Australians Probably Won’t Have Public Vote on Recognizing Gay Marriages

FlagIt appears as though Australians will not be heading to the polls to decide whether the government should recognize marriages between same-sex partners after all. In this case, parties on the left are blocking the public vote, which had been organized as a sort of compromise by conservatives who are part of the country’s ruling Coalition and would not legislatively approve same-sex marriage.

But supporters of same-sex marriage in Australia don’t want a public vote, though polls show that Australians overwhelmingly support recognition. They object to the cost of having an election for this issue (remember: voting in Australia is mandatory), and gay marriage proponents also oppose having a public vote on a human rights issue. But not a vote by lawmakers who represent the public. Go figure. (Well, I suppose you can’t launch a campaign to boot your neighbors out afterward if you don’t like how they voted.)

But that path to a Parliament vote is equally complicated, and The West Australian wonders if it might actually take several years more than to legalize it via lawmakers. The issue here is that Australia’s Parliament is fragmented across several parties, and most votes are strictly enforced along party lines. The same reason that Australia’s Parliament can’t get approval for a public vote on gay marriage is essentially the same reason why it hasn’t been able to get through the Parliament itself. There hasn’t been a strong enough coalition between different groups.

David Leyonhjelm, Australia’s libertarian (technically Liberal Democrat) senator, had been trying to push for a same-sex marriage vote in the Parliament. Under the previous government (they’ve had a change in prime ministers and a new parliamentary election since then), the only way to have gotten gay marriage through the Parliament would have been for the ruling political parties to permit their members to vote their consciences rather than a party line. Attempts to make that happen in the government’s ruling Coalition (center-to-right Liberals and Nationalists) failed, and the Coalition’s official stance on same-sex marriage was in opposition. So members of those parties in the Parliament were expected to vote against it. Ao it has not been pushed to a vote in the Parliament yet.

The new Parliament keeps the same ruling coalition in charge, so there’s a new push on Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull to get lawmakers to actually vote (and obviously vote “yes”). Read more here.

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Mugabe Orders Arrest Of “Rats We Call Athletes” After Zimbabwe Wins No Olympic Medals

It appears Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe was banking on a precious metal inflow from Rio to fix his nation's ailing economy as he has ordered the arrest of all 31 Zimbabwean Olympic athletes arrested and detained for daring to return home with no medals.

Zimbabwe which is one of the countries in the Olympics without a medal presented a team of 31 athletes. The closest any of the athletes came to win a contest was at the 8th position.

As NaijaLoaded.com reports, Mr. Mugabe who is incensed with the team’s performance told the Police Chief to arrest all the team members and detain them.

“We have wasted the country’s money on these rats we call athletes. If you are not ready to sacrifice and win even copper or brass medals (referring the 4th and 5th positions) as our neighbors Botswana did, then why do you go to waste our money” he said.

 

If we needed people to just go to Brazil to sing our national anthem and hoist our flag, we would have sent some of the beautiful girls and handsome guys from University of Zimbabwe to represent us.”

 

He added that, the money invested in the team to represent the country could have been used to provide amenities and build schools.

 

This situation is like an impotent man who is married to five women, what is the essence? I will make sure we share the cost across board for all of them to pay back to government chest even if it takes 10 years to recoup, now it turns out to be a soft loan we have given them to go and visit Brazil as tourist, they are useless” he concluded.

Now that's the Olympic spirit!!

When (or if) any of these Zimbabwean athletes get out of jail, maybe it's time to emigrate to Singapore?

Infographic: Some Athletes Are Chasing Huge Gold Medal Bonuses | Statista

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Is there any gold bullion stored at the US Mint in Denver?

by Ronan Manly, BullionStar

Anyone with even a passing interest in US official gold reserves will probably recall that the US Treasury claims to hold its gold (8,133.5 tonnes) over four locations across the continental United States, namely at three US Mint facilities in Fort Knox (Kentucky), West Point (upstate New York), Denver (Colorado), and at the New York Fed (Manhattan, New York City).

The claimed gold holding locations and summary quantities held appear in a never-changing monthly Treasury report titled “Status Report of U.S. Government Gold Reserve

This report states that 4,583 tonnes of US Treasury gold are stored in the US Mint’s bullion depository in Fort Knox, 1,682 tonnes at the West Point bullion storage facility, and 1,364 tonnes in the US Mint facility in Denver, for a total of 7,628 tonnes of gold. The US Treasury further claims that 418 additional tonnes of its official gold reserves are held at the Federal Reserve Bank vault in New York. An additional 87 tonnes, a working stock figure (which never changes), comprises the balance.

While Fort Knox and the NY Fed vaults regularly take the limelight in terms of volume of media coverage, and to a lesser extent the West Point vault facility does so also, there is very little if anything devoted to coverage of the US Treasury gold supposedly held in Denver. It is therefore of interest that none other than the US Mint on its own website recently ceased claiming that it stores gold bullion at its Denver facility.

On August 11, 2014, the US Mint’s Denver web page contained the following statement:

“Today, the United States Mint at Denver manufactures all denominations of circulating coins, coin dies, the Denver “D” portion of the annual uncirculated coin sets and commemorative coins authorized by the U. S. Congress. It also stores gold and silver bullion.

Less than a month later, on September 8, 2014, the above paragraph had been subtly changed to the following, and the words ‘gold and’ had been removed:

“Today, the United States Mint at Denver manufactures all denominations of circulating coins, coin dies, the Denver “D” portion of the annual uncirculated coin sets and commemorative coins authorized by the U. S. Congress. It also stores silver bullion.

The amended wording remains on the Mint’s present day Denver web page i.e. with just the “It also stores silver bullion” sentence.

At the very least this change in wording between August and September 2014 is very unusual. Why would the Mint have authorized and made such a wording change and deleted the reference to gold bullion? I asked the US Mint to clarify but the query went unanswered:

Given that the Denver Mint does not produce any gold or silver coins, the Mint does not have a need to store either gold or silver bullion working stock in Denver, so the above wording cannot be referring to metal being stored for fabrication supplies. The only commemorative coin produced in Denver is an uncirculated clad half dollar made of copper and nickel.  While the above change of wording on the US Mint’s website could have an entirely different explanation, it does raise the possibility that there isn’t any US Treasury gold bullion stored in Denver. This possibility would also subscribe to a view that has been expressed for quite some time now by well-known gold author and commentator James Rickards. Since at least 2010, and probably prior to that, Rickards seems to think that the US gold reserves are nearly exclusively stored at West Point and Fort Knox. Some tweets of his illustrate the point:
 
 
 

This view, that the US gold is kept at West Point and Fort Knox actually makes quite a lot of practical sense and is entirely logical. It also makes Denver look like the odd man out.

The US Mint facilities at Fort Knox and West Point are located adjacent to US military installations, namely the US Army base, Fort Knox, and the US Military Academy, West Point. The Fort Knox bullion depository, which opened in 1936, was actually built on land that was previously part of the Fort Knox military base, and that had been deeded to the Treasury Department. The West Point bullion facility, which opened two years later in 1938, was built on land formerly occupied by the West Point military facility, and that had also been deeded to the Treasury Department.

Having large quantities of gold stored in facilities next door to US military facilities is a natural security advantage for protection and also as a deterrent against any would be gold heists. In contrast, the US Mint facility in Denver is located on a city block at 320 West Colfax Avenue, between Delaware St and Cherokee St. It’s near a court-house and a police station but no sign of any US military facilities in the immediate vicinity.

320 West Colfax Avenue, Denver

The US Mint in Denver is also the odd one out (of the three) in that it offers public tours of the facility, something unheard of at Fort Knox and West Point. Arguably, the NYFed offers a gold vault tour, but out of US Mint facilities that the Treasury claims to store gold at, Denver is the only one with a public tour. The supposed location of the gold vaults in Denver is also a complete mystery with no photos or images of any vaults or contents of vaults (as far as I can see) ever on the web. A review of the Denver Mint tour (here) mentions supposed gold storage in the lower decks of the building but this seems to be merely supposition as it is inferring that 3 gold bars on display in Denver came from the buildings vaults. However, these three gold bars actually came from West Point, as CoinWeek stated in May 2012:

“Denver Mint plant manager David Croft pointed out that the three bars were shipped in from the U.S. Mint’s working gold supply at West Point and did not come from the gold that is in deep storage in Denver.

Which begs the question, why ship gold to Denver? The US Mint and Treasury would probably answer, so as not to ‘break the seals’ on the Denver vault doors, but this shipping of 3 gold bars from upstate New York to Denver would seem completely unnecessary if Denver was storing a couple of tonnes of gold, let alone 1,364 tonnes. The more accurate answer may be that the US gold, if it even exists to the extent to which the US Treasury claims, is held adjacent to US military bases at West Point and Fort Knox. 

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No Free Beer: Texas Judge Strikes Down Law Forbidding Breweries From Selling Distribution Rights

A Texas judge on Thursday struck down a state law prohibiting breweries from negotiating with distributors over where their beer can be sold.

Under the terms of the law ruled unconstitutional in district court this week, breweries were forbidden to sell their so-called “territorial rights.” In other words, breweries were banned from accepting money from a distributor in exchange for giving that distributor the exclusive right to sell a certain beer in a certain area—essentially requiring most Texas breweries to give away those rights for free.

Texas, like many states, uses the so-called “three-tiered system” to govern the sale of alcohol. Distributors serve as middle men between breweries and retailers like bars and restaurants. The entire model is a hold-over from the tail end of the Prohibition era and basically serves to protect distributors’ share of the market, even without additional rules like this one, which was passed in 2013 at the behest of—you guessed it—the distributors.

Brewers had opposed the law when it was passed, and three Texas breweries banded together to challenge the law in court. They argued that it required them to give away their territorial rights for free instead of allowing them to sell to the highest bidder.

District Judge Karin Crump agreed and struck down the law as a violation of the Texas state constitution’s prohibition against laws that deprive individuals of their property without due process.

“This law took part of my business away from me and gave it to big distributors. Now I’ve got my business back,” said Chip McElroy, owner of Austin-based Live Oak Brewing, in a statement. Live Oak was one of three plaintiffs in the case, along with Revolver Brewing of Fort Worth and Peticolas Brewing of Dallas. All three were represented by the Institute for Justice, a libertarian law firm that challenges overreaching governmental regulations.

Matt Miller, a senior attorney at IJ, said this week’s ruling was “a victory for every Texas craft brewery and customers who love their beer.”

The Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission offered no comment on the ruling. Spokesman Chris Porter said in an email the TABC was conferring with the Texas Attorney General’s Office and had not yet decided whether to move forward with an appeal.

Breweries in Texas are allowed to self-distribute their products as long as they make less than 125,000 barrels of beer per year. Once they surpass that arbitrary threshold, state law requires that their sell their products to a distributor. Brewers are allowed to use a distributor if they produce less than 125,000 barrels per year, as McElroy’s brewery did because they did not have workers or trucks to get their beer to other parts of the state.

McElroy previously contracted with a distributor in Houston and had plans to sell his beer in other parts of the state, but cancelled those plans after the new law took effect, he said in court documents.

Brewers are free to contract with different distributors in different parts of the state, but have to choose a single distributor for any given area. That’s why territorial rights have value, since multiple distributors serving one city would have to bid against each other for the right to sell a given product. The 2013 law changed all that. By requiring breweries to give away territorial rights for free, distributors were no longer required to compete with each other on that point. Distributors pushed for the change because the recent explosion in craft breweries meant they had to buy territorial rights from an ever-growing number of new producers.

The law essentially took away part of brewers’ property rights—”a very un-Texan thing to do,” Michael Peticolas, owner of Peticolas Brewing, told the American Bar Association Journal in May.

There are 189 craft breweries in Texas, according to the Brewer’s Association, a national trade group. They produced more than 1.1 million barrels of beer in 2015 and generated $3.7 billion for the Texas economy.

Thursday’s ruling leaves Kentucky as the only state in the country with a similar law on the books.

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Domino’s Will Soon Deliver Your Pizza by Drone—if You Live In New Zealand

In recent years, Amazon and Google have been researching drone technology to make package delivery more convenient for customers. Both companies have made progress in their efforts, even with the federal government standing in their way. Yet they may have been beaten by an unexpected competitor: a pizza company.

Domino’s Pizza Enterprises Limited (which franchises the Domino’s brand overseas) announced Thursday that it is launching the first commercial drone delivery service in the world. The company and American-based robot manufacturer Flirtey said they plan to begin offering pizza-delivery-by-drone at select New Zealand stores later this year.

“Domino’s is all about providing customers with choice and making customer’s lives easier,” said Don Meij, Domino’s Group CEO and managing director, in a statement. “Adding innovation such as drone deliveries means customers can experience cutting-edge technology and the convenience of having their Supreme pizza delivered via air to their door. This is the future.”

Customers can already track their pizza’s delivery thanks to a GPS locater in the delivery car’s topper. Soon, some will be able to look up and see their order fly to them.

So why New Zealand? Well, the country’s laws are friendlier toward drones. While there are some rules and regulations on the books, New Zealand Transport Minister Simon Bridges said in a statement the country continues to review its laws to “have the ideal environment to trial all forms of technology.” This includes opening the door to both commercial and recreational drone use. “New Zealand has the most forward-thinking aviation regulations in the world,” said Flirtey CEO Matt Sweeny in a statement.

In contrast, the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has enacted extensive regulations limiting drone use. Some industry leaders have said the FAA should set standards for commercial traffic but otherwise stay out of the way.

The rules are already stifling the future of drones in America. Operators must be within the line of sight of the drone they are operating, according to the FAA, which limits how far a drone can go to deliver goods. Amazon, which wants to be able to make deliveries across far distances, went to the United Kingdom to conduct its research because that country has more relaxed regulations.

Domino’s devices will fly autonomously, and will only work within a 1.5-kilometer range from participating stores. The franchise said it aims to eventually increase the radius to 10 kilometers. If the New Zealand trial is successful, the service may expand into markets in Europe and Asia.

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Paul Wolfowitz Says He ‘Might Have to Vote for Hillary Clinton’

Paul Wolfowitz was one of the most infamous hawks of the Bush II era, a deputy secretary of defense who pushed hard both for the Iraq War and, in general, for “democracy promotion” by military means. Now he may be joining the #HawksWithHer brigades.

Interviewed by Der Spiegel, Wolfowitz expresses alarm at Trump’s alleged isolationism and confesses that he may vote for the Democrat:

SPIEGEL: How would the world change if Trump became president?

Wolfowitz: We are already seeing a degree of instability in the world because Obama seems to have consciously wanted to step back. Trump is going to be “Obama squared,” a more extreme version of the same thing….

SPIEGEL: Who are you going to vote for in November?

Wolfowitz: I wish there were somebody I could be comfortable voting for. I might have to vote for Hillary Clinton, even though I have big reservations about her.

To read the rest, go here. For more neoconservatives for Clinton, go here. For a reminder that Obama has not in fact “step[ped] back” from the world, go here.

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Hillary Clinton Enters The Media Wars

Submitted by Mike Krieger via Liberty Blitzkrieg blog,

Earlier this week, I published a post titled Questioning Hillary’s Health is Not Conspiracy Theory, in which I wrote:

As I look at the landscape in 2016 to-date, I observe emergent signs that alternative media is finally beginning to take over from the legacy mainstream media when it comes to impact and influence. The mainstream media (unlike with John McCain in 2008), had decided that Hillary Clinton’s health was not an issue and chose not to pursue it. Many in the alternative media world took a different position, and due to mainstream media’s failure to inform the American public for decades, the alternative media drove that issue to the top of the news cycle. That’s power.

 

This is an incredibly big deal, and the mainstream media intuitively knows what it means. It means a total loss of legitimately, prestige and power. All of which is well deserved of course.

 

So here’s the bottom line. 2016 represents the true beginning of what I would call the Media Wars. Alternative media is now capable of driving the news cycle. Mainstream media now has no choice but to fight back, and fight back it will. It will fight back dirty. This is going to get very ugly, but by the time the dust has settled, I think much of the mainstream media will be left as a shell of its former self.

When I wrote the above, I had no idea that two days later Hillary Clinton would deliver a speech in Nevada specifically targeting a nebulous movement referred to as the “alt-right,” as well as several of the prominent websites associated with it. Never in a million years did I think Hillary herself would so publicly enter the Media Wars.

The speech itself was pretty bizarre. Although I found her effective on several fronts, I believe it will ultimately backfire by providing free publicity and fame to many of those she intended to demonize. Precisely because she is so polarizing, Clinton can only make an opposing movement far stronger by engaging in direct attacks on them. She is incapable of being a unifying figure for this country, so the moment she calls out a group as her enemy, many people on the sidelines will suddenly say, well maybe they’re not so bad.

The whole thing reminded me of something I wrote in last week’s post, Election 2016 – Why Defeating Trump Won’t Make Trump Go Away:

Hillary Clinton and her supporters are making the case that Donald Trump in 2016 represents some sort of Hitlerian existential threat that must be defeated at all costs. They are desperately trying to sell to the public the notion that all concerns about her incredibly shady past can and should be set aside for the time being because keeping Trump out of the White House takes precedence over everything else. Of course, such an argument is easily dismissed by anyone who is aware enough to understand that Trump (like Sanders) merely serves as a vehicle for justified anger percolating across the land, and that defeating him as an individual accomplishes absolutely nothing in the long-term.

 

Indeed, a Donald Trump loss is likely to fan the flames of populist angst further, particularly if Hillary Clinton continues along with status quo business as usual as if nothing ever happened, which she undoubtably will. Ironically, many of these delusional “lesser of two evils” Hillary supporters may be unpleasantly surprised to discover that media mogul Trump could even more formidable (and dangerous) than President Trump. Which is precisely why merely fighting against symptoms of a rigged and unethical system solves absolutely nothing, and ultimately makes the underlying problem worse.

 

The bottom line. It doesn’t matter what happens in this election, Trump isn’t going anywhere because his supporters aren’t going anywhere.

The other problem with the speech were its laughable and obvious contradictions. For example, she starts off by saying the Trump campaign peddles in conspiracy theories found in the “far dark reaches of the internet.” She goes on to name a few of these “dark reach” sites, spending a lot of time on Infowars and Breitbart. This is where things start to come unglued. If these sites are comparable to supermarket tabloids (as she claimed), why craft an entire speech around targeting them? Why would you spend so much energy on crazy fringe sites? The reason is because they aren’t fringe, and as such, she’s decided to personally engage in the burgeoning Media Wars.

As I discussed in my post from a couple of days ago, New York Times columnist Farah Manjoo recently whined on Twitter about how Infowars was appearing at the top of Google search for Hillary health queries. He publicly called for Google to “fix” the problem. That was Tuesday. Two days later the frontrunner for the Presidency of these United States also attacks Infowars. Something big and unprecedented is going on here.

Moreover, after her tirade against Alex Jones and Infowars, Hillary proceed to not just go after Breitbart, but she actually read multiple headlines from the website. Again, if these sites are so fringe, why obsess over them to such an extent? It’s because alternative media is now driving the news cycle and this is extraordinarily dangerous to status quo influence and power. This is simply a fact, whether you like Breitbart or Infowars or not.

But that’s just one bizarre aspect of the speech. What was even more revealing were her shamelessly misleading and contradictory comments on several topics. For one, she talked about how Trump would want foreign travels to the U.S. be subject to screening based on their religion. She then goes on to state how the only other country or group in the world that does this is ISIS. Unfortunately for her, this isn’t exactly true. As Michael Tracey points out:

Of course, we all know why the omission. It’s because the Saudis have given between $10-$25 million to the money-laundering charity fraud known as the Clinton Foundation.

Moving along, toward the end of the speech Hillary quotes a Mexican proverb. She said: “Tell me with whom you walk and I will tell you who you are.” To which Max Abrams poignantly replies:

All of this perfectly highlights the unmistakeable fatal flaw with Hillary Clinton as a candidate. She is so compromised, so shady and so corrupt, that she can’t successfully take the moral high ground even against someone like Trump.

All of that aside, she could have probably spun this speech in an effective manner if she hadn’t made one really stupid and very revealing mistake. Despite the crux of her speech being that Donald Trump is a racist who peddles in conspiracy theories, she launched into one of the most absurd conspiracy theories of all when she blamed Russia’s Vladimir Putin for the rise of the “alt-right” and global nationalism. Indeed, she actually called him the grand-godfather of it. Whatever the heck that means.

The de facto merger between Breitbart and the Trump Campaign represents a landmark achievement for the “Alt-Right.” A fringe element that has effectively taken over the Republican Party.

 

This is part of a broader story — the rising tide of hardline, right-wing nationalism around the world.

 

Just yesterday, one of Britain’s most prominent right-wing leaders, Nigel Farage, who stoked anti-immigrant sentiments to win the referendum to have Britain leave the European Union, campaigned with Donald Trump in Mississippi.

 

Farage has called for a bar on the children of legal immigrants from public schools and health services, has said women are and I quote “worth less” than men, and supports scrapping laws that prevent employers from discriminating based on race — that’s who Donald Trump wants by his side when he is addressing an audience of American voters.

 

And the grand-godfather of this global brand of extreme nationalism is Russian President Vladimir Putin.

This is from someone who just spent 20 minutes bashing Trump and his hordes of conspiracy theorists. Very bizarre.

Finally, I thought her concluding statement was quite telling. She states:

We want to build an America where everyone has a place. Where if you work hard and your do your part you can get ahead and stay ahead. That’s the basic bargain of America. 

Here she seems to be implying that this basic bargain has been broken. That working hard is no longer enough and people are falling behind in droves. I agree, but why is that? Why have things not improved under Obama, and how is Hillary, who wants to carry on with Obama’s policies possibly going to restore this bargain?

She won’t, which is precisely why Trump and Sanders both created movements over the past year and a half. Hillary Clinton is not someone who can unite the country and she’s not someone who can fix our problems. It’s preposterous to think the consummate status quo insider, a war hawk who will undoubtably lead the nation into WW3 can heal this country’s wounds.

It’s not that I think Donald Trump can, it’s just that I know Hillary Clinton won’t.

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Caption Contest: Virtually President

Sometimes 'life'… "wow, the economy looks great"

h/t @Stalingrad_Poor

Imitates 'art'…

Source: MichaelPRamirez

 

And, just this morning, White House propagandist Earnest exclaimed "Obama's economic optimism is widely shared." The problem is… that's total bullshit…

The professionals don't believe it…

 

And the broad American people don't believe it…

 

But as the green line above shows, there is one cohort that has not been as optimistic as this in 18 months.

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The Reckoning Looms – Central Bankers Really Don’t Know What They’re Doing

Submitted by Michael Snider via Alhambra Investment Partners,

As I have written many, many times, the “unexpected” events of January and February were a dramatic wake-up call for central banks. Last August’s global liquidation they could at least try to ignore because it could possibly fit within the paradigm of “transitory”, a one-off aberration that was some mysterious Chinese viral contagion and thus of not any great, lingering importance. The recurrence in the first part of 2016, though, destroyed those assertions and a lot of people noticed; and you can bet the Fed noticed that a lot of people noticed.

What is happening this year is astounding. After saying year after year after year that the recovery is coming, and even doing so to the point of condescension, the admissions of wrongfulness are starting to roll in, if only softly at first. How ludicrous does “transitory” look now? Though that word remains attached to official policy statements, official policymakers themselves have begun to act otherwise.

There was the brief flirtation with NIRP even in the United States, though fortunately disabused by clear Japanese example of the utter harm such monetary “stimulus” actually offers. Of late, economists having floating the idea for raising the inflation target, but they have yet to offer an explanation as to why that might be needed (even before they try to argue why it might work in a way the current one doesn’t). To get to the future of new policy regimes that are hopefully (to them) more successful, central bankers have to deal with the policies of the past that so clearly weren’t.

Even Jon Hilsenrath of the Wall Street Journal has been captured by the mood, certainly affected by the discussions to be taking place among central bankers gathered at Jackson Hole. The Kansas City Fed symposium might be better titled this year as “How do we get ourselves out of this mess we created?”

In the 1990s, a period known in economics as the “Great Moderation,” it seemed the Fed could do no wrong. Policy makers and voters saw it as a machine, with buttons officials could push to heat or cool the economy as needed. Now, after more than a decade of economic disappointment, the central bank confronts hardened public skepticism and growing self-doubt about its own understanding of how the U.S. economy works.

 

For anyone seeking to explain one of the most unpredictable political seasons in modern history, with the rise of Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders, a prime suspect is public dismay in institutions guiding the economy and government. The Fed in particular is a case study in how the conventional wisdom of the late 1990s on a wide range of economic issues, including trade, technology and central banking, has since slowly unraveled.

This is a theme that I have consistently presented as evidence for monetary evolution as both an explanation for Fed failure and what I believe will increasingly be appreciated as a depression. As I wrote just a few weeks ago:

Twice a year every year, the Chairman of the Federal Reserve drives up to Capitol Hill and formally reports to Congress. Given our current circumstances, these ceremonial affairs are lent a great deal of mainstream scrutiny as the public tries to parse the smallest scraps of unanticipated deviations from the carefully laid script. In many ways, this is a rerun of the late 1990’s dot-com bubble, but in reverse. When Alan Greenspan would testify, even his briefcase would be subjected not to so much scrutiny but reverence for what the Fed would not have to do, as the St. Louis Fed embarrassingly confirms. When Janet Yellen testifies, the world waits with baited breath for her to endorse instead the smallest little something that the Fed might have got right.

During the dot-com era, it wasn’t so much what Greenspan got right but what little the Fed had to actually do. The explosion of monetary evolution took care of the “moderation” of that time for him. It was all blasted apart on August 9, 2007, and hasn’t been fixed since (Humpty Dumpty references with regard to monetary policy are actually appropriate here, especially the horses) no matter how many trillions of worthless, inert bank reserves were created. Indeed, that is the crux of the matter; the true global currency standard was destroyed in further capacity for growth, economic as well as financial, and the agency charged with the care and nurture of the dollar responded with arrogant irrelevance.

Before the eurodollar break, the Fed was a bunch of geniuses, the best and the brightest the nation could possibly offer and a shining example to the rest of the world. They were the pinnacle of technocratic competence, admired for their power that everyone just assumed because, again, how little they actually did. After the break, they are an incompetent, increasingly petulant mess where the media looks to Janet Yellen in the desperate hope that there is the tiniest little scrap of good news all despite massive effort redeployed time and again.

ABOOK August 2016 Fear Economy

But we should be vigilant about what is really going on here. I very much doubt there is a true mea culpa gathering to be offered from economists who up until recently vehemently abused any notion that they could be wrong. A preview of my RealClearMarkets column tomorrow:

There is at the very least a growing realization even among economists that their policies aren’t working; it only took nine years. It is the byproduct of the threat to survival; after having remained consistently optimistic to the point of shouting down anyone who challenged the recovery narrative, increasing popular unrest is creating political unrest that will, if unchecked, threaten even the longstanding cherished place of orthodox economists who have remained on such pedestals since the 1930’s. Thus, there can be no depression because if we all admit what is increasingly obvious that would leave no doubt as to just who has been at fault.

Economists are almost certainly repositioning themselves for when (not if, I believe wholeheartedly) that occurs. Once the depression sinks in, there is no room left for orthodox economists who blamed only the gold standard for the possibility.

ABOOK August 2016 Payrolls Final Sales LF Part

So we should be very clear also in response; they should be denied any seat at the table of reform. While starting to at least admit the possibility might seem to be something, it is far too little and much, much too late. Economists and central bankers have disqualified themselves for participation in the project. It’s not like the monetary system’s change and evolution was something that just happened overnight; it was right there for them to see all along, not the least of which was everything that has happened since August 2007. They have even talked about in at least vague and general terms for decades, only to dismiss it every time as of no great importance.

Once the people’s mindset changes, what they will find in especially Federal Reserve conduct could border on criminal neglect. There was Greenspan’s warning in June 2003 that perhaps the banking world had indeed changed in a meaningful way, and that monetary capabilities might need to be more carefully examined before they had to be used as in the Japanese experience. Three years before that, Alan Greenspan admitted right in the FOMC transcripts that the Fed had no idea what modern money even was:

The problem is that we cannot extract from our statistical database what is true money conceptually, either in the transactions mode or the store-of-value mode. One of the reasons, obviously, is that the proliferation of products has been so extraordinary that the true underlying mix of money in our money and near money data is continuously changing. As a consequence, while of necessity it must be the case at the end of the day that inflation has to be a monetary phenomenon, a decision to base policy on measures of money presupposes that we can locate money. And that has become an increasingly dubious proposition.

Did the Fed expend every resource to rectify this knowledge gap? No; emphatically no. Quite the opposite as they openly proved in discontinuing M3 in March 2006, writing in the official press release that the “costs of collecting the underlying data and publishing M3 outweigh the benefits.” Any institution that made such judgment only a little over a year before the repo and eurodollar markets blew up should be prohibited from all discussions going forward.

There is a world waiting to be rebuilt and a growing realization from even the most recalcitrant orthodoxists, those stubborn elite who denied all this for decades, that such a job is going to get done. We are moving past “if” and finally toward “when.” They are not interested in litigating past liability, only ensuring that they have a voice in that outcome. That should never happen; they had their chance, squandered it, and proved themselves unfit for the huge task ahead that was left to us by nothing more than Lord Acton’s axiom about power corrupting. A republican democracy needs no such people in positions of influence. They couldn’t be trusted to do what was right, and now we are left still to tally the costs of such blatant immorality.

The only positive that will come out of this changing tone and softening stance is that it will finally crystallize all the various threads that have been aligned against true reform, including and especially the idea that monetary policy as it is would still be an option. As I write for tomorrow:

He [Former Fed Governor Warsh] is of the growing chorus of even former insiders and members of past authority who are calling for letting go of the ideological rigidity set in place during the New Deal. Warsh takes no prisoners, charging, correctly, that a “numeric change” for the inflation target is “subterfuge”, a case that I and many others have been making for years. Pretending everything is fine delays the recovery, not aids in it.

It has been my fervent, pleading hope for years now that the phrase “they really don’t know what they are doing” will become associated with central banks and central bankers in the mainstream consciousness of the public as well as the professional verdict from politicians on down. For the Wall Street Journal and none other than Jon Hilsenrath to write that article (and it is not the only one of late) is a clear sign that we are moving ever closer to that day.  Even so, we need to be mindful that, pace Churchill, it would mark only the end of the beginning. There is a vast and hopeful world yet to be created and a great many people who have proved themselves utterly unqualified to help create it.

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Bank of Japan Prepares for Crash Triggered by Fed Tightening

By Wolf Richter, WOLF STREET

No central bank of a developed country equals the Bank of Japan in trying to manipulate the stock market up by buying equities. The BOJ has done this for years. With breath-taking ineffectiveness.

So on July 28, the BOJ announced another stock market pump-up scheme: it would nearly double its annual purchases of equity ETFs from about ¥3.3 trillion to ¥6 trillion ($60 billion).

Hedge funds and other speculators expected for the BOJ to instantly throw its weight around in the stock market, and hopes were riding high that the Nikkei would surge, or at least rise in a visible manner. Alas, on Friday in Tokyo, the Nikkei dropped to 16,361, down a smidgen from where it had been on July 28.

The debacle was right in line with the BOJ’s prior stock-market pump-up schemes. While it managed with its negative interest rate policy to totally kill off all money market funds in Japan, with the last 11 shuttering earlier this year, and while it managed with its gigantic purchases of Japanese Government Bonds to completely freeze up the JGB market, the BOJ has failed to accomplish much of anything in the stock market. The Nikkei stock index is down 21% from its recent peak in June last year, and is down 57% from its all-time peak in 1989.

But nearly doubling the ETF purchases should have done something. So why did the highly anticipated pump-up-scheme rally flop?

Now an answer is seeping to the surface. It seems the BOJ is worried about a stock market crash, triggered by Fed tightening, and has decided to keep its power dry to be able to put a floor under plunging stocks later this year.

According to the Nikkei Asian Review, the BOJ purchased ETFs on only three days in August through Wednesday: August 3, August 4, and August 10, totaling ¥176 billion.

But its new rate of purchases of ¥6 trillion annually would mean ¥24 billion in ETF purchases per trading day. So 18 weekdays in August through Wednesday, minus one holiday (Mountain Day) should equate to ¥408 billion – which left the BOJ’s purchases short by ¥232 billion.

This pile of moolah has been added to its “dry powder.” Every day the BOJ is not buying ETFs, its pile of dry  powder increases. The Nikkei Asian Review:

The BOJ does not make public the process by which it buys ETFs, for fear of unduly influencing the market. But an official offered a passing reference to “last October” by way of explanation for the conservative approach.

“Last October” means this: Last year, the BOJ had front-loaded much of its ETF spending during the stock-market swoon in the summer, when China was crashing, and Japan followed. Then there were just ¥500 billion, or two months’ worth of ETF purchases, left over for the final three months of the year. So in October, it bought ETFs on just one day, saving up what was left to combat any sell-offs at the end of the year.

Hedge funds watch this sort of thing closely to wring some advantage out of it. Central bank action is all that matters anymore in the markets – at least, that’s the meme:

But as 2015 drew to a close, market players nevertheless began to suspect that the bank was out of options. An extra ¥300-billion ETF purchase quota added at the BOJ’s December policy meeting was viewed merely as a tack-on measure and failed to keep share prices from entering a slide.

This year, too, speculation around US interest rate hikes makes a stock market slide near the end of the year a real possibility.

But with stocks going nowhere now, the BOJ has decided to not waste its powder at the moment, because it wouldn’t accomplish much anyway. Instead, it would keep its powder dry for when it was needed. The Nikkei:

The BOJ does not explicitly define its buying as a stock price control measure. But eschewing a regular buying schedule to tailor purchases to market movements speaks to a significant level of concern about staving off another slide.

These ETFs are a special central-bank concoction. In a new twist last December, the BOJ promised to buy ETFs based on companies that boost wages, employment, and capital spending. But those ETFs didn’t exist. They’d have to be created first so that the BOJ could buy them.

Major asset managers in Japan have been busy creating these ETFs. Daiwa Asset Management partnered with index provider MSCI to develop a special stock index for these anointed companies. Nomura Asset Management and other firms in the Nomura group also came up with an index. The first ETFs that track those indices started trading in May.

Everything was ready when the BOJ announced at the end of July that it would nearly double its purchases of these ETFs. With every day that the BOJ is not buying, its pile of dry powder is growing. It is likely that the BOJ, when it decided to ramp up its ETF purchases in July, already knew why, and it had nothing to do with inflation or any of the other pretexts of QE: it was to prepare for the moment when the Fed made its move despite expectations that it would not, and when, in response, the markets would unravel.

But it’s doubtful that this will work out. Practically nothing the BOJ has tried to accomplish in the Japanese stock market has worked out. While stocks might have reacted positively at first, they invariably ended up tanking.

The BOJ isn’t the only one worried. Read…  “Mother of all Shorts” when Stocks Cave to Reality?

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