Guest Post: Civil Rights And Public Order In Hong Kong

Submitted by Daniel Cloud

The authorities in Hong Kong are once again threatening to clear the protest sites. They have a legal pretext, in the form of court orders issued in response to complaints from the owners of buildings, who are losing traffic. The powers that be are in no mood for compromise. “Police urge the illegal road occupiers to obey the court order, remove obstacles and personal belongings, and stop the illegal occupation soonest.”

Momentum has been lost, for the time being, so the government has decided to put on a little more pressure, to see if it can’t finally end the whole incident. That may work, in the short term, or it may backfire again. But in the medium and long term, the protestors aren’t really going to go away permanently, because their perfectly legitimate grievance – no democracy, therefore no real rule of law or protection for basic human rights – isn’t going to go away. The people of Hong Kong are thoroughly familiar with the modern word, and they know what they deserve. There just isn’t any way to get a whole city full of highly educated modern people to accept that they can’t have the same rights as everyone else in the developed world. There isn’t any legitimate reason the authorities could possibly give for why that should be – none that’s more sophisticated than “because I’m going to kill you if you don’t shut up about it.” But that means that no matter how many times the protestors are removed, they’ll always come back, sooner or later. The government can’t win a long war of political attrition with the protest movement, though they may think they can now, because, according to the basic social contract of a modern society, they’re simply in the wrong. There’s no way for them to fix that, and there’s no way for them to stop people from noticing it. So the injury will keep being insulting, and protests will keep flaring up until the problem is fixed or they’re violently crushed.

But let’s give the Devil his due. The authorities must still suppose that they have some plausible excuse for their actions, some reason, which they hope Hong Kong people will eventually accept, that justifies their repeated attempts to deprive their citizens of the basic right of assembly. The crucial question for predicting the ultimate outcome of this protracted confrontation is whether that story actually makes any sense, whether it is something educated people in a modern society could possibly remain convinced of for very long. What is it? What do they say when they do these things, if it isn’t simply the familiar “shut up or I’m going to kill you” which we all remember so fondly from Tiananmen? What’s their excuse?

In fact, the Hong Kong government keeps trying to explain its various attempts to deprive Hong Kong people of their civil rights by saying that they’re needed to preserve “public order”. But is that really a legitimate reason? What is the actual relationship between civil rights and public order? And what makes this kind of non-violent mass protest happen in the first place? What are the protestors trying to achieve? Is it or is it not something that justifies a disruption of public order? Confronted with these questions, different people might come up with different answers, at least at first, so let me try to give you a rational account of the considerations involved, as I understand them, and we’ll see if you agree with me that the Hong Kong government’s justification for its actions is ultimately unconvincing.

The instinct to gather a quorum when confronted by a tyrant is deeply engraved in the human genome. We evolved in small societies, roving bands of hunter-gatherers. Christopher Boehm shows, in Hierarchy in the Forest, that those societies tend to be very egalitarian, with a strong emphasis on personal autonomy. Occasionally domineering individuals do appear, but it’s easy for everyone to meet behind their back and decide that they must be exiled or killed. Sometimes the relatives of the man being dealt with in this way are the ones who actually have to do the deed. The important thing is that the decision must be made and executed by the whole community, acting in concert. Individually each member would be afraid to oppose the bully, but together they have courage.

In larger human societies, this instinct for collective resistance to illegitimate authority can make coordination difficult. Strangers must interact with each other, and disputes arise that can’t be resolved by consensus. Conventional laws must be created to supplement our shared preferences, and authority must be delegated to those who enforce them. But this results in societies that are ordered by two very different principles, which can easily come into conflict.

Most of us share a preference that nobody should commit murder. That is an unconditional shared preference about everyone’s behavior. Even if most other people started committing murders, we would still feel that everyone really should refrain. We can think of the preferences about how everyone should behave which most people share as the social contract. This shared sense of justice and propriety is the original principle of order in human societies, but in societies too large and complex to be managed entirely by peer pressure, enforceable, somewhat arbitrary conventions are needed to make it effective.

For example, most of us, in North America, would prefer that each other person follow the convention of driving on the right side of the road. But if everyone else started driving on the left hand side of the road, we would prefer that the person switch to the left hand side. Our preferences about their behavior, in this case, are conditional – they depend on what everyone else is doing, unlike our unconditional preference that everyone refrain from murder. There is supposed to be a particular relationship between these two different kinds of social rule. It’s part of the social contract that people ought to drive down the same side of the road as everybody else, because to do otherwise might result in negligent homicide, but the rule that it must be the right side in particular is just a convenient convention for implementing the social contract, one of two equally good alternative ways of doing that.

The same thing is true of any traffic rule. It could have been otherwise, but it’s part of the social contract that whatever it actually is must be conformed to. Laws in general have this same conventional character. They always could have been otherwise, and yet following them is still obligatory. Even constitutions and the whole systems of government they underpin are also basically just systems of somewhat arbitrary conventions for implementing the society’s underlying social contract.

If everyone else is driving on the right, most people would prefer to do the same, but a few drunks or scofflaws might flout the rule, if there were no traffic police. The social contract requires adherence to conventional laws under normal circumstances, so it supports the existence of police to enforce this convention. The problem in a society that doesn’t have regular, meaningful, free and fair elections and an independent judiciary is that there is no similar group of people whose job it is to defend the underlying social contract. If the laws or the system of government come into conflict with the social contract, if they become arbitrary in the bad sense of the word, there are police (and soldiers) to enforce the laws, but there is no conventional arrangement for stopping the police from enforcing them, even though the laws are supposed to be mere ways of implementing the social contract.

A society in that situation is like an unsafe coal mine. As long as everyone else is still working, I may need to go on working there, so I can feed my family. And as long as I’m still working, I want each other person to come to work, because the mine would be even less safe with a skeleton crew. So I conform to the convention of continuing to work. But though I want each other person to continue conforming as long as everyone else is, I would be much happier if all of us didn’t come to work one day, because then we might be able to force the owner to improve the safety of the mine. My fellow workers probably feel the same way, they probably wish we could all strike. If we could all gather together somewhere, we could easily see that everyone else was just as willing to strike as we were, and management would be in trouble. So management doesn’t want us to gather a quorum, and they’re likely to send goons to break up our meetings.

And this is just exactly what the preservation of public order at the expense of a basic human right, the right of assembly, is all about. It’s all about preventing the formation of a quorum, a visible critical mass of disaffected citizens for mass disobedience to crystallize around. It’s precisely the conventions of public order, the unelected government that’s constituted by them, and the violations of basic rights they entail that the protestors are threatening to unravel with their protest, so that a new set of conventions more consistent with the social contract can be adopted in their place.

Usually the social contract requires us to follow those conventions, and obey the law, but when the government violates our civil rights by denying us the right of assembly, that obligation can become reversed. Then we must not conform to them, though we’re still bound by the social contract.

In a democratic revolution, the protestors have the goal of creating a new set of conventional arrangements for periodically allowing a quorum of citizens to accept or reject their government and their laws. That is supposed to ensure that the laws don’t conflict with the social contract most of the time, and it will make it possible for citizens to do something about the situation when they do. If such a mechanism is already in place, the social contract is already adequately protected, so the gathering of citizens in public does nothing to erode the legitimacy of the government, and protests are harmless. Occupying Wall Street doesn’t cancel the last election, as long as there’s a next one coming, and as long as that next election will be free and fair and genuinely meaningful, and not a sham, like Hong Kong’s “elections”.

The use of force to disperse peaceful protestors is normally an attempt to prevent the assembly of a quorum, in a situation where that must be prevented to preserve an ongoing violation of the society’s social contract, or to disperse a quorum that has already formed. But it’s risky, because if it becomes too obvious that the government’s goal is preserving its ability to flout the social contract, it can lose legitimacy. The violence cuts two ways, undermining the state’s authority even as it deters the protestors.

Authority in modern human societies results from a combination of legitimacy – the shared sense that most people probably are willing to accept some act or some law or some government, that it’s in accordance with the social contract and our accepted conventions for implementing it – and power, having traffic police to deal with those few people who don’t. If legitimacy evaporates as a result of brutal and unsuccessful attempts to prevent or break up a peaceful assembly, authority disappears with it, and all the government is left with is power. Often this is not enough to allow it to hold together as an entity. People begin to refuse orders, there’s no way to shoot all of them, and it dissolves. Then, if the social contract of the society is consistent with democracy and the rule of law, a new government can be formed, and plans for elections can be put in motion.

In a modern society, the social contract itself is a fluid, constantly evolving thing, because our shared preferences and values are always evolving as our way of life changes. Changing preferences mean that the laws and conventions by which a modern society is governed must change constantly as well. The whole apparatus of democracy and the rule of law is there to keep the conventions of public order in harmony with the evolving social contract, and rapidly and efficiently resolve conflicts between them. Only the rule of law in the fullest possible sense – real legislators chosen by free and fair elections, an independent judiciary, and a modern, constantly evolving legal code, which is enforced in an impartial and reasonable manner – can create a long-lasting harmony of this kind in a modern society, so it is only where the rule of law is enshrined in the social contract, where all of these things are widely shared societal values, that a revolution against a tyranny can produce anything but more tyranny.

Unfortunately, there are several things that can go wrong with this process. If the government is ruling not one natural society but several, stripping away the conventions that allow them to avoid fighting each other may result in a civil war, rather than the formation of a new government. Or there may be an underlying social contract – but not one consistent with democracy and the rule of law. In this case, unless that changes, sooner or later the people will simply elect another tyrant. (In Egypt, it was sooner.)

In Syria, the government lost legitimacy when it began using snipers against peaceful protestors. (Deliberately and publicly murdering your own citizens tends to be perceived as a violation of the social contract in almost any society.) Its authority as the government of Syria collapsed – but it continued to exist as an extremely well-armed militia for the Alawite minority that controlled it. The national government became the government of a single ethnic group, but retained its legitimacy within that group. That residual power was enough to prevent the formation of a new national government, and created the Hobbesian hell that is Syria today.

Sadly, Hong Kong faces a somewhat similar situation. It isn’t the capital of China. No matter what happens there, the authority of the Chinese government is unlikely to be shaken. They are uniquely well positioned to get away with murder, to repeat Tiananmen and crush the protests, if they get out of hand. So the government of Hong Kong is right, there really is a grave danger that would result from a breakdown of public order. What they’re not saying, though, is that the danger actually comes from them, and their backers in Beijing, rather than from anything the demonstrators are doing. What they’re telling the protestors still really does just boil down to “shut up or I’ll kill you”, which is unfortunate, since it means that they actually will have to be willing to publicly murder their own citizens, in the end, to make the threat credible, with all the further risks to public order and their own legitimacy that that course of action entails.

The problem, of course, is what would happen afterwards. Hong Kong would be badly damaged. China, with its economy already in trouble, would then also be on an irreversible collision course with the rest of the world, with our emerging world society and its own nascent social contract. (This is why the Chinese government was so angry about Kenny G’s visit with the protestors. The last thing they want is for foreigners to begin to join them, because it will make killing them harder, if it ever comes to that.) The Chinese people themselves would be bitterly disappointed. A massacre in Hong Kong now would be the beginning of endless troubles for the Party.
 
Waiting and doing nothing is dangerous, because the demonstrations awaken and tantalize the human appetite for justice, tempting others in China to try to steal that delicious fruit. But doing what would be necessary to permanently shut the people of Hong Kong up, now that they’ve started talking back, would also be incredibly dangerous, since it could seriously damage the central government’s legitimacy. With the economy going sour, things were already pretty bad. Now the Party faces a problem that leaves them no good options.

If the protests gain momentum again, as they will sooner or later, accepting the students’ demands would in fact probably be their best choice, out of the unappetizing menu of choices in front of them, since it would preserve their legitimacy long enough to allow them to regain the initiative. Taiwan is already irreversibly a liberal democracy – letting Hong Kong be one as well would bring reunification one step closer, and decisively preventing that will make reunification permanently impossible. But it would be very surprising to see the current government of China make that wise and bold decision. There really is no justification for trying to preserve public order at the expense of fundamental civil rights – but the Party’s whole excuse for existing, at this point in its history, is the fiction that there is.

Daniel Cloud teaches philosophy at Princeton University. Other things he has written can be found in the ZH archives, and at http://ift.tt/1wTA0WP




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Surveillance State Wins – Senate Votes To Allow NSA Bulk Data Collection To Continue

Senate leaders failed to get the 60 votes needed to advance The USA Freedom Act – which would have limited the National Security Agency’s bulk collection of phone records – and as Bloomberg reports, it’s unlikely a new version can be drafted for another vote before the congressional term expires this year. The 58-42 vote to move the measure forward came mostly along party lines as Senator Saxby Chambliss – the top Republican on the intelligence committee – rambling that the bill “eliminates tools critical to the intelligence community’s ability to prevent terrorist attacks, and its adoption would greatly degrade our ability to fight domestic terrorism in particular.” In other words – it’s for own good, now shut up!

 

Bloomberg reports that The Senate blocked legislation that would have limited the National Security Agency’s bulk collection of phone records, more than year after Edward Snowden exposed the extent of U.S. government surveillance programs.

Senate leaders failed to get the 60 votes needed to advance the bill today. It’s unlikely a new version can be drafted for another vote before the congressional term expires this year.

 

The 58-42 vote to move the measure forward came mostly along party lines.

Wired.com explains what the bill would have achieved…

The bill would have put an end to the government’s controversial bulk collection of phone records from U.S. telecoms—a program first uncovered by USA Today in 2006 but re-exposed in 2013 in leaks by NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden. The bill would instead have kept records in the hands of telecoms and forced the NSA to obtain court orders from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court to gain access to them. It would also have required the agency to use specific search terms to narrow its access to only relevant records.

 

Additionally, the bill would have allowed service providers more transparency in disclosing to the public the number and types of requests they receive from the government for customer data. The government in turn would have had to be more transparent about the number of Americans caught up in its data searches. The NSA has said in the past that it has no idea how many Americans are caught up in national security collection efforts that target foreign suspects.

Remember – blocking the bill was for your own good!!

“The USA Freedom Act eliminates tools critical to the intelligence community’s ability to prevent terrorist attacks, and its adoption would greatly degrade our ability to fight domestic terrorism in particular,” Senator Saxby Chambliss of Georgia, the top Republican on the intelligence committee, said by e-mail.

 

Former NSA and CIA Director Gen. Michael Hayden and former U.S. Attorney General Michael Mukasey have called it the kind of “NSA Reform That Only ISIS Could Love,” referring to the militant group known as the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria that has terrorized parts of the Middle East.

There is still hope for privacy…

The bulk-records collection program still faces problems next summer when Section 215 of the USA Patriot Act are scheduled to expire. The government has used Section 215 to authorize collection of the records and reformers in the Senate and House have vowed to fight re-authorization of this and other sections of the Act next year and let them expire.

*  *  *




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China Home Price Slump Sends Iron Ore Plunging To 2009 Lows (-50% In 2014)

Iron Ore prices crashed below the critical $70/mt level overnight, lows not seen since the bottom in 2009, as China’s home prices fell for the second month in a row, accelerating losses. Average property prices across China dropped 2.6% YoY in October (a bigger drop than September’s 1.2% YoY slip) with only 1 out of 70 cities seeing any positive price change (Zhengzhou +0.2% MoM). What is perhaps most entertaining is the 38.6% YoY rise in new home starts China just experienced – the biggest jump ever – as the first sign of demand (or hint from PBOC that they would ‘help’ with mortgages) and supply floods the market. The ‘market’ appears not to believe the hype.

 

China home prices continue to slide…

 

With 69 of 70 cities seeing falling prices…

Source: @M_McDonough

 

And that led to more weakness in Iron Ore (and copper) prices…

 

which is ironic because the Chinese homebuilders went crazy in October increasing new home starts by 38.6% YoY in October…!!

 

That will not end well.




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Tonight on The Independents: Goodbye, USA Freedom and Keystone Pipeline! Hello, Executive Action, Weird Chinese Censorship, and Ferguson Build-up! Also, Anthony Fisher on Jerusalem Terror, and After-show

Tonight’s live episode of The
Independents
(Fox Business Network, 9 p.m. ET, 6 p.m. PT,
repeats three hours later) begins with a couple of nail-biting
Senate votes from this evening: The
narrow defeat
of an act legalizing the Keystone Pipeline, and
of the National Security Agency-reforming
USA Freedom Act
. Joining to discuss are Party Panelists
Charles W. Cooke
(National Review) and Joe DeVito (comedian).
The duo will also chew on the latest in
Grubergate
.

President Barack Obama is roiling the political waters by
threatening massive executive action on immigration; on to chew
over the wisdom and legality of that are Tamar Jacoby, president of
ImmigrationWorks USA, and Timothy Sandefur,
principal attorney of the Pacific Legal Foundation. Beloved Reason
TV writer/producer Anthony L.
Fisher
will talk about the terrorist attacks in Jerusalem, the
co-hosts will cogitate on
Radley Balko’s writing
about how cops should prepare for
potential riots. And we’ll talk about China’s weird hangups with

The Hunger Games
.

Online-only aftershow begins at http://ift.tt/QYHXdy
just after 10. Follow The Independents on Facebook at
http://ift.tt/QYHXdB,
follow on Twitter @ independentsFBN, hashtag
us at #TheIndependents, and click on this page
for more video of past segments.

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BTFTriple-Dip-Recession – Japanese Stocks Recover GDP Losses

3 days and 1400 NKY points roundtrip and all is once again well in the world according to Abe. The Nikkei 225 has just recovered all its losses from the dismal GDP downside ‘surprise’ thanks to a never-ending levitation in USDJPY back over 117.00. For now, the momentumn has stalled for stocks… but we are sure another regurgitated headline-full of Japanese policy-maker bullshit will send USDJPY to 120 and NKY back to 40,000 any day now – thus proving to all that Japan is indeed ‘recovered’.

USDJPY surges… NKY catches up somewhat… but has stalled for now…

 

JGBs remain lower in yield but yesterday’s ugly auction did not help confidence that the BoJ can keep a lid on this monkey-business…

 

Charts: Bloomberg




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Are “We The People” Useful Idiots In The Digital Age?

Submitted by John Whitehead via The Rutherford Institute,

Back in the heyday of the old Soviet Union, a phrase evolved to describe gullible western intellectuals who came to visit Russia and failed to notice the human and other costs of building a communist utopia. The phrase was “useful idiots” and it applied to a good many people who should have known better. I now propose a new, analogous term more appropriate for the age in which we live: useful hypocrites. That’s you and me, folks, and it’s how the masters of the digital universe see us. And they have pretty good reasons for seeing us that way. They hear us whingeing about privacy, security, surveillance, etc., but notice that despite our complaints and suspicions, we appear to do nothing about it. In other words, we say one thing and do another, which is as good a working definition of hypocrisy as one could hope for.

 

—John Naughton, The Guardian

“Who needs direct repression,” asked philosopher Slavoj Zizek, “when one can convince the chicken to walk freely into the slaughterhouse?”

In an Orwellian age where war equals peace, surveillance equals safety, and tolerance equals intolerance of uncomfortable truths and politically incorrect ideas, “we the people” have gotten very good at walking freely into the slaughterhouse, all the while convincing ourselves that the prison walls enclosing us within the American police state are there for our protection.

Call it doublespeak, call it hypocrisy, call it delusion, call it whatever you like, but the fact remains that while we claim to value freedom, privacy, individuality, equality, diversity, accountability, and government transparency, our actions and those of our government overseers contradict these much-vaunted principles at every turn.

For instance, we disdain the jaded mindset of the Washington elite, and yet we continue to re-elect politicians who lie, cheat and steal. We disapprove of the endless wars that drain our resources and spread thin our military, and yet we repeatedly buy into the idea that patriotism equals supporting the military. We chafe at taxpayer-funded pork barrel legislation for roads to nowhere, documentaries on food fights, and studies of mountain lions running on treadmills, and yet we pay our taxes meekly and without raising a fuss of any kind. We object to the militarization of our local police forces and their increasingly battlefield mindset, and yet we do little more than shrug our shoulders over SWAT team raids and police shootings of unarmed citizens.

And then there’s our love-hate affair with technology, which sees us bristling at the government’s efforts to monitor our internet activities, listen in on our phone calls, read our emails, track our every movement, and punish us for what we say on social media, and yet we keep using these very same technologies all the while doing nothing about the government’s encroachments on our rights. This contradiction is backed up by a recent Pew Research Center study, which finds that “Americans say they are deeply concerned about privacy on the web and their cellphones. They say they do not trust Internet companies or the government to protect it. Yet they keep using the services and handing over their personal information.”

Let me get this straight: the government continues to betray our trust, invade our privacy, and abuse our rights, and we keep going back for more?

Sure we do. After all, the alternative—taking a stand, raising a ruckus, demanding change, refusing to cooperate, engaging in civil disobedience—is a lot of work. What we fail to realize, however, is that by tacitly allowing these violations to continue, we not only empower the tyrant but we feed the monster. In this way, as I point out in my book A Government of Wolves: The Emerging American Police State, what starts off as small, occasional encroachments on our rights, justified in the name of greater safety, becomes routine, wide-ranging abuses so entrenched as to make reform all but impossible.

We saw this happen with the police and their build-up of military arsenal, ostensibly to fight the war on drugs. The result: a transformation of America’s law enforcement agencies into extensions of the military, populated with battle-hardened soldiers who view “we the people” as enemy combatants.

The same thing happened with the government’s so-called efforts to get tough on crime by passing endless laws outlawing all manner of activities. The result: an explosion of laws criminalizing everything from parenting decisions and fishing to gardening and living off the grid.

And then there were the private prisons, marketed as a way to lower the government’s cost of locking up criminals. Only it turns out that private prisons actually cost the taxpayer more money and place profit incentives on jailing more Americans.

Are you starting to notice a pattern yet? The government lures us in with a scheme to make our lives better, our families safer, and our communities more secure, and then once we buy into it, they slam the trap closed. Doesn’t matter whether you’re talking about red light cameras, DNA databases, surveillance cameras, or zero tolerance policies—they all result in “we the people” being turned into enemy #1.

In this way, the government campaign to spy on our phone calls, letters and emails was sold to the American people as a necessary tool in the war on terror. Instead of targeting terrorists, however, the government has turned us into potential terrorists, so that if we dare say the wrong thing in a phone call, letter, email or on the internet, especially social media, we end up investigated, charged and possibly jailed.

This criminalization of free speech, which is exactly what the government’s prosecution of those who say the “wrong” thing using an electronic medium amounts to, is at the heart of Elonis v. The United States, a case before the U.S. Supreme Court this term.

If you happen to be one of the 1.31 billion individuals who use Facebook or one of the 255 million who tweet their personal and political views on Twitter, you might want to pay close attention, because the case has broad First Amendment implications for where the government can draw the line when it comes to expressive speech that is protected and permissible versus speech that could be interpreted as connoting a criminal intent.

The case arose after Anthony Elonis, an aspiring rap artist, used personal material from his life as source material and inspiration for rap lyrics which he then shared on Facebook. For instance, shortly after Elonis’ wife left him and he was fired from his job, his lyrics included references to killing his ex-wife, shooting a classroom of kindergarten children, and blowing up an FBI agent who had opened an investigation into his postings.

Despite the fact that Elonis routinely accompanied his Facebook posts with disclaimers that his lyrics were fictitious, and that he was using such writings as an outlet for his frustrations, he was charged with making unlawful threats (although it was never proven that he intended to threaten anyone) and sentenced to 44 months in jail.

Elonis is not the only Facebook user to be targeted for the content of his posts. In a similar case making its way through the courts, Marine veteran Brandon Raub was arrested by a swarm of FBI, Secret Service agents and local police and forcibly detained in a psychiatric ward because of controversial song lyrics and political views posted on his Facebook page. He was eventually released after a circuit court judge dismissed the charges against him as unfounded.

Earlier this year, rapper Jamal Knox and Rashee Beasley were sentenced to jail terms of up to six years for a YouTube video calling on listeners to “kill these cops ‘cause they don’t do us no good.” Although the rapper contended that he had no intention of bringing harm to the police, he was convicted of making terroristic threats and intimidation of witnesses.

And then there was Franklin Delano Jeffries II, an Iraq war veteran, who, in the midst of a contentious custody battle for his daughter, shared a music video on YouTube and Facebook in which he sings about the judge in his case, “Take my child and I’ll take your life.” Despite his insistence that the lyrics were just a way for him to vent his frustrations with the legal battle, Jeffries was convicted of communicating threats and sentenced to 18 months in jail.

The common thread running through all of these cases is the use of social media to voice frustration, grievances, and anger, sometimes using language that is overtly violent. The question the U.S. Supreme Court must now decide in Elonis is whether this activity, in the absence of any overt intention of committing a crime, rises to the level of a “true threat” or whether it is, as I would contend, protected First Amendment activity. (The Supreme Court has defined a “true threat” as “statements where the speaker means to communicate a serious expression of an intent to commit an act of unlawful violence to a particular individual or group of individuals.”)

The internet and social media have taken the place of the historic public square, which has slowly been crowded out by shopping malls and parking lots. As such, these cyber “public squares” may be the only forum left for citizens to freely speak their minds and exercise their First Amendment rights, especially in the wake of legislation that limits access to our elected representatives. Unfortunately, the internet has become a tool for the government to monitor, control and punish the populace for behavior and speech that may be controversial but are far from criminal.

Indeed, the government, a master in the art of violence, intrusion, surveillance and criminalizing harmless activities, has repeatedly attempted to clamp down on First Amendment activity on the web and in social media under the various guises of fighting terrorism, discouraging cyberbullying, and combatting violence. Police and prosecutors have also targeted “anonymous” postings and messages on forums and websites, arguing that such anonymity encourages everything from cyber-bullying to terrorism, and have attempted to prosecute those who use anonymity for commercial or personal purposes.

We would do well to tread cautiously in how much authority we give the government to criminalize free speech activities and chill what has become a vital free speech forum. Not only are social media and the Internet critical forums for individuals to freely share information and express their ideas, but they also serve as release valves to those who may be angry, seething, alienated or otherwise discontented. Without an outlet for their pent-up anger and frustration, these thoughts and emotions fester in secret, which is where most violent acts are born.

In the same way, free speech in the public square—whether it’s the internet, the plaza in front of the U.S. Supreme Court or a college campus—brings people together to express their grievances and challenge oppressive government regimes. Without it, democracy becomes stagnant and atrophied. Likewise, if free speech is not vigilantly protected, democracy is more likely to drift toward fear, repression, and violence. In such a scenario, we will find ourselves threatened with an even more pernicious injury than violence itself: the loss of liberty. In confronting these evils, more speech, not less, is the remedy.




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Uber Executive Suggested Company Hire Team to Dig up Dirt on Journalists

Screen Shot 2014-11-18 at 5.07.16 PMFirst there was Grubergate. Now we have Ubergate.

Reports of questionable behavior emanating from the executive suite at ridesharing company Uber are nothing new. My antennae first shot straight upward when I read that the company had hired one of Barack Obama’s chief political strategists, David Plouffe, as a senior vice president of policy and strategy. The Washington Post covered this in the articleUber hired David Plouffe when it realized ‘techies’ can’t do politics.

Around the exact same time, The Verge reported on the company’s playbook for sabotaging its competitor, Lyft. You can read that article here. Something seemed a little fishy, but I pretty much forgot all about it.

Well the latest revelation is simply something I can’t ignore. Thanks to a piece published yesterday at Buzzfeed, we now have an idea of the sick mindset of one of the company’s senior executives. Even worse, this guy sits on a board that advises the Department of Defense.

continue reading

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Keystone Pipeline Fails to Build Enough Senate Support

This circus is far from over.As predicted
earlier in the day
, embattled Democratic Sen. Mary Landrieu of
Louisiana was unable to get enough votes to push Keystone XL
pipeline construction support through the Senate. It came up one
vote short. From
USA Today
:

Landrieu, the lead Democratic sponsor of the bill, is locked in
a Dec. 6 runoff against GOP Rep. Bill Cassidy. The pipeline vote
has become a political issue in the race, where the state’s oil and
gas industry is supportive of the pipeline’s construction. The
proposed crude-oil pipeline would run nearly 1,200 miles from
Canada to the Gulf Coast.

Both lawmakers are using the pipeline vote to flex their
legislative muscle and clout on Capitol Hill ahead of the
runoff. “The race is not over in Louisiana. She has not given
up, we have not given up on her behalf,” said Senate Majority
Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev.

Landrieu was confident she could secure the 60 votes necessary
to pass the bill, but public vote counts had the bill stalled at 59
votes Tuesday afternoon. “I don’t expect it to fail,” Reid said,
cautioning: “I don’t know what’s going to happen.”

The House passed mirror legislation last week, sponsored by
Cassidy, who is favored to win the Senate race because of the
conservative lean of the state.

It will, of course, come up again in the next Senate next term
and will almost certainly pass. Whether Landrieu will be there to
try to push it through again is another question.

A reminder: A majority of Americans
support building the pipeline
.

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Despite Record Highs, These 5 ‘People’ Are Still Flipping Out

Despite the apparent economic and profit news improvements recently, JPMorgan CIO Michael Cembalest notes there are a few instances where people are still flipping out. It’s worth reviewing them, he suggests, as they're indicative of risks and opportunities in financial markets heading into 2015, and of the continued presence of central banks affecting asset prices.

 

Flipping out: Oil company investors. Oil prices have fallen by 30% since June 2014. What’s not to like about an effective tax cut for consumers? Well, there’s the issue of the world’s largest oil companies which took on a trillion dollars of debt in recent years to find and develop new fields, usually with the expectation that oil prices would be higher than they are now. Biggest borrowers: Petrobras (by far), PetroChina, Total, Shell and BP. Even before this year’s oil price decline, only a little more than half of the top 100 had positive free cash flow (see 1st chart below). If WTI prices remain at ~$80, which oil futures markets are pricing in until 2018, the positive free cash flow universe will probably fall further.

 

 

Investors have flipped out about this turn of events, driving valuations of energy and oil service stocks lower (see above), and driving credit spreads wider on HY energy issues, 50% of which are rated B or CCC. Lower oil prices reflect weaker global GDP growth, a supply shock from the US shale boom and decreased energy intensity in places like China, whose oil demand per unit of GDP has fallen by 35% since 2005. Given this backdrop, S&P 500 profit forecasts for 2015 have come down ~3%, with energy-related reductions outweighing increases in consumer discretionary forecasts so far.

The bottom line: lower oil prices help consumers (see below), but cut into US energy-related investment and production, and may also result in disruptions and distressed stock/bond opportunities in a highly leveraged global energy sector.

*  *  *

Oil price declines and GDP growth

 

Benefits from lower oil prices are greatest in countries whose energy spending as a % of consumption is high; where energy taxes are lower, passing on more of the oil price decline to consumers; where savings rates are lower, so more of the increase in disposable income gets spent; and where energy intensity (barrels of energy equivalent per unit of GDP) is high. Many of these conditions are true for the US, at least relative to other countries. However, these growth benefits are partially offset when the dollar is rising, which encourages more imports and less exports. As per a recent note from Goldman Sachs, a 10%-15% decline in oil prices when combined with a stronger dollar would boost US GDP growth by just 0.10%-0.15%.

*  *  *

 

Flipping out: the Bundesbank. While the Eurozone is not falling back into recession, growth and inflation are stuck at ~1% and unemployment is still high outside Germany. There are signs of rising voter discontent, particularly given better outcomes in European countries not using the Euro. There’s pressure on the ECB to purchase government bonds, since its loans and purchases of private sector securities may only result in 1/3 of its EUR 1 trillion balance sheet expansion target. The prospect of ECB  government bond purchases is reportedly causing current and former Bundesbank leaders to flip out; the Bundesbank prefers productivity-enhancing measures by member states instead. However, my sense is that Draghi and his allies will continue to squelch Bundesbank opposition, and that we will see ECB purchases of Eurozone government bonds next year.

The bottom line: if the ECB buys gov’t bonds, markets will probably take it positively, but ECB balance sheet expansion is not having nearly the same multiplier effect on growth or profits that it had in the US/UK.

*  *  *

Draghi: Hast Du nicht mehr alle Tassen im Schrank?

 

Former ECB chief economist Jurgen Stark called existing ECB unconventional policy measures “an act of desperation” and described its purchases of asset-backed securities as adding “incalculable risks”. Current Bundesbank President Weidmann cautions that ECB government bond purchases “would raise legal questions, set wrong incentives and may not produce desired results.”

*  *  *

 

Flipping out: Brazilian manufacturers. The combination of rising interest rates, rising inflation and falling demand/prices for Brazilian commodity exports has caused Brazilian manufacturers to flip out: their confidence levels are close to the lows of the global recession. Even with all the bad news, the Bovespa was up 20% for the year in September since markets were pricing in the possibility of a new government. After the recent election, however, the Bovespa is down for the year as markets price in a continuation of the status quo. Too much optimism was probably priced in even if there were a change in governance, since the choices are all difficult at this point.

 

The bottom line: Brazil (and Turkey) remain EM question marks given rising inflation, weak growth and large reliance on foreign capital. We prefer EM manufacturers like Mexico, Poland and South East Asia instead.

*  *  *

 

Flipping out: Some Japanese economists. In Japan, inflation and inflation expectations are now above zero, and employee compensation and full-time employment are growing at +2%, their highest levels in years. So despite the bad Q3 GDP result, there are some signs that “Abenomics” is having its desired impact, although it has taken a 30% Yen decline vs the US$ since mid-2012 to get here.

However, not everyone is a fan of the Bank of Japan’s almost total monetization of government debt issuance and its purchases of Japanese equities and real estate investment trusts. In fact, some Japanese economists are flipping out:

In the Nikkei Asian Review, Izuru Kato from Totan Research highlights that little is being done to address Japan’s structural problems (i.e., Japan used to rank in the top ten in the World Bank’s Ease of Doing Business Index; Japan is now 27th, and 120th in “starting a business”). Negotiations have stalled on the Trans-Pacific Partnership4, a centerpiece of government plans to increase productivity and GDP growth. Kato is nervous about the BoJ’s massive balance sheet growth (2nd chart above) and criticizes the BoJ’s “monetary shamanism” resulting from its private sector asset purchases.

 

Former BoJ chief economist Hayakawa believes the government should “quit while it’s ahead”, and start shrinking the balance sheet. The risk of current policies: cost-push inflation in which prices go up mostly due to a weak Yen, but without boosting growth, exports or employment enough.

 

As per economist Richard Koo at Nomura, that’s exactly what’s happening: “Most of the price increases reported in Japan recently have been imported inflation fueled by the weak Yen. The resulting decline in the nation’s terms of trade implies an outflow of income, which naturally depresses domestic final demand.” Koo’s latest report shows almost no growth (yet) in bank lending or in the money supply despite growth in base money. Furthermore, the rise in corporate profits in Japan is almost entirely a result of translation effects of a weaker Yen on foreign sourced revenues.

On Halloween, the Bank of Japan announced even more purchases of Japanese government bonds, and a tripling of its purchases of Japanese stocks. To augment the forced march to higher asset prices, government-controlled Japanese pension funds are being brought along for the ride: mandated equity allocations have been doubled. The Bank of Japan vote was 5-4, with 5 bureaucrats and academics voting in favor, and 4 board members with private sector experience voting against. I imagine that at some point soon, holding cash in Japan without the intention of investing it will qualify as some kind of misdemeanor.

The bottom line: there are some signs that Japan is reflating and BoJ purchases are good news for investors in Japanese equities (if you hedge the Yen exposure), but what if a perpetually weakening Yen is needed to keep Abenomics moving? This is without question the world’s greatest Central Bank High Wire Act.

*  *  *

 

Flipping out: Voters in highly indebted US states. A surprise from the mid-term elections: the blue states of Massachusetts, Maryland and Illinois flipped governors from blue to red (how blue are they? See table below). There are a lot of factors involved in elections, and it’s difficult to pinpoint why things turned out the way they did. But in looking at the shift in these states, it brings to mind an analysis we did earlier this year on the fully loaded funded and unfunded debt of US states:

What percentage of state tax collections is needed to pay interest on funded debt and amortize the state’s unfunded pension and retiree health care obligations, assuming a 30 year amortization period and a 6% return in the pension plan?

Our estimates are shown in the chart. The higher the percentage, the greater the pressure on the governor and the state legislature to increase state tax collections and/or reduce discretionary spending. There’s a big difference between the states, making national generalizations misleading.

What’s notable is that three states that flipped from blue to red this year (Massachusetts, Maryland and Illinois) ranked in the top ten according to our computations.

 

It’s hard to say for sure, but it is possible that the difficult choices on mandatory spending, discretionary spending and state taxes are starting to play a role in US gubernatorial elections.

*  *  *

Source: JPMorgan Eye On The Market




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