Can Parent’s Making Porn Lead to Loss or Reduction of Child Custody?

From yesterday’s decision in Killebrew v. Gardner (opinion by Judge James Gardner Colins, joined by Judges Judith Ference Olson and Victor P. Stabile):

Father and Mother were married for a period of less than two years and had separated prior to Child’s birth. On March 6, 2014, Father filed an initial custody complaint seeking shared legal and physical custody. On April 7, 2014, the trial court entered an order providing that the parties would share legal custody and Father would have partial physical custody on Tuesday and Thursday evenings and every other Sunday. Father’s custody periods were expanded in orders dated October 17, 2014, and January 29, 2015, allowing Father to have Child overnight every other Thursday and one Saturday night per month. Father’s partial custody was expanded again on December 9, 2015, to alternating two or four nights per week, and this allocation of custody continued, in substantially similar form, through a series of orders entered prior to 2020.

On January 27, 2020, Mother filed a petition for modification of custody order, alleging that Child was involved in two automobile crashes while being driven by Father’s wife  …. At a February 25, 2020 hearing on this petition before a hearing officer, Father presented evidence that Mother had posted sexually explicit photographs of herself on the “OnlyFans” website {“a subscription-based website that allows content creators to share sexually explicit materials with their fans, after engaging in direct messages and other interactions, for a fee”}. Father also informed the hearing officer that he had made a ChildLine [suspected child abuse] report concerning Mother’s behavior.

On February 26, 2020, the trial court issued an order, upon the recommendation of the hearing officer, providing that Mother would have no contact with Child pending a scheduled forensic interview with Child. In the event that the forensic interview revealed that Child had no awareness of Mother’s OnlyFans activity, the order authorized supervised telephone communication with Mother and Child but no in-person contact pending a future court order. Alternatively, if Child did indicate awareness of such activity, then Mother would be permitted no contact with Child at all. The order further provided that Mother was required to delete her OnlyFans account and submit to a psychological evaluation and follow any recommendations provided to her in that evaluation.

Mother filed a petition for emergency hearing on July 1, 2020, alleging that the Delaware County Children and Youth Services (“CYS”) investigation had showed no sign of child abuse or that Child was aware of Mother’s OnlyFans activity and that Mother had otherwise fully complied with the requirements of the February 26, 2020 order. This petition was denied on July 22, 2020. On August 20, 2020, Father and Mother appeared at a status conference before the hearing officer, which resulted in an August 25, 2020 order granting Mother partial physical custody of Child every other weekend from Friday to Sunday evening, with Father retaining sole legal custody.

On November 16, 2020, Mother filed a modification petition seeking shared legal and physical custody of Child. In a March 30, 2021 order, upon consideration of Mother’s request, the trial court extended Mother’s period of partial physical custody to a period spanning Friday evening to Tuesday morning, on alternate weekends, but legal custody of Child continued to reside with Father.

On August 24, 2021, Mother filed the modification petition at issue here, again seeking shared legal and physical custody of Child. The matter ultimately proceeded to trial on April 26, 2023…. On June 27, 2023, the trial court issued the custody order under appeal, which provides that Mother and Father share legal and physical custody of Child….

[T]he court determined that [statutory custody] factor 9, which party is more likely to maintain a loving, stable, consistent, and nurturing relationship with the child, was … neutral. Finally, in its consideration of factor 16, any other relevant factor, the court found that there was no evidence that Mother’s OnlyFans activity caused Child any harm and that the court was not permitted to otherwise “judge a parent’s private adult behavior outside the presence of the child” under its statutory authority to assess the best interests of the child when fashioning a custody award….

The paramount concern in any child custody case is the best interests of the child. “The best-interests standard, decided on a case-by-case basis, considers all factors which legitimately have an effect upon the child’s physical, intellectual, moral, and spiritual well-being.” … “In a dispute between parents, each parent shares the burden of proving, by a preponderance of the evidence, that an award of custody to him or her would serve the best interests of the child.”

Father argues that the trial court did not appropriately consider Mother’s “poor life choices” when granting Mother shared legal and physical custody of Child based upon her prior OnlyFans activities. Father asserts that this activity called into question Mother’s mental health and posed a risk to Child. Father further contends that Mother was not forthright at trial regarding her work on OnlyFans as she stated that her OnlyFans subscribers would see her in “various stages of undress,” when in fact she was broadcasting herself performing sex acts….

The [trial] court noted Mother’s testimony that she deleted her OnlyFans account in May 2020, she has never posted adult content on any other site, her interactions with her patrons on the site were entirely virtual and solely through her pseudonymous username, and she never created OnlyFans content in her home during a period in which Child was present. The court further observed that the CYS investigation revealed that Father’s child abuse report was “unfounded.”

While the court recounted that the hearing officer who initially addressed this issue in 2020 agreed with Father that Mother’s OnlyFans activity reflected on her ability as a parent, the court recited its obligation to conduct a de novo custody trial and determined that it was not bound by the hearing officer’s finding. The trial court added that its focus under Section 5328(a) was on the best interests of the child with weighted consideration of any factor that affects the child’s safety, but “none of [the custody] factors include the morality of a parent’s judgment or values.”

The trial court then determined that Mother’s OnlyFans activities were irrelevant to the court’s custody analysis:

At the proceedings before the custody hearing officer, Father failed to establish that Mother’s activities on OnlyFans caused [C]hild any harm. Indeed, the record before the hearing officer as well as the record of the custody trial failed to establish that [C]hild was aware of Mother’s activities on OnlyFans.

Moreover, the [c]ourt credits Mother’s testimony that [C]hild was always in Father’s custody while she was creat[ing] content for OnlyFans. Father presented no evidence to prove the contrary. Additionally, Father failed to establish that Mother’s participation in OnlyFans raised any safety concerns. Indeed, he could not, as Mother participated anonymously with her location shielded. Last, the [c]ourt notes that CYS investigated Father’s allegations and subjected [C]hild to a forensic interview. The CYS investigation was closed after it deemed Father’s allegations “unfounded.”

In sum, the Court has considered Father’s concerns regarding Mother’s OnlyFans page. The statutory custody factors contained in § 5328(a) fail to permit this Court to judge a parent’s private adult behavior outside the presence of the child at issue absent evidence that it implicates [the] child’s safety or otherwise is inimical to the best interests of the child. Father failed to show that Mother’s activities three years ago on OnlyFans affect [C]hild’s best interests or are detrimental to her safety. Indeed, upon this [c]ourt’s Order, Mother deleted the page on May 15, 2020, over three years ago. Accordingly, the [c]ourt declines to consider Father’s allegation, finding it stale and beyond the purview of this [c]ourt’s statutory obligation pursuant to § 5328(a).

Upon a careful review of the record, we find no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s conclusion. The court comprehensively considered the evidence adduced at trial concerning Mother’s OnlyFans usage and fully addressed Father’s arguments that Mother’s past behavior on the site negatively reflected on her ability to parent Child. The court’s factual findings that Mother created her OnlyFans content when Child was not present in her house, Child was unaware of Mother’s activities on the site, and such activities did not pose a danger to Child’s safety are supported by the record. As an appellate court, we may not disturb the trial court’s reasonable conclusion, supported by competent evidence, that Mother’s OnlyFans activity did not weigh against an award of custody in her favor.

Moreover, we agree with the trial court’s rejection of Father’s request that the court consider Mother’s purported moral deficiencies as a result of her OnlyFans usage. As the trial court explained, a parent’s morality is not an enumerated custody factor. Furthermore, this Court has repeatedly rejected consideration of a parent’s morality or sexual lifestyle when fashioning a custody award. In V.B. v. J.E.B. (Pa. Super. 2012), we held that a trial court “injected artificial morality concerns that the legislature has deemed irrelevant” when finding that a father’s participation in prior polyamorous relationships weighed against him in a custody ruling where there was no finding that the relationships had an adverse impact on the child. See also Bolds v. Bowe (Pa. Super. 2022) (citing V.B. and disapproving of trial court’s criticism of father for leading a “double life” of polyamorous relationships but declining to overturn award of primary physical custody to mother where court “based its assessment of the factors upon [f]ather’s behavior, not its preconceived notions or judgment against [f]ather’s immorality”). Similarly, in Michael T.L. v. Marilyn J.L. (Pa. Super. 1987), we held that the trial court committed a “gross abuse of discretion” in relying on the mother’s “active sex life” during periods when the child was not in her custody as a basis for awarding custody of the child to the father absent evidence that the mother’s promiscuity had an adverse impact on the child. Likewise, here, where the trial court found that Mother’s past usage of OnlyFans to earn supplemental income was not a detriment to her parenting of Child or to Child’s safety, the court properly declined to consider this issue. {Mother testified that she is a licensed therapist [a quick Google search suggests she’s an addiction and substance abuse counselor -EV] and was employed in that capacity throughout the relevant period.} …

Note the complicated answer to the question in the post title:

  1. The mother apparently lost all in-person contact with the child for six months (Feb. 26, 2020 to Aug. 25, 2020).
  2. She then had sharply reduced parenting time with the child for seven more months (Aug. 25, 2020 to Mar. 30, 2021), though she then regained the roughly half-and-half parenting schedule that had been in place over the preceding years.
  3. She didn’t recover full shared legal custody for over two more years (Mar. 30, 2021 to June 27, 2023).
  4. She was ordered to shut down her OnlyFans account (presumably on pain of losing any chance to regain access to her child).
  5. But ultimately the appellate court concluded that the trial court didn’t act unreasonably in returning custody to her.

Items 1 and 4 strike me as hard to justify, especially since creating pornography is generally protected by the First Amendment (unless it depicts children, or is so hard-core as to qualify as unprotected “obscenity,” and nothing in the opinion suggests that was so). If there was real evidence that the child was being mistreated—e.g., by being depicted in the OnlyFans videos—that would have justified a temporary loss of access, but only for so long as was needed to verify that this isn’t happening. (For more on my views about parents’ free speech rights in child custody cases, see this article, though it discusses other kinds of fact patterns.)

To be sure, I can expect that many children might be upset to later learn that their parents had done porn, whether because they hear about it from classmates or see it themselves. But children might be upset about their parents’ having done all sorts of things; I don’t think that this concern about children’s potential disapproval or embarrassment (or hypothetical future strain on the parent-child relationship caused by such disapproval or embarrassment) should be a basis for a legal reduction in a parent’s custody rights.

Item 5 thus seems to me quite correct. But I’d love to hear what others think.

The post Can Parent's Making Porn Lead to Loss or Reduction of Child Custody? appeared first on Reason.com.

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‘Make-Believe’ Crisis

‘Make-Believe’ Crisis

Authored by Jim Quinn via The Burning Platform blog,

The ease with which any critical thinking individual can obliterate the climate change narrative makes you realize it has nothing to do with the climate or saving the planet.

The entire climate change scam is nothing more than a means to control the masses, enslave them through this warped ideology, and siphon billions from the very taxpayers they are misleading through their sophisticated propaganda campaign.

There is no crisis.

We are actually moving into a cooling period driven by the only thing that really matters – the sun.

Anyone with two brain cells knows you can’t power this modern world via solar and wind.

It’s plainly and quantifiably  impossible to do so.

Without oil, natural gas, coal, and nuclear power, our entire global economic system comes to a halt. Liberals are just the biggest dupes in this fantasy of windmills and solar panels.

They are so brain dead, they don’t know where the electricity to charge their virtue signalling Teslas is actually produced.

The stupid, it burns – like red hot coal.

According to Al Gore the world ended in 2016.

The climate grifters like Gore, Gates, Schwab, and the rest of the Davos billionaire cabal that fly to climate change conferences in their private jets and live in 25,000 square foot mansions with 13 bathrooms and multiple gas stoves, want to use this climate change tripe as the main thrust in depopulating the planet so they have it all and the surviving peasants own nothing.

Climate change is the cudgel the ruling elite are using to increase their own power, control and wealth.

It really is that simple.

I believe throwing billionaires into volcanoes will satisfy the climate gods.

That is more believable than their ridiculous climate crisis narrative

Tyler Durden
Thu, 01/04/2024 – 14:45

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“The Public Should Be Made Aware Of This”

“The Public Should Be Made Aware Of This”

“The public should be made aware of this,” Elon Musk commented on X, referencing a post by former Texas Representative Mayra Flores, which showed a video of what might be the biggest migrant caravan approaching the US southern border in the past year. 

Flores said, “The largest migrant caravan of 2023 known as the ‘poverty exodus,’ has recently departed from Southern Mexico, comprising approximately 15,000 individuals from 24 countries en route to the US border.” 

“Yet Democrats are focused on cooking pictures I posted that reminded me of my upbringing. I can’t with so much pettiness,” she noted.” 

As we’ve detailed in two reports, the US southern border invasion is likely being organized by a network of NGOs, or non-governmental organizations, some of which are funded by US taxpayers. 

Last week, Fox News reported that a record 302,000 encounters with illegal migrants occurred in December, which marks 785,000 encounters since Oct. 1. 

Meanwhile, the Biden administration has repeatedly downplayed the invasion. 

Let’s revisit the clearest misinformation campaign from the White House in May, when Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorka declared: “I want to be very clear, our borders are not open.” 

And this… 

While Democrats welcome the millions of new voters illegals, there are increasing fears that the Biden administration’s reckless open southern border policies are fueling a major national security threat. 

Kinney County, Texas, Attorney Brent Smith told The Center Square: “Our government is funding this invasion with our tax dollars. It needs to stop. We don’t know who is coming in. It only took 19 people to change the world as we know it on 9/11. That’s a fraction of the thousands coming through an hour and we don’t know who they are.” 

Tyler Durden
Thu, 01/04/2024 – 14:25

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AI Can’t Paper Over Semiconductor Weakness

AI Can’t Paper Over Semiconductor Weakness

By Heather Burke, BLoomberg Markets Live analyst and reporter

A semiconductor company profit warning serves as a reminder that pockets of weakness remain in the tech industry beyond Apple.

Mobileye, which makes semiconductors for driver-assistance systems in vehicles, is plunging about 25% after its revenue outlook missed estimates. Demand for new technology in cars is high, but overall auto demand is slowing. Other companies that supply chips to the auto industry also dropped.

Nvidia and the fervor around artificial intelligence helped drive the best year for Philadelphia Semiconductor index since 2009, papering over slowdowns in areas such as industrial and networking chips. AI remains an area of growth potential: last month Broadcom said it expects AI growth to help counter a sales slowdown. But even the AI hype may have peaked. Nvidia was the best S&P 500 performer last year by far but its blowout earnings beat in November wasn’t enough to captivate traders.

Semiconductors and semiconductor equipment are projected to post the biggest y/y earnings-per-share growth of the three info tech subsectors in 4Q and 1Q24, according to Bloomberg Intelligence data. But, as we are seeing in the first week of the year, froth is seeping out of big tech, and chip companies won’t be spared, AI or not.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 01/04/2024 – 14:05

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“In Defense Of Democracy”, Desperate Dems Drop ‘Trump Paid Off By Princes & Premiers’ Report (But Suggest No Charges)

“In Defense Of Democracy”, Desperate Dems Drop ‘Trump Paid Off By Princes & Premiers’ Report (But Suggest No Charges)

You know it’s bad when… you bring back the ‘c’-word.

House Democrats appear to be reverting to an old playbook with their latest report claiming President Trump violated the Constitution by accepting payments for leases and hotel stays while in office due to thecollusive participation of foreign states.”

The ZeroHedge-esque-titled report: “White House for Sale: How Princes, Prime Ministers, and Premiers Paid Off President Trump” is 156 pages of damning evidence of Trump’s dastardly plan to make millions from foreign leaders while in office.

As The Wall Street Journal’s Jack Gillum and Kate O’Keefe breathlessly report, China and Saudi Arabia topped a list of 20 countries whose governments or state-linked entities pumped millions of dollars into Donald Trump’s properties while he was president, according to a new report and previously undisclosed records that shed light on Trump’s potential business conflicts as he seeks a second term.

Public documents and internal financial records obtained by Democrats on the House Oversight Committee and seen by The Wall Street Journal showed that countries spent lavishly at Trump’s hotels in Washington and Las Vegas. They also shelled out for payments at his New York properties, spending a total of at least $7.8 million during his time in office. 

The Chinese government and entities linked to it spent more than $5.5 million, or nine times that of Saudi Arabia, the next biggest spender, according to the report published Thursday by the panel’s Democratic minority. It argued that the foreign payments identified are “likely only a small fraction” of the true total because of incomplete disclosures.

The report, underpinned by documents provided to House investigators by the accounting firm Mazars USA, offers a fuller picture of how Trump’s businesses benefited during his presidency as foreign officials may have tried to curry favor with Trump.

Democrats will likely raise such questions again if he wins another term in November.

WSJ sheepishly admits that “the findings stem from years of litigation into whether Trump ran afoul of the Constitution’s emoluments clause, which prevents officeholders from accepting anything of value from foreign states without the permission of Congress.”

Which have prompted absolutely no charges at all for Trump or his family.

But, that’s not the point. The report provides defensive ‘whataboutist’ talking points for Biden-backers.

The tone of the report positions Trump’s actions as shockingly treasonous:

“The report’s detailed findings make clear that we don’t have the laws in place to deal with a president who is willing to brazenly convert the presidency into a business for self-enrichment and wealth maximization with the collusive participation of foreign states.

No other president had ever come close before to trying a rip-off like this simply based on vacuuming up foreign government money, which was the cardinal presidential offense and betrayal in the eyes of the Founders – an offense and betrayal made all the more striking here by the offender’s repeated laughable proclamations of “America First!”

And yet, after 156 pages of horrific ‘facts’, the House Committee on Oversight and Accountability does not call for charges, or an investigation; but instead suggests some reforms for future presidents to:

“ensure that all occupants of the Oval Office abide by the Constitution’s unequivocal language commanding loyalty to the interests of the American people – not the interests of homicidal Saudi monarchs, totalitarian Chinese bureaucratic state capitalists, or other foreign actors looking to obtain policy favors and indulgences by paying off a president or his wholly owned businesses.”

The comments section of The Wall Street Journal story on the Democrats’ report sums up the average Americans’ view of all this…

William Hall

Let me get this straight.

Foreign governments spent money at Trump properties for which they received lodging and meals and whatever other services the Trump properties provided.

However, the Biden crime family received millions from foreign actors and we have no idea what services were provided in return.

*  *  *

John Melvin

Shocked. I am shocked to discover that hotels charge fees for providing rooms and food for its guests.

Is there any evidence that they grossly overpaid or received something other than room and board?

I’m guessing not, or it would have been in the story.

…and it goes on…

Still, we are sure this report will play non-stop on various news networks for the next 48 hours and will serve as a tool to counter the actual payoffs that the Biden family have directly received, for apparently no services rendered…

Tyler Durden
Thu, 01/04/2024 – 13:40

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Why Aren’t People Having More Kids?


Tim Carney on a Just Asking Questions background | Illustration: Lex Villena

“To be a sane and happy parent, you need to be counter-cultural in our family-unfriendly culture,” writes Tim Carney in his forthcoming book Family Unfriendly: How Our Culture Made Raising Kids Much Harder Than It Needs to Be.

Carney, senior columnist at the Washington Examiner, senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, and the father of six children, talked with Reason‘s Zach Weissmueller and Liz Wolfe about declining fertility in America and worldwide and why he thinks it’s time for “governments, employers, and other institutions” to “abandon the idea of neutrality and instead take a side: the pro-family side.” They also discussed how governments make it harder to afford large families by implementing counterproductive housing and labor regulations. The conversation delved into the role that technology might play in increasing fertility in the future, the enduring cultural relevance of Mike Judge’s 2006 movie Idiocracy, and their reactions to clips about DINK couples (“double-income, no kids”). 

Watch the full conversation on Reason‘s YouTube channel or on the Just Asking Questions podcast feed on AppleSpotify, or your preferred podcatcher.

Sources referenced in this conversation:

Americans’ ideal family size is smaller than it used to be | Pew Research Center

Childstats.gov—America’s Children: Key National Indicators of Well-Being, 2023—Demographic Background

Building the New America: Urban Reform Institute, September 2023

World Fertility Rate 1950-2024 | MacroTrends

World Population Prospects—Population Division—United Nations

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How To Make An Economy Better In Election Year

How To Make An Economy Better In Election Year

Authored by Law Ka-chung via The Epoch Times,

In 2024, presidential and congressional elections will take place in many countries.

There has been speculation for a long time that existing ruling regimes try their best to make the economy prosperous and market bullish in the run-up to an election. The underlying belief of this is that government policies, whether fiscal or monetary, are effective and efficient. The latter is crucial because this requires a policy launched in the election year to have an imminent impact on the economy or market.

If the pleasing actions by the existing ruling regime are more oral than practical, then soon after, people would find no improvements in the situation and see through such manipulation tricks.

Accordingly, whether actions are deeds more than words or words more than deeds does not really matter, because what matters is policies done previously if policies are to be effective.

What policies have been in place so far?

Clearly, there has been a series of monetary tightening over the past two years, which are supposed to generate the expected cooling impact in 2024.

Because of such a long lag in policy effects (if any), the election year might not exhibit prosperity as expected.

The accompanying chart counts the number of years having various real GDP (year-over-year) growth ranges by years (n) before an election. Here, n = 0 means election year, n = 1 means one year before election, and so on. The counts are presented as a histogram against real GDP growth. A distribution leaning towards the right means better real GDP growth. The data used are the official ones dated earliest from 1930, giving an almost a century’s record.

U.S. Real GDP Growth n Year Before Elections (1930–2022). (Courtesy of Law Ka-chung)

The chart shows the election year (blue line) having slightly better economic performance (leaning somewhat more to the right than other colors).

However, the central tendencies of these distributions might not differ statistically, although the dispersions might look a bit different.

Since there are only slightly more than twenty counts for each year, the small sample (< 30) properties do not allow too much statistical inference from these results.

What can be concluded is that the election year effect looks more like a slogan than anything statistical.

On a specific case level, there are many election years with bad economic performance, namely, 2020 with the COVID-19 lockdown, 2008 with a financial tsunami, and 2000 with the tech bubble burst.

As explained above, such belief relies deeply on the policy impact.

For 2024, the market expects the Federal Reserve to begin rate cuts as early as March.

Nevertheless, experience suggests monetary policy typically has a time lag of 1 to 2 years.

This means if the U.S. economy turns bad within this year, there is not enough time for any policy changes to put off the fire.

[ZH: The timing of Powell’s sudden pivot  – which sparked stocks to soar and soft-survey data to improve as rate-cut expectations spiked – happens to have coincided with the rapid decline in President Biden’s approval rating…]

This might explain why n = 3 (red line) is also a good year because if a series of easings is made in an election year (n = 0), then the effect will be seen in the year (n = 3).

Will such history repeat this time? We must wait and see.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 01/04/2024 – 13:20

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Government, Social Assistance, & Health Is Over 100% Of Job Creation In These 3 ‘Progressive’ States

Government, Social Assistance, & Health Is Over 100% Of Job Creation In These 3 ‘Progressive’ States

Authored by Mike Shedlock via MishTalk.com,

The welfare state is booming, especially in the sanctuary states. In three states, Government jobs plus Social Assistance/Health Care is over 100% of year-over-year job creation.

What’s driving American job growth? In progressive states, it’s government, social assistance and healthcare.

The Wall Street Journal reports The Welfare-Industrial Complex Is Booming

The tens of thousands of migrants pouring into big cities need to be tended to. So do the hundreds of thousands of drug-addled and mentally ill homeless living on the streets. Progressive government doesn’t do anything on the cheap. America’s welfare state has thus become a proverbial Big Dig, and it keeps getting bigger.

New York City is spending $394 a day—or $143,810 a year—to house and feed each migrant, many in formerly posh hotels. Mayor Eric Adams grouses about the flood of migrants, but what does he expect when the city makes itself a welfare magnet?

Meantime, the homeless population continues to swell, even as government shovels more money into housing subsidies—nearly $43 billion in the Democrats’ March 2021 Covid bill alone. The number of homeless shot up 85,389 between 2019 and 2023, with California and New York combined accounting for about half the increase, according to a recent federal government report.

A 2017 report from Orange County United Way, a nonprofit in Irvine, Calif., estimated that each chronically homeless person living on the streets and in emergency shelters costs the public $85,631 a year, largely owing to high healthcare expenses from repeat trips to the emergency room. The $837,000 Los Angeles is spending to build a single housing unit for the homeless almost appears frugal by comparison.

Aside from two years of runaway inflation, one way to explain Americans’ malaise is that they sense most new jobs aren’t making them or most people they know better off. The main beneficiaries are workers in the welfare-industrial complex.

Check out Medicaid in California

The California Health Care Foundation explains Medi-Cal Financing and Spending

In fiscal year (FY) 2021–22, California’s Medicaid program, Medi-Cal, spent $121.9 billion to provide a wide range of core health benefits to nearly 15 million Californians with low incomes. 

Free Heath Care to Illegal Immigrants

News Medical reports States expand health coverage for immigrants as GOP hits Biden over border crossings

Eleven states and Washington, D.C., together provide full health insurance coverage to more than 1 million low-income immigrants regardless of their legal status, according to state data compiled by KFF Health News. Most aren’t authorized to live in the U.S., state officials say.

Enrollment in these programs could nearly double by 2025 as at least seven states initiate or expand coverage. In January, Republican-controlled Utah will start covering children regardless of immigration status, while New York and California will widen eligibility to cover more adults.

There are more than 10 million people living in the U.S. without authorization, according to estimates by the Pew Research Center. Immigrant advocates and academic experts point to two factors behind state leaders’ rising interest in providing health care to this population.

States have also expanded coverage in response to pleas from hospitals, lawmakers say, to reduce the financial burden of treating uninsured patients.

California was the first state to begin covering immigrants regardless of their legal status, starting with children in 2016.

Health Care Benefits to Illegal Immigrants

Your health cares costs are increasing to cover illegal immigrants. And it will only accelerate from here. Offering free health care for kids will soon expand to adults.

The alternative is emergency room care which is more expensive.

Money, Money, Money

Let me ask again, Sanctuary Cities Seek More Money for Migrants, But is Money the Problem?

Add free housing and free health care for illegal immigrants to the list of major forces increasing inflation.

And these numbers are sure to be a major election issue, perhaps the deciding issue. For discussion of how the Senate is shaping up, please see Good News, Republicans Have a Great Chance to Take the Senate in 2024

Tyler Durden
Thu, 01/04/2024 – 12:40

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ISIS Claims Responsibility For Mass Casualty Suicide Bombings In Iran

ISIS Claims Responsibility For Mass Casualty Suicide Bombings In Iran

Most international reports yesterday said that over 100 were killed, with still others like Fox News citing a high figure of 200 dead from the explosions that ripped through an event marking the four year anniversary since Qasem Soleimani’s death in Kerman city in the country’s south. On Thursday a revised figure is being widely reported of at least 84 people killed, more than 280 wounded. Despite state sources revising the casualty count downward, it was still among the deadliest single terror attacks in the Islamic Republic’s history.

Iranian leaders are vowing swift revenge, with Interior Minister Ahmad Vahidi telling state television, “The perpetrators of this terrorist attack will be caught by the powerful hand of our security and intelligence organizations and will receive a strong slap, both perpetrators and supporters.”

Victims’ family members gathered at a hospital in Kerman, in southeast Iran, ISNA via AP

Like other prior top-level statements from Tehran in the immediate aftermath, Iran has stopped short of officially seeking to blame Israel or the US. However, other Iranian officials still pointed the finger at Tel Aviv and Washington as is typical, given Israel has in the past conducted covert assassinations of nuclear scientists. 

Many observers are pointing out that it doesn’t fit the pattern of an Israeli covert sponsored attack, given the attacks were likely carried out by a pair of suicide bombers who detonated themselves within large crowds. The Associated Press details

The IRNA report quoted the official as saying that surveillance footage from the route to the commemoration at Kerman’s Matryrs Cemetery clearly showed a male suicide bomber detonating explosives. The official said the second blast “probably” came from another suicide bomber, though it hadn’t been determined beyond doubt.

Such a tactic is more typical of Saudi/Wahabi/Sunni-style al-Qaeda or ISIS or Jundallah attacks, and these groups have long had inroads in border regions of Iran among the non-Shia minority in the country. On Thursday, Reuters is reporting that ISIS has taken responsibility: 

ISLAMIC STATE CLAIMS RESPONSIBILITY FOR IRAN ATTACKS: REUTERS

Meanwhile, The Wall Street Journal has cited analysts to say Israel’s involvement is doubtful in this case:

People familiar with Israeli operations say the country told allies that it wasn’t involved with the explosions. They said the style of the bombing doesn’t fit the pattern of alleged Israeli attacks, which have usually been more precise targeting of individuals or infrastructure connected to Iran’s security forces.

The characteristics of Wednesday’s attack in Iran, including the high number of civilian casualties, don’t match the pattern of previous Israeli targeted killings, which tend to avoid large-scale surrounding damage, said Shlomo Mofaz, a former senior official in Israeli military intelligence. 

The source additionally said that “When the Iranians want to point a finger at Israel and know it is Israel it [the accusations] come in a different tone.” But important to note is that the WSJ is quoting a “former senior official” who served in “Israeli military intelligence” to say… don’t look at Israel.

Others have remained skeptical, and highlighted the likely role of the MEK in the Kerman attack…

The Iranian outlawed Mujahadin-e Khalq (MEK) dissident group has long had support from US and European political leaders, despite having been known for a history of covert assassination campaigns targeting officials of the Islamic Republic. It’s widely believed that Israeli intelligence also utilizes MEK assassins in brazen sabotage and assassination operations, chiefly aimed at degrading Iran’s nuclear program.

However, while MEK has long been known for brazen assassinations in crowded areas, it typically employs tactics like drive-by motorcycle killings, and is not well-known for suicide bombings.

Given that now there’s been an Islamic State statement of responsibility, the West is likely to consider it a ‘closed case’, but Tehran leaders will still be suspicious, given they tend to see ISIS as ultimately a Saudi-Israeli backed project to begin with.

Tyler Durden
Thu, 01/04/2024 – 12:20

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/CsvyXH2 Tyler Durden

3 Economic Myths That Need To Die


a globe in front of a black and white backdrop | Illustration: Lex Villena

As a new year dawns, it’s customary to reflect on the past and set resolutions for the future. This year, let’s resolve to greet three widespread claims with healthy doses of skepticism.

The first dubious claim is that income inequality in the United States has inexorably risen since the 1960s. It’s a scary narrative heavily bolstered by the work of three French economists: Thomas Piketty, Emmanuel Saez, and Gabriel Zucman. According to these researchers, the situation was fueled mostly by tax cuts for top income earners during President Ronald Reagan’s administration. Their proposed remedy, not surprisingly, is a sky-high, French-like level of taxation.

As appealing as that may be to the many fans of soak-the-rich policies, I advise against condemning the rich to the tax guillotine quite yet. We should also hold off on trying to tackle the alleged problem with more welfare spending. In the last few years, a series of peer-reviewed studies from very respectable economists have shown that the three Frenchmen’s claims of rising income inequality suffer from fatal flaws. For instance, some researchers argue that the rise in inequality is not as pronounced as suggested, pointing to better data sources or interpretations. Others highlight methodological issues, such as the questionable treatment of tax data and government transfers in calculating incomes.

Basically, the incessant narrative of ever-widening income inequality requires, at a minimum, serious skepticism. That leaves the case for further income redistribution weak, even if one admits that welfare spending has increased the income of some poverty-stricken Americans. Unfortunately, it’s done so at the cost of economy-wide productivity and sometimes to the detriment of welfare recipients themselves.

Short of adopting this more accurate and comprehensive picture of American wealth distribution and economic mobility, I hope we will at least hear more tempered claims from the left that the world is going to hell.

The second claim warranting skepticism is the one about how years of unchecked globalization have eroded America’s industrial foundation. Not only do we Americans still produce an enormous economic output, but the U.S. also continues to be a dominant force in manufacturing. A recent paper by the Cato Institute’s Colin Grabow even reports that American manufacturing surpasses the output of Japan, Germany, and South Korea combined. We are the world’s second-largest manufacturing economy and, better yet, we are a global frontrunner in critical sectors such as automotive and aerospace.

Further, I hope people finally come to understand that the fact that manufacturing now employs fewer workers and contributes less to gross domestic product than in previous decades doesn’t require a change in policy. As Grabow shows, the same thing is happening across all developed countries—and not predominantly due to globalization. It’s more a result of advances in productivity (as workers use more machines and computers, they produce more output) and a change in consumer preferences toward services rather than goods.

Besides, while fewer people are employed in manufacturing, those who continue to work there enjoy better and safer work conditions. They also command higher wages. If you’re unconvinced of these points, go visit a modern steel mill.

Finally, I wish politicians and pundits—and more of us citizens—would become a lot more skeptical about the idea that government is the solution to all problems. At the very least, I hope they consider the sheer scale of today’s government. Despite all the enormous spending and extensive regulating, dissatisfaction among the public persists, and in many cases, problems seem to be worsening. Correlation isn’t causation, but this observation alone should puzzle those who believe that simply expanding government is a solution.

In truth, government spending is not inherently efficient or effective. It often leads to a misallocation of resources, bureaucratic inefficiencies, and unintended consequences that exacerbate the problems government aims to solve. And when government fails, its mistakes are hard to correct. It’s a sharp contrast with the dynamic and adaptive nature of free markets. The collective decisions of millions of individuals freely spending and investing their own money are incredibly effective at allocating resources, responding to consumer needs and driving innovation. And when the market fails, people with their own money on the line don’t hesitate to change course.

As we step into 2024, it’s crucial to adopt a better and informed perspective toward these and other prevalent claims. The narrative of ever-increasing income inequality, the supposed erosion of America’s industrial base due to globalization, and the belief in government as a panacea are all areas ripe for reevaluation.

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The post 3 Economic Myths That Need To Die appeared first on Reason.com.

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