued to tank yesterday despite a pricing in of US rates rapidly going towards zero, and of general easing all over, which we have said loudly won’t work, and despite the incremental roll-out of fiscal packages, which we have said just as loudly won’t work in the form and scale presented. The S&P was -3.4%, as the market’s bipolarity continued, and S&P futures are -1.4% again as I type; we saw US 10-year yields collapse to 0.82% (and 30-year US mortgage rates to a record low of 3.29%); and we saw JPY surge to 105.8.

None of these things say what some large Wall Street banks are saying: this is just a passing problem, and rate cuts and fiscal policy will make everyone good: perhaps the issue is that what makes THEM good does not work on public health. Of course, they aren’t the only ones singing that song. US President Trump, who in many ways is probably running against this virus in 2020, called it a ‘flu (not a “Sleepy flu” or a “Little ‘flu” or a “Shifty ‘flu”), and appeared to imply it was OK to work through it.

Of course, that suits the hundreds of millions of US workers with little or no holiday time, or sick leave, or in the gig economy, for whom paying USD1,600 to be tested for Covid-19, and then for two weeks of treatment with no income, is going to be a very hard sell…and therefore surely so is keeping Covid-19 from being a pandemic in a US population not short of the elderly or those with the heart, lung, and kidney problems that are such a high risk factor for morbidity is going to be so very hard. So many voices increasingly sound like that guy trying to keep control at the end of Animal House (“Remain calm! All is well! Wash your hands!”). But do wash your hands, of course.

“Now’s the time to pull out the stops,” says the WHO chief, in contrast, threatening to name names of those who aren’t preparing. But it’s *still* not a pandemic, apparently, and it’s still OK to allow people to keep flying to the vast majority of locations, taking potential infection with them. Indeed, governments around the world are mostly taking slow, incremental steps that evidently allow Covid-19 to stay ahead of them. We all get real politik, and the bottom line, and how rare Black Swans are supposed to be. So it’s understandable why the chairman of a certain low-cost airline was on UK TV yesterday saying ‘just wash your hands and keep flying all over the world as if nothing is happening’ – or, in spirit, ‘This is just a ‘flu”…

…even when the WHO says it is 34 times more deadly, and Imperial College analysis (and Trump) say perhaps 1%, therefore also implying vastly more infections than we already know about.

Yet governments have of course co-opted the message that a short-term hit to GDP in some areas is somehow worse than a pandemic risk that destroys far more GDP in far more places longer term. The pattern we are seeing is still of the virus acting furiously under the water while the public sector too often glides along serenely like a swan (because markets), and hence the virus is spreading like a swan spreads its awesome wings. And hence we are now seeing a jagged swan dive in markets. Or rather a Black Swan-dive, as yields and stocks tumble in unison, and credit spreads widen.

Throw in another 50bp Fed rate cut this month, why not? What is it going to do at this stage? Juice the housing market? Juice stocks? Encourage firms to invest more? Narrow credit spreads? Of course, one can say that it “couldn’t hurt” – but it won’t help.

Even if people remortgage at these historically low rates, and put cash in their pockets, it will stay in their pockets – perhaps to save for possible hospital costs for Covid-19 if I didn’t have full coverage. That will mean higher US savings. And that, absent more public spending, means some combination of either lower US GDP growth or a lower US trade deficit. And good luck getting access to easy USD liquidity internationally despite low rates if the US is in recession and not buying your widgets anymore: the USD trade channel will be choked, as container shipping already is, and risk-off will predominate.

I repeat this message for the CNY ‘market’, which is somehow once again trying to show that it is the real risk-off safe haven and future reserve currency.


Tyler Durden

Fri, 03/06/2020 – 09:53

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US Stocks Crash Into Red On Week, Treasury Yields Are Utterly Collapsing

US Stocks Crash Into Red On Week, Treasury Yields Are Utterly Collapsing

A disastrous opening for US stocks – the worst yet during the crisis – has sent all US major equity indices into the red for the week…

The Dow is down 800 points…

VIX has exploded back to nearly 49…

But it is the bond markets that are utterly mind-blowing.

30Y Yields are down 30bps today!!

This is utterly unprecedented.

But it is the stress in funding markets – USD FRA/OIS is blowing out – that should worry people most…

Buckle Up.


Tyler Durden

Fri, 03/06/2020 – 09:36

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/39uXESo Tyler Durden

A Mississippi Woman Gave Diet Advice Without a License. The State Threatened To Throw Her in Jail.

Mississippi Department of Health officials threatened to turn Donna Harris’ eight-week weight loss challenge into six months behind bars, but now the state stands accused of putting the First Amendment on a diet.

Harris, a personal trainer and fitness expert, has run a Facebook page since 2018 dedicated to encouraging healthy eating habits. Earlier this year, she launched a small side business, offering one-on-one diet coaching and weight loss tips to anyone willing to pay $99 to participate in an eight-week contest where participants could compete to shed the most pounds. Before it could even start, however, the state government shut it down.

On January 22, Harris received a cease-and-desist letter from the Mississippi Department of Health. Talking about healthy eating on Facebook and getting paid to do it, the department said, could trigger a $1,000 fine and up to six months in jail. In the eyes of the state, Harris was an unlicensed dietician—and apparently enough of a threat to public safety that she might need to be put behind bars.

“When I learned I would have to cancel my weight-loss class, I was devastated,” said Harris in a statement. “People were counting on me and they were so excited about learning how to lose weight in a healthy way, and they were so disappointed when I told them I was not going to be able to go through with the program.”

Harris wasn’t pretending to be a licensed dietician. In fact, her Facebook page and website both specify that she isn’t one. Anyone willing to pay her for advice on eating healthier was engaged in a voluntary transaction—one that has little to do with the state government’s interests.

In a lawsuit filed this week on Harris’ behalf, the Mississippi Justice Institute, a nonprofit law firm, argues that Mississippi’s overzealous enforcement of its dietician licensing law violated Harris’ First Amendment rights.

Aaron Rice, the group’s director, is particularly galled by what happened when Harris asked the state what information she could legally provide without a license. She was told to stick to “government-approved guidelines, like the food pyramid,” Rice says. “So you can engage in government-approved speech, but not non-government-approved speech?”

Getting a permission slip to speak freely about healthy diets is no easy task in Mississippi. It requires a bachelor’s degree and more than 1,200 hours of supervised practice. Starting in 2024, the license will require a graduate degree. Harris actually has one of those—a master’s degree in occupational therapy, to go along with her bachelor’s degree in nutrition and food science—but not the one the state will soon require.

Mississippi is not the only state to require that dieticians be licensed, and this is not the first time a state has gone to extreme lengths to enforce its mandatory permission slip regime. In 2017, Florida Department of Health officials ran a sting operation to catch Heather Kokesch Del Castillo giving out unlicensed diet advice online. She, too, was threatened with jail time. A judge rejected a subsequent challenge to the state’s dietician licensing laws brought on Del Castillo’s behalf by the Institute for Justice, a libertarian law firm.

“Laws that restrict who can give dietary advice clearly implicate the First Amendment,” says Paul Sherman, a senior attorney with the Institute for Justice. “If the government wants those laws on the books, it bears the burden of justifying them.”

States get away with regulating all sorts of economic activity via occupational licensing laws, in part because of the so-called “professional speech doctrine,” a legal practice in which courts have held that governments may limit or compel speech under the guise of regulating business activity. But the U.S. Supreme Court knocked down the professional speech doctrine in a 2018 ruling that overturned a California law requiring pregnancy centers to tell women where they could get an abortion.

Sherman says that the 2018 ruling—National Institute of Family and Life Advocates v. Becerra—was a “game-changer” that has caused lower courts to begin to grapple with how occupational licensing laws may run afoul of the First Amendment too. He predicts there will be more litigation in that space.

Rice notes that Mississippi has a reputation for being one of the most obese states in the nation, as well as one of America’s highest incarceration rates—two things that won’t be improved by treating unlicensed dieticians like serious criminals.

“Telling healthy adults what they should eat or buy at the grocery store is a freedom we all have as Americans,” he says, “whether we are paid for that speech or not.”

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A Mississippi Woman Gave Diet Advice Without a License. The State Threatened To Throw Her in Jail.

Mississippi Department of Health officials threatened to turn Donna Harris’ eight-week weight loss challenge into six months behind bars, but now the state stands accused of putting the First Amendment on a diet.

Harris, a personal trainer and fitness expert, has run a Facebook page since 2018 dedicated to encouraging healthy eating habits. Earlier this year, she launched a small side business, offering one-on-one diet coaching and weight loss tips to anyone willing to pay $99 to participate in an eight-week contest where participants could compete to shed the most pounds. Before it could even start, however, the state government shut it down.

On January 22, Harris received a cease-and-desist letter from the Mississippi Department of Health. Talking about healthy eating on Facebook and getting paid to do it, the department said, could trigger a $1,000 fine and up to six months in jail. In the eyes of the state, Harris was an unlicensed dietician—and apparently enough of a threat to public safety that she might need to be put behind bars.

“When I learned I would have to cancel my weight-loss class, I was devastated,” said Harris in a statement. “People were counting on me and they were so excited about learning how to lose weight in a healthy way, and they were so disappointed when I told them I was not going to be able to go through with the program.”

Harris wasn’t pretending to be a licensed dietician. In fact, her Facebook page and website both specify that she isn’t one. Anyone willing to pay her for advice on eating healthier was engaged in a voluntary transaction—one that has little to do with the state government’s interests.

In a lawsuit filed this week on Harris’ behalf, the Mississippi Justice Institute, a nonprofit law firm, argues that Mississippi’s overzealous enforcement of its dietician licensing law violated Harris’ First Amendment rights.

Aaron Rice, the group’s director, is particularly galled by what happened when Harris asked the state what information she could legally provide without a license. She was told to stick to “government-approved guidelines, like the food pyramid,” Rice says. “So you can engage in government-approved speech, but not non-government-approved speech?”

Getting a permission slip to speak freely about healthy diets is no easy task in Mississippi. It requires a bachelor’s degree and more than 1,200 hours of supervised practice. Starting in 2024, the license will require a graduate degree. Harris actually has one of those—a master’s degree in occupational therapy, to go along with her bachelor’s degree in nutrition and food science—but not the one the state will soon require.

Mississippi is not the only state to require that dieticians be licensed, and this is not the first time a state has gone to extreme lengths to enforce its mandatory permission slip regime. In 2017, Florida Department of Health officials ran a sting operation to catch Heather Kokesch Del Castillo giving out unlicensed diet advice online. She, too, was threatened with jail time. A judge rejected a subsequent challenge to the state’s dietician licensing laws brought on Del Castillo’s behalf by the Institute for Justice, a libertarian law firm.

“Laws that restrict who can give dietary advice clearly implicate the First Amendment,” says Paul Sherman, a senior attorney with the Institute for Justice. “If the government wants those laws on the books, it bears the burden of justifying them.”

States get away with regulating all sorts of economic activity via occupational licensing laws, in part because of the so-called “professional speech doctrine,” a legal practice in which courts have held that governments may limit or compel speech under the guise of regulating business activity. But the U.S. Supreme Court knocked down the professional speech doctrine in a 2018 ruling that overturned a California law requiring pregnancy centers to tell women where they could get an abortion.

Sherman says that the 2018 ruling—National Institute of Family and Life Advocates v. Becerra—was a “game-changer” that has caused lower courts to begin to grapple with how occupational licensing laws may run afoul of the First Amendment too. He predicts there will be more litigation in that space.

Rice notes that Mississippi has a reputation for being one of the most obese states in the nation, as well as one of America’s highest incarceration rates—two things that won’t be improved by treating unlicensed dieticians like serious criminals.

“Telling healthy adults what they should eat or buy at the grocery store is a freedom we all have as Americans,” he says, “whether we are paid for that speech or not.”

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Police are keeping a list of people who tell offensive jokes

Are you ready for this week’s absurdity? Here’s our Friday roll-up of the most ridiculous stories from around the world that are threats to your liberty, your finances, and your prosperity… and on occasion, poetic justice.

Hillary Clinton’s Email Scandal Just Rose From the Dead

Ignorance of the law is no excuse for you or me.

But somehow when Hillary Clinton broke the law while Secretary of State, it was her intentions that mattered.

As everyone knows by now, Clinton stored confidential, top secret emails on a personal, unsecured email server while she was Secretary of State.

She got off the hook because she claimed that she didn’t intend to violate the law… she didn’t realize that what she was doing was totally illegal.

That’s why she’s not rotting in a prison cell, even though you or I would be turning big rocks into little rocks in a DayGlo Orange jumpsuit if we had committed an equivalent crime.

But a group called Judicial Watch wasn’t as quick to let it go.

Using Freedom of Information Act requests, they continued to uncover more and more details of the case and bringing it all to court. And as the judge in the case commented, “With each passing round of discovery, the Court is left with more questions than answers.”

Therefore a federal judge has permitted another round of discovery. This means Hillary Clinton will be forced to sit for an interview with government officials to answer “significant questions” about her violation of the law.

Click here to read the full story.

Police in Scotland have a list of people who tell offensive jokes

Scottish Internet users better be careful of the jokes they tell online– you might end up on a government watchlist.

A Freedom of Information request revealed that 3,300 “non-crime hate incidents” have been logged in a police database.

Hundreds of people were added to the list last year for making offensive jokes or rude comments online.

Police say they track these individuals just in case their humor crosses the line into illegal territory.

For example, a couple years ago a Scottish YouTuber was arrested and convicted for teaching his pug a Nazi salute.

They guy may have been way too sophomoric… but when did it become a crime to be immature and offensive?

And now free speech is being monitored for signs of criminality.

Plus, with certain types of background checks, potential employers could see that these innocent people have been logged social media posts deemed to be offensive by the government.

Click here to read the full story.

School forbade kids from saying no when asked to dance

I just love it when wokeness contradicts itself.

A middle school in Utah was gearing up to host its Valentine’s Day dance. And in an effort to make sure that all students felt “welcome, comfortable, safe, and included,” the school adopted a policy forcing the kids to dance with anyone who asked them.

And sure enough, when an 11-year old girl was asked to dance by a boy who creeped her out, the principal forced them to dance together.

This is pretty much the opposite of #MeToo.

And in their ridiculous effort to make sure that no student was upset or offended, they violated one of the most basic consent rules in our society.

This is the paradox of wokeness: it’s absolutely impossible to prevent people from feeling upset, offended, excluded, or rejected.

Click here to read the full story.

Update: not illegal to remove cops’ GPS from your car

In December we talked about police who suspected a man of selling drugs.

They placed a GPS tracker on his car, but the man removed it. So the police got a warrant to search the man’s property for the “stolen” GPS.

While searching for the GPS, they found drugs.

Now the case against him for theft of the GPS has been dismissed along with the evidence of drug crimes.

The courts said it was all collected illegally, because the GPS was never stolen in the first place.

Click here to read the full story.

Update: woman pleads guilty to being topless in her own home

We’ve been following the case of Tilli Buchanan who was charged with sex crimes for being topless in her own home.

She and her husband had removed their shirts after installing insulation. Because her step-children saw her barechested, Tilli was charged with “child sex abuse” under Utah criminal code 76-9-702.5(2)(a)(ii)(B) for exposing “the female breast below the top of the areola. . .”

That left her facing the possibility of having to register as a child sex offender.

Originally she tried to challenge the law itself under equal protection grounds, since it treated male and female nipples differently.

But when she lost that case, she opted to take a plea deal. The charges were downgraded so she won’t be considered a sex offender.

Tilli will pay $600 and the case will be dismissed in a year if she doesn’t commit any crimes.

It’s pretty pathetic that she was ever charged in the first place, and sad that this is what the justice system wastes resources on.

Click here to read the full story.

Source

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Nearly 2,800 People Quarantined in New York City To Prevent Spread of Coronavirus

Mandatory quarantines on the upswing in New York. As residents of more and more U.S. cities test positive for the coronavirus, any hope of keeping it contained seems to have passed America by. And while the disease itself may still be nothing to panic about, government reactions to the coronavirus—a.k.a. COVID-19—are starting to ring some pretty big alarm bells.

Already, thousands of Americans are being told to “self-quarantine”—and could find themselves facing hefty fines if they venture outside.

In New York’s Westchester County, where a lawyer this week tested positive for the virus, more than 1,000 people are being asked to voluntarily self-quarantine and “two or three dozen” have been ordered to complete a mandatory quarantine, according to New York Governor Andrew Cuomo.

In New York City, 2,773 people are under quarantine, officials with the Health Department announced yesterday. Most of these people—who have not tested positive for coronavirus but may have been exposed—are completing voluntary “home isolation.” One woman who tested positive for the coronavirus, along with her spouse, were put under a mandatory quarantine order.

Both mandatory quarantine orders and voluntary quarantine requests are likely to increase, according to officials. “We’re going to get more and more mandatory as needed,” said NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio at a press conference yesterday.

Enforcing these orders are health department employees who are also “sworn peace officers with the legal authority make arrests, use physical force and conduct searches,” notes the New York Post. “Breaking involuntary confinement can result in fines of between $200 and $2,000 per day in the city and up to $2,000 per incident elsewhere.”

The paper also points out that “voluntary” quarantine orders aren’t really all that voluntary:

City and state laws don’t provide any penalties for violating voluntary quarantine, which is the “preferred method” of isolating carriers or potential carriers of contagious diseases, according to an official Public Health Legal Manual published in 2011.

But if people refuse to comply, they can be subjected to involuntary quarantine by order of the health commissioner in New York City, or by local boards of health elsewhere in the state.

These health police in New York City can also sanction certain folks for refusing to get tested for the coronavirus.

New York City said this week that testing is mandatory for all teachers, health professionals, and emergency responders at risk of catching COVID-19. Those who won’t take the test will be put on mandatory quarantine at home or at “such other location determined by the Department,” according to an order from the Health Department.


QUICK HITS

  • In California, authorities are requiring that private health insurance companies cover coronavirus testing “free” of cost to those who qualify, whether tests are administered at a doctor’s office, an urgent care center, or an emergency facility.
  • The Trump administration is expanding the number of temporary seasonal work visas available by 35,000.
  • A man in Texas was sentenced to 30 days in jail and a $1,000 fine for licking a container of ice cream in a Walmart. He has also been ordered to pay the ice cream manufacturer, Blue Bell Creameries, $1,565 in restitution.
  • Andrew Yang has started a nonprofit that will run a universal basic income experiment in New York State.
  • “Today’s prohibition on polygamy has created a shadow society in which the vulnerable make easy prey,” said Utah lawmaker Deidre Henderson, the sponsor of a newly-approved bill to decriminalize polygamy. “Because of the very real fear of imprisonment, losing employment, not being treated fairly, and having their children taken into state custody, we now have an environment where crime often goes unreported, victims are silenced, and perpetrators are empowered.”
  • Even Vox co-founder Ezra Klein, the poster boy for faith in big government, has some reservations about the 2020 presidential candidate options:

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Nearly 2,800 People Quarantined in New York City To Prevent Spread of Coronavirus

Mandatory quarantines on the upswing in New York. As residents of more and more U.S. cities test positive for the coronavirus, any hope of keeping it contained seems to have passed America by. And while the disease itself may still be nothing to panic about, government reactions to the coronavirus—a.k.a. COVID-19—are starting to ring some pretty big alarm bells.

Already, thousands of Americans are being told to “self-quarantine”—and could find themselves facing hefty fines if they venture outside.

In New York’s Westchester County, where a lawyer this week tested positive for the virus, more than 1,000 people are being asked to voluntarily self-quarantine and “two or three dozen” have been ordered to complete a mandatory quarantine, according to New York Governor Andrew Cuomo.

In New York City, 2,773 people are under quarantine, officials with the Health Department announced yesterday. Most of these people—who have not tested positive for coronavirus but may have been exposed—are completing voluntary “home isolation.” One woman who tested positive for the coronavirus, along with her spouse, were put under a mandatory quarantine order.

Both mandatory quarantine orders and voluntary quarantine requests are likely to increase, according to officials. “We’re going to get more and more mandatory as needed,” said NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio at a press conference yesterday.

Enforcing these orders are health department employees who are also “sworn peace officers with the legal authority make arrests, use physical force and conduct searches,” notes the New York Post. “Breaking involuntary confinement can result in fines of between $200 and $2,000 per day in the city and up to $2,000 per incident elsewhere.”

The paper also points out that “voluntary” quarantine orders aren’t really all that voluntary:

City and state laws don’t provide any penalties for violating voluntary quarantine, which is the “preferred method” of isolating carriers or potential carriers of contagious diseases, according to an official Public Health Legal Manual published in 2011.

But if people refuse to comply, they can be subjected to involuntary quarantine by order of the health commissioner in New York City, or by local boards of health elsewhere in the state.

These health police in New York City can also sanction certain folks for refusing to get tested for the coronavirus.

New York City said this week that testing is mandatory for all teachers, health professionals, and emergency responders at risk of catching COVID-19. Those who won’t take the test will be put on mandatory quarantine at home or at “such other location determined by the Department,” according to an order from the Health Department.


QUICK HITS

  • In California, authorities are requiring that private health insurance companies cover coronavirus testing “free” of cost to those who qualify, whether tests are administered at a doctor’s office, an urgent care center, or an emergency facility.
  • The Trump administration is expanding the number of temporary seasonal work visas available by 35,000.
  • A man in Texas was sentenced to 30 days in jail and a $1,000 fine for licking a container of ice cream in a Walmart. He has also been ordered to pay the ice cream manufacturer, Blue Bell Creameries, $1,565 in restitution.
  • Andrew Yang has started a nonprofit that will run a universal basic income experiment in New York State.
  • “Today’s prohibition on polygamy has created a shadow society in which the vulnerable make easy prey,” said Utah lawmaker Deidre Henderson, the sponsor of a newly-approved bill to decriminalize polygamy. “Because of the very real fear of imprisonment, losing employment, not being treated fairly, and having their children taken into state custody, we now have an environment where crime often goes unreported, victims are silenced, and perpetrators are empowered.”
  • Even Vox co-founder Ezra Klein, the poster boy for faith in big government, has some reservations about the 2020 presidential candidate options:

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via IFTTT