An Autonomous, Software-Based Venture Capital Fund Just Raised $163 Million. It’s the Largest Crowdfunding Campaign in History.

Welcome to the strange (and exciting) new world of blockchain-based finance: A so-called Decentralized Autonomous Organization (DAO) has raised $163 million so far, making it the largest crowdfunding campaign in history by a wide margin.

The DAO is a venture capital fund for startups. Investors in the DAO receive tokens that give them voting rights over how the money will be dispersed. But there’s no legal staff or management team providing oversight; the project will be carried out through code.

This is possible thanks to two breakthroughs in computer science introduced with Bitcoin. First is programmable money. In the case of the DAO, the cryptocurrency “ether,” which has similar properties to Bitcoin, can be set to transfer automatically between parties based on an algorithm. For example, if enough shareholders in the DAO vote to invest in a startup, the funds transfer automatically to the startup. The precise conditions can be stipulated in code instead of a written contract. No lawyers or bankers required.

The second breakthrough is the concept of the blockchain, which is a shared file that lives simultaneously on computers all over the world and is constantly updated. So investors in the DAO don’t have to trust any single person or company to maintain—and not tamper with—the underlying software that controls their money. Duplicate copies of the DAO’s code exist all over the world. (The DAO lives on the Ethereum blockchain, which is similar to Bitcoin but designed to host more sophisticated programs.)

It’s noteworthy that the DAO raised all this money during the very same week that new rules took effect legalizing so-called equity crowdfunding, in which small investors can kick in investments of under $2,000 and still get a piece of the company.

This was a longtime coming. Equity crowdfunding was part of the 2012 U.S. Jobs Act, but it took government lawyers four years to figure out how to regulate it. Along the way, the Securities and Exchange Commission produced a 585-page document on the subject.

The DAO gives us equity crowdfunding without the rules, bureaucracy, or the government’s stamp of approval. So is it legal? That’s not entirely clear, but there also may be no way for federal regulators to stop it.

For more on that topic, watch my recent story on Brooklyn-based Consensys, which is the leading developer of applications on the Ethereum blockchain.

Bonus article: Augur May Become the Greatest Gambling Platform in History. Is There Anything the Government Can Do to Stop It?

Bonus video: Want to Buy Stock in Your Corner Bistro? The Government Opens Venture Capital Markets to the Masses

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The Washington Post’s Modest Proposal To “Fix Democracy”: Root Out “Ignorant American Voters”

Presented with no comment, via The Washingotn Post:

Authored by David Harsanyi, a senior editor at the Federalist.

Never have so many people with so little knowledge made so many consequential decisions for the rest of us.

A person need only survey the inanity of the ongoing presidential race to comprehend that the most pressing problem facing the nation isn’t Big Business, Big Labor, Big Media or even Big Money in politics.

It’s you, the American voter. And by weeding out millions of irresponsible voters who can’t be bothered to learn the rudimentary workings of the Constitution, or their preferred candidate’s proposals or even their history, we may be able to mitigate the recklessness of the electorate.

No, we shouldn’t erect physical barriers to ballot access. Let’s purchase more voting machines, hire additional poll workers, streamline the registration process, mail out more ballots for seniors and produce more “Rock the Vote” ads imploring apathetic millennials to embrace their civic duty.

At the same time, let’s also remember that checking a box for the candidate whose campaign ads you like best is one of the most overrated obligations of the self-governed. If you have no clue what the hell is going on, you also have a civic duty to avoid subjecting the rest of us to your ignorance.

Unfortunately, we can’t trust you.

Now, if voting is a consecrated rite of democracy, as liberals often argue, surely society can have certain minimal expectations for those participating. And if citizenship itself is as hallowed as Republicans argue, then surely the prospective voter can be asked to know just as much as the prospective citizen. Let’s give voters a test. The citizenship civics test will do just fine.

How many screeching proponents of the two major candidates would pass this quiz? Here are some of the questions, which run from easy to preposterously easy:

“If both the President and the Vice President can no longer serve, who becomes President?”

“There were 13 original states. Name three.”

“What is one right or freedom from the First Amendment?”

“What is freedom of religion?”

I have tempered confidence that at least a majority of the voting public could pass such a test — though I couldn’t say the same for a majority of presidential candidates. Certainly, this should be a breeze for citizens so intensely involved in the process that they feel compelled to plaster bumper stickers on their cars and attend the rallies of their favorite candidates.

Or am I being too optimistic? When Newsweek asked a thousand voters to take the official citizenship test a few years back, nearly 30 percent couldn’t name the vice president. More than 60 percent did not know the length of U.S. senators’ terms in office. And 43 percent couldn’t say that the first 10 amendments to the Constitution are known as the Bill of Rights.

Only 30 percent knew that the U.S. Constitution is the supreme law of the land.

In another study, by the Annenberg Public Policy Center, we learned that only 36 percent could name all three branches of the U.S. government. Only 62 percent knew that the U.S. Supreme Court was tasked with determining the constitutionality of legislation. Fewer than half of Americans knew that split decisions in the Supreme Court have the same effect as 9 to 0 decisions.

These are the people who pick the people who define the basic fabric of the legal system — and often our lives.

To be fair, the contemporary electorate is probably no less ignorant today than it was 50 or 100 years ago. The difference is that now we have unlimited access to information. As James Madison wrote, “A popular Government, without popular information, or the means of acquiring it, is but a Prologue to a Farce or a Tragedy; or, perhaps both.”

And it literally takes seconds to learn about the fundamentals of our republic and the positions of candidates. If you forsake the power of information, you have no standing to tell the rest of us how to live our lives. Don’t vote.

Now, some of you will accuse me of peddling crass elitism. But I say the opposite is true. Unlike the many who depend on ignorant voters to wield and secure their power, I refuse to believe that working-class or underprivileged citizens are any less capable of understanding the meaning of the Constitution or the contours of governance than the supercilious 1-percenters. I believe this despite the widespread failure of public schools to teach children basic civics. It’s still our responsibility as voters.

Of course, we also must remember the ugly history of poll taxes and other prejudicial methods that Americans used to deny black citizens their equal right to vote. Any effort to improve the quality of the voting public should ensure that all races, creeds, genders and sexual orientations and people of every socioeconomic background are similarly inhibited from voting when ignorant. For the good of our democratic institutions.

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For First Time Since World War II, “Right-Wing, Anti-Immigrant, Euroskeptic” Set To Become President Of Austria

One month ago, pro-European voices in Austria, and all of Europe, were suddenly muted when in the first round of the Austrian presidential election, Norbert Hofer head of Austria Freedom Party (FPO), described as a “Euroskeptic, right-wing, anti-immigrant party” crushed his opposition buoyed by a migration crisis that has heightened fears about employment and security across the continent, and gathered a whopping 35% of the vote leaving the other five legacy candidates far behind.

Austrian far right Freedom Party (FPOe) presidential candidate Norbert
Hofer during the final election rally in Vienna, Austria, April 22, 2016

Today, Austria holds the decisive run-off round between Norbert Hofer and former Greens leader Alexander van der Bellen, which according to preliminary opinions polls was set to be a close vote, although probably not that close.

Presidential candidate Norbert Hofer prepares to cast his ballot at the
polling station in his hometown Pinkafeld, Austria, May 22, 2016

According to Reuters, a far-right victory would resonate across the 28-member EU, where migration driven by conflict and poverty in the Middle East and elsewhere has become a major political issue. Support for groups like the Euroskeptic, anti-immigration Freedom Party (FPO) has been rising in various countries, whether they have taken in many migrants in the recent influx, like Germany and Sweden, or not, like France and Britain.

Most are still far from achieving majority support. The FPO has been in government before, serving as a coalition partner in the early 2000s when it was led by the late Joerg Haider. But whoever wins the presidential election, it is likely to be a new high-water mark for Austria’s and Europe’s far right, all the more significant for being in a prosperous country with comparatively low, albeit rising, unemployment. 

In his last pre-election gathering, Hofer delivered another message with anti-Muslim overtones. “To those in Austria who go to war for the Islamic State or rape women – I say to those people: ‘This is not your home,'” he told a cheering crowd.

Later, Hofer sought to soothe international fears that he is a radical far-righter. The Austria Press Agency cited him as telling foreign reporters Sunday that he is “really OK,” and “not a dangerous person.”


Supporters of presidential candidate Norbert Hofer attend his final
election rally in Vienna, Austria, May 20, 2016

If Hofer wins, mainstream parties will also come under scrutiny for not recommending an anti-FPO vote. Many feel that would only have bolstered the FPO’s argument that it is taking on Austria’s deeply entrenched political establishment. As Reuters adds, “a far-right victory would resonate across the 28-member EU, where migration driven by conflict and poverty in the Middle East and elsewhere has become a major political issue.”

It would also be a huge boost to anti-immigrant, Euroskeptic movements in the other two key nations, Germany, whose AfD is now the third most popular party, and France, where the leader of the local National Front, Marine Le Pen, is the frontrunner for the French 2017 presidential election.

A victory for the Freedom Party in Austria would be mostly symbolic: the president traditionally plays a largely ceremonial role but swears in the chancellor and can dismiss the cabinet. “I have to work for one or two years and then everybody will see that I am OK, I am not a dangerous person,” Hofer, 45, told reporters after voting in his eastern hometown of Pinkafeld.

Hofer, deputy leader of the FPO, is known as the gentler face of the party but has only recently become a household name.

Austria took in 90,000 asylum seekers last year, more than 1 percent of its population, many of them shortly after it and neighbouring Germany opened their borders last autumn to a wave of migrants including refugees from Syria’s civil war. The government has since clamped down on immigration and asylum, but that failed to slow rising support for the FPO, which was already capitalising on widespread frustration with Austria’s two traditional parties of government.

While a Gallup poll for the Oesterreich newspaper last weekend found Hofer ahead by a 53-47 margin based on 600 people surveyed, the question is what do exit polls say. As Reuters reports, a projection will be published when the last polling stations close at 5 p.m. (1500 GMT), and the result is due to be announced after 7 p.m. A high number of postal ballots has raised the prospect of the result being unclear until Monday.

And while we wait, here is the first exit election estimate, which according to Austria’s ORF, has Hofer at 50.1% 49.9% for his rival from van der Bellen.

Some more reports.

For the official rolling results, check back in a few hours.

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Do These Charts Reveal That The Next Chinese Yuan Devaluation Is Right Around The Corner?

China economic growth

After the Fed tried to cause some more confusion with its decision to hike the interest rates by saying that a rate hike in June still is a possibility, we wanted to have a closer look at China which once again posted weaker than expected numbers.

We are very interested in all developments in China, as the country remains one of the largest net buyers of our favorite metal gold. Even though its economy is definitely growing at a (much) slower rate, the gold purchases haven’t been impacted, but the main question is whether these purchases are indeed to prepare the country for a total collapse of the financial system, or just to show the outside world the balance sheet of the central bank has some robust back-up assets that would allow it to print more money to try to support the economy.

US Dollar Chinese Yuan

Indeed, the Chinese export growth fell in April to a -1.8% YoY basis after seeing a sharp increase of in excess of 11% in March. Granted, the March-boost was very likely caused by the Chinese new year which resulted in a temporary export ‘stop’ during the new year, where after inventories were cleared out. So, okay, the lower export number didn’t really bother us that much, but what caught our attention was the fact the imports into China have been falling for 18 (!) consecutive months now which definitely is an indication of a crumbling domestic market.

That’s an important conclusion, and a first step in our central thesis in this article. Despite a declining export rate and a continuous freefall in the total amount of goods imported into China, the central government is sticking with its growth plan and wants to see the economy grow by 6.5-7% this year.

And that’s where everything is about to go completely wrong. There clearly isn’t a high demand for foreign products in China, nor is there a huge demand for Chinese products abroad, so the only way the growth numbers in the economy could be propped up is by making another giant flood of credit available. And now, several months (and even more than a year) since we started to warn about the Chinese problem, the data are finally confirming our suspicions.

Let’s have a look at the total debt in the Chinese economy (household debt + corporate debt + government debt).

China Total Debt

Source: ABN AMRO

Yes, your first conclusion might indeed be there’s nothing wrong here as the majority of the debt increase has been the result of non-government credit expansion. But that’s another reason why you should never take any information or charts for granted, as China has quite a few government-owned companies, and the debt of those companies most definitely isn’t counted as government debt. Throw in the fact the Chinese household debt vs the GDP has more than tripled in the past 10 years, and you realize there’s a widespread bubble in all of the society’s layers.

China Household Debt

Source: tradingeconomics.com

Of course, a 200% increase in the household debt to GDP ratio doesn’t sound too bad for a developing country, but keep in mind the GDP has also increased substantially. So whereas the net household debt was just $300B in 2006, this has increased to a stunning $4T as of at the end of 2015. That’s right, the amount of household debt in China has increased by 1233% in just 9 years. That’s an CAGR of 33.4% PER YEAR.

And then there’s one final chart we’d like to show, and that’s the investment growth in the country’s real estate sector. We have seen numerous reports about ‘ghost cities’, and it doesn’t look like the Chinese government is reducing the total investment in real estate and construction.

China 2

Source: ABN Amro

Indeed, whilst the private sector continues to slow down its investment in new real estate related projects, the government is stepping up the plate and has been increasing its investment sharply. Yep, we will see more and more ghost cities in China!

All in all, these charts explain why China has a serious problem at hand, and isn’t capable to render enough autonomous growth to offset these issues. Throw on top of that the renewed strength of the US Dollar, and one can easily see that a new storm is brewing, with another (possible violent) Yuan devaluation looming on the horizon.

And perhaps that’s the reason why China continues to buy more gold, to make sure it has gold as a back-up plan to keep at least some of its credibility and creditworthiness. China added in excess of a million ounces of gold in the first quarter of this year, and continues to purchase gold month after month. 

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Why The ‘Flyover States’ Are Hurting – Bubble Finance Is Strictly For The Bicoastal Elites

Submitted by David Stockman via Contra Corner blog,

We are now in month 83 of this so-called recovery. Yet there are still 45 million people on food stamps——one out of every seven Americans. The median real household income is still 5% below its level in the fall of 2007. There are still only 71 million full-time, full-pay “breadwinner” jobs in the nation—–nearly 2 million fewer than when Bill Clinton was packing his bags to vacate the White House.

At the same time, we have had monetary stimulus like never before. There has been 90 straight months of virtually zero interest rates. The balance sheet of the Fed has been expanded by $3.5 trillion. For point of reference, that is 4X more than all the bond-buying during the entire first 94 years of the Fed’s history.

So something doesn’t parse, and that’s to put it charitably. The truth is, the Fed’s entire radical regime of ZIRP and QE constitutes a monumental monetary fraud.

It has not “stimulated” a wit the struggling main street economy of flyover America. Instead, it has showered Wall Street speculators with trillions of windfall gains and gifted the bicoastal elites with a false prosperity derived from financial inflation and government expansion.

Herein follows an initial bill of particulars. We show that the “recovery” narrative endlessly trumpeted by the Fed and its fellow travelers on Wall Street and in the financial media does not remotely reflect on the ground economic reality; it derives almost entirely from a narrow band of badly flawed and thoroughly misleading labor market indicators and other faulty “incoming data” from the Washington statistical mills.

To begin with the most obvious example, consider the graph below on industrial production of consumer goods. The whole point of ultra-low interest rates is obviously to induce households to borrow and spend, and thereby trigger a virtuous cycle of rising demand, increasing production, more jobs and income and even more consumer spending. That’s Keynes 101.

Yet after seven years of massive monetary stimulus, domestic production of consumer goods is still 9.1% below its pre-crisis peak, and at a level first reached in early 1999!

Never once in its post-meeting blather about a steadily “improving” domestic economy has the Fed noted this fundamental rebuke to its entire ideology.

After all, if you are priming the pump with trillions of inducements for households to borrow and spend, why has consumer goods production remained in the sub-basement of its historical trend line and “recovered” at such a tepid rate?

The disconnect between the mainstream recovery meme and the chart above is implicit in the latter’s construction. That is, the industrial production index is a physical measure of output, and as such is not distorted by the flaws in the primitive measures of inflation published by the BLS.

As we showed a few days ago, the annual rate of consumer inflation during the last five years has been all over the lot depending upon which measure used and which time period observed.

CPI, CPI Services. and PCE - Click to enlarge

This is important because based on the regular CPI, the official data implies that real hourly wages have risen by nearly 1% per annum since this turn of the century. So all things equal, households should have more financial resources to purchase real consumer goods.

But we do not think the standard CPI accurately measures the true cost of living, and especially not the 25% weighting given to the phony OER (owners equivalent rent). And that’s to say nothing of all the other tricks embedded in the numbers such as hedonics, which implies that bureaucrats have the capacity to assess the subtleties of product quality and consumer utility.

Accordingly, we think that BLS sub-index for total consumer services is more representative of living costs because it puts a heavier weight on medical care, education, child care, transportation, housing rents and other services which households must contend with week-in-and-week-out.

As shown in the chart below, hourly wages of nonsupervisory workers have grown at 2.7%  per year since April 2000 compared to 1.9%  for the CPI. In the conventional rendering, this results in an annual gain in real wages of just under 1% annually.

By contrast, the CPI sub-index for services has rising by 2.7% per annum during the last 16 years, implying no gain in real wages at all. And even that includes the distorting impact of the OER. If you substitute the market based index for housing rents we display in the first chart above, it is likely that services purchased by the average household have been inflating at upwards of 3% per year during this century, meaning that real wages have been steadily shrinking.

Since the financial crisis there has been another significant jolt to household spending capacity in addition to the implicit shrinkage of real wages suggested above. Namely, most main street households have hit Peak Debt, meaning that their spending capacity is no longer being supplemented with incremental borrowings.

Needless to say, that is a dramatic change from the pattern of the previous 30 years as displayed in the graph below. In effect, the easy money policies of the Fed—-especially between Greenspan’s arrival in August 1987 and the 2008 financial crisis—–induced the household sector to perform a giant LBO on itself.

So doing, it ratcheted up its leverage ratio from a historically stable rate of about 80% of wage and salary income to nearly 220% by the peak in 2007.

Household Leverage Ratio - Click to enlarge

Household Leverage Ratio – Click to enlarge

Since then, the ratio has dropped significantly, but still remain far above what had been healthy levels prior to the post-1987 household borrowing binge. This has been called “deleveraging” by the commentariat, but its true import has been totally obfuscated by the all is awesome meme .

Still, the untoward implication is hard to miss if you focus on something other than the monthly deltas. To wit, during the household sector’s LBO between 1987 and 2008, total credit market debt outstanding erupted from $2.7 trillion to $14.3 trillion on the eve of the financial crisis or by 5.4X.

Since then, it has not increased by a single dime!

What that means is that we have a Say’s Law economy, not the Keynesian one jabbered about by our monetary politburo and the mainstream financial media. And when production and income is in the saddle, not the one time anomaly of bloated credit based consumption, you have fish of an entirely different kettle.

Stated differently, money pumping and artificially cheap credit no longer stimulates household spending because the latter are tapped out. Another potent indicator of that truth is the fact that housing construction still remains in the sub-basement of history, notwithstanding the lowest real mortgage rates ever recorded.

Indeed, new starts of single-family housing units after all of this alleged “recovery” are still lower than they were during all but four months prior to the financial crisis during the last 33 years. Yet, historically the whole point of Keynesian money pumping was to stimulate new housing construction.

The same holds true with respect to labor hours employed in the nonfarm business sector. Since the turn of the century, labor hours in the nonfarm economy have advanced at an anemic rate of just 0.4% annually. That is only one-fourth of the 2.0% rate which prevailed during the prior 16 years.

Needless to say, that radical downshift is not due to demographics. The adult population has actually grown from 212 million in 2000 to 252 million at present.

At the same time, it puts the lie to the alleged virtuous circle of Keynesian stimulus. There has been no pump-priming of consumption spending, production, jobs, income, and more of the same.

Indeed, the Fed’s balance sheet has grown by 900% during the last 16 years, while labor hours have risen by only 6.7%. There is self-evidently a big time blockage in the transmission mechanism.
Total Hours Worked NonFarm Payrolls - Click to enlarge

The same is true for business investment spending. The classic argument for Keynesian stimulus has always included the notion that businessmen are somewhat slow-witted, and therefore need government inducement to increase capital spending and take advantage of opportunities for future profit.

Low interest rates were supposed to do just that, and presumably the record low rates on corporate loans and bonds during recent years should have accomplished that turbo-charging effect in spades.

But it hasn’t. Bubblevision is always telling you about whatever tiny change in nonresidential business investment occurred or didn’t occur during the most recent quarter. What it never, ever reports is the trend line of real net business investment after current period depreciation. The latter, of course, measures the capital resources consumed in the production of current GDP.

Owing to the laws of arithmetic, this crucial measure of business sector health and growth—–real net investment–can not rise unless current period CapEx exceeds current capital consumption. As shown below, that has not remotely been happening since the turn of the century.

In fact, real capital consumption has risen by 53% over the last 16-years, while real net investment is down by 17%.

There is plenty more evidence where these examples came from, but the larger point is clear. The US economy has a giant supply-side problem that can’t be alleviated by demand-side stimulus.

As we have demonstrated repeatedly, monetary stimulus is a one-time parlor trick. It only works when there is business and household balance sheet space left to leverage, thereby permitting spending derived from current production and income in the manner of Say’s Law to be boosted with spending derived from incremental borrowings.

Under conditions of Peak Debt, therefore, the Keynesian credit magic ceases to “stimulate” the main street economy. Instead, it never leaves the canyons of Wall Street, where it cycles in an incendiary spiral of leveraged speculation and the systematic inflation of financial assets.

The graph below summarizes that story succinctly. The broadest measure of the stock market—–Wilshire 5000 index——has risen by 125% since 1999. The real median family income has fallen by 7%. 

Stated differently, the bicoastal elites, who own most of the nation’s financial assets or who feed off the financial system and a debt-swollen central state in Washington, believe themselves to be in the pink of prosperity.

They do not understand, of course, that this is all a giant bubble which at length will burst in spectacular fashion, causing their own unearned windfalls to shrink in the process.

In the meanwhile, they may come to understand that the flyover zone of America has been left behind. The main street insurgency fueling Donald Trump’s shocking rise to the top of the Presidential race proves that much in spades.

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Democratic Party Warns Sanders Supporters May “Instigate Actual Violence” At Convention

While Hillary continues to remind everyone that her nomination is a “done deal”, supporters of Bernie Sanders refuse to go quietly into the night.  Bernie’s supporters put so much pressure on establishment Senator Barbara Boxer that she suffered an unfortunate meltdown in Nevada recently; they plan to do the same at the Democratic National Convention in July as well.  

According to The Hill, Sanders supporters are planning a massive rally that could have as many as 30,000 participants, although organizers hope to have the number end up much larger. Permits for four demonstrations at the Philadelphia convention have already been secured, and now the focus is on getting as many people to attend as possible.

More from The Hill: 

Bernie Sanders’s supporters have secured permits for four demonstrations near July’s Democratic National Convention, according to a new report.

 

The events will rally support for Sanders’s message while Democrats select their presidential nominee in Philadelphia, according to The Wall Street Journal.

 

The Wall Street Journal on Friday reported that one permit authorizes an event consisting of four days of all-day rallies at FDR Park.

 

Philadelphia expects at least 30,000 participants; organizers are hoping the turnout is even higher. The park is located close to the Wells Fargo Center, putting it in close proximity to the convention’s epicenter.

 

The Wall Street Journal said that the other three events are scheduled for Thomas Paine Plaza, which is located a few miles from the convention’s venue. Philadelphia expects around 2,000 to 3,000 fans demonstrating for the independent Vermont senator at those events.

Just like in the case of the Republican race before it was made clear that Trump would win by a landslide, now it is the Democratic establishment’s turn to use every trick in the playbook to try and marginalize anyone who dares go against them, with the Nevada State Democratic Party warning recently that the demonstrations may be used to instigate “actual violence.Which is even more ironic because until recently its was Trump supporters who were saying precisely that only to be laughed down by the media.

The claim of violence was quickly downplayed by Bill Taylor, one of the events organizers.

“We are marching,” he said. “If you’re planning on coming here with violence in mind, we don’t want you.”

The Democratic establishment will likely end up winning the push for Hillary as its nominee, but one major legacy has remained as a result of what already has been the most surreal presidential race in history: the voices of those who are not part of the establishment, and who want real genuine change to a broken system, are no longer silent and have understood they too can and will be heard.

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58 Percent of Voters Willing To Go With Someone Other Than Trump or Clinton

Pollster and political consultant Douglas Schoen has released a new poll showing that Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump are effectively tied among likely voters, with each pulling in the low-40s. (This finding is replicated in other polls, some of which show Trump slightly ahead of Clinton but msot within the margin of error).

The most interesting finding in the Schoen results involves responses to questions about independent or alternative candidates. The short version tells us what we’ve known for a long time: Increasing numbers of people are effectively done with the two major parties, at least when it comes to their presumptive nominees for president. As Matt Welch and I wrote in The Declaration of Indepedents (2011/2012), politics is a lagging indicator of where America is already headed and the same forces that have remade our cultural, commercial, and personal lives are coming to politics. Every aspect of our lives besides politis is shot through with increasing choices and proliferating, personalized options. Due to our electoral system, the United States will always have two dominant parties, but what they stand—and how broadly they appeal to people—can vary widely. But until the Dems and Reps figure that (if ever), they will appeal to fewer and fewer voters who are desperate to see a 21st-century politics that reduces the size, scope, and spending of government while giving more options and freedom to people to live the lives they imagine for themselves.

On top of that, 58 percent of respondents said they’re open to voting for a non-Republican, non-Democratic candidate.

Trump and Clinton are both north of 50 percent in terms of disapproval and it seems unlikely that will change all that much. Election 2016 may well be a battle of attrition, where the ultimate victor squeaks in with considerably less than 50 percent. Recall that in 1992, 1996, and 2000, the winner pulled less than a majority of the popular vote, and since then, voters have become even less enamored of the major parties.

All of which is to say this election is already providing the most-fertile ground for a powerful third-party or independent run. Is the Libertarian Party (LP), the only other party that will be on the ballot in all 50 states, ready for that challenge? The LP picks its nominee next weekend and whether it turns out to be the 2012 nominee, former New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson, or someone else, the candidate will need to be serious in a way that he didn’t need to be in past elections. What is the grand theme of the LP candidacy? What are broad-brush points on war, spending, taxes, and the like? It’s worth pointing out that Johnson is already getting 10 percent in a new Fox News poll and got 11 percent in a Monmouth University survey a month or so ago. That almost certainly reflects the interest in anybody other than Clinton or Trump rather than anything specific to Johnson or the LP.

As Matthew Dowd noted on ABC’s This Week with George Stephanopoulos this morning, the role of a third party or independent candidate isn’t necessarily to win but to represent large numbers of people who feel left out by the visions of America sketched out by the Republican and Democratic Parties.

Particularly when it comes to the LP, that means having specifics to show you’re competent and serious (what parts of government are you going to cut, Mr. LP candidate?) but also a large vision of what sort of America the LP envisions. One of the LP candidates, Austin Petersen has already trotted out a version of Canadian politician Tim Moen’s 2014 vision: “I want gay married couples to be able to protect their marijuana plants with guns.” (For what it’s worth, Moen’s electoral results haven’t been great so far.)

But what about his slogan? Is it a starting point for suggesting what a Libertarian presidential candidate should be saying? Suggest thematic frames and slogans for the LP and independent candidates in the comments below.

[Trump image URL]

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“I Am Not Your Experiment” – Thousands Around The World Protest GMO Giant Monsanto

A little over a year ago, GMO giant Monsanto was furious at the World Health Organization for linking glypshophate, the chief ingredient in weed killer Roundup, to cancer.  As a result Monsanto immediately demanded that WHO retract said report, saying that the report was biased and contradicts regulatory findings that the ingredient, glyphosate, is safe when used as labeled.

A working group at WHO said after reviewing scientific literature it was classifying glyphosate as “probably carcinogenic to humans.” Howeber Monsanto was relentless and said that “we question the quality of the assessment,” according to Philip Miller, Monsanto vice president of global regulatory affairs. “The WHO has something to explain.”

In retrospect it may have been Monsanto who had something to explain, which it did, indirectly, when last week another report was released, this time from the U.N.’s Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), according to which Roundup’s glyphosphate is unlikely to cause cancer in  people. Continuing the explanation, diazinon and malathion, two other pesticides reviewed by the committee, which met last week and published its conclusions on Monday, were also found to be unlikely to be carcinogenic.

“In view of the absence of carcinogenic potential in rodents at human-relevant doses and the absence of genotoxicity by the oral route in mammals, and considering the epidemiological evidence from occupational exposures, the meeting concluded that glyphosate is unlikely to pose a carcinogenic risk to humans from exposure through the diet,” the committee said.

As Reuters itself notes, the conclusions appear to contradict the abovementioned finding by the WHO’s Lyon-based International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), which in March 2015 said glyphosate is “probably” able to cause cancer in humans and classified it as a ‘Group 2A’ carcinogen. This is when the alarm bells at Monsanto went off and, according to some, the company’s spending on favorable reports shot through the roof. The result was immediate.

Seven months after the IARC review, the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA), an independent agency funded by the European Union, published a different assessment, saying glyphosate is “unlikely to pose a carcinogenic hazard to humans”. The United States’ Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), which first assessed glyphosate in 1986 and has reviewed it several times since then, had also previously concluded it has “low toxicity for humans”.

In other words, whether or not a Monsanto compound is carcinogenic may depend on how much in “research funding” Monsanto has spent in advance to the writers of the study.

In any case, whether Roundup causes cancer or not, the opinion of millions of people around the world is already be made up, and as RT reports more than 400 simultaneous demonstrations around the world are voicing fury at US biotech leviathan Monsanto, which is now facing a hostile takeover from German pharmaceuticals company Bayer (a transaction which ha stunned analysts and shareholders who warn Bayer would need to take on too much debt and dilute equity holdings in its quest to acquire an embattled target).

But while Bayer may or may not end up being the new owner of Monsanto, it won’t matter to millions of people who will boycott the product regardless.

The whole world hates Monsanto!” read the banners among a throng in Paris, marching to the sound of a drum band.

The crowd held up posters condemning the sale of the herbicide RoundUp, which may or may not lead to cancer in humans (depending on who one asks) and the development of genetically-modified crops.

 

Environmentalist and leftist politicians, such as former presidential candidate Jean-Luc Melenchon, marched at the front of the column, but the impetus for the rallies was provided by another group.

The grassroots Nuit Debout has mobilized hundreds of thousands for labor reform protests in recent months, and many of the same demonstrators turned out to barrack the St. Louis-based giant in Lyon, Bordeaux and Lille.

Genetically-modified crops are banned in France, despite the European Union gradually loosening regulation on the varieties, as they become more popular across the world due to higher yields and greater disease resistance.

Meanwhile, despite the latest UN report supposedly clearing Monsanto of any carcinogenic fault, Glyphosate, the active chemical in RoundUp and other leading herbicides, could still face a Europe-wide ban, after an EU committee failed to issue it with a new retail license, following protracted negotiations. A UN report published this month stated that it was not likely to be ingested in quantities sufficient to cause cancer in humans, but last year’s report by the UN cancer agency called for it to be recognized as a carcinogen that could cause non-Hogdkin’s lymphoma.

“Monsanto is killing me & you!” and “I am not your experiment!” read placards at a protest march through New York. More than 90 percent of US-grown corn, soybean and cotton is genetically-modified.

RT`s correspondent Caleb Maupin talked to some of the hundreds of activists gathered in the center of Manhattan to protest against Monsanto. People marched through the streets chanting, “No more Monsanto” and “Monsanto has got to go.” The demonstrators carried signs saying: “Ban glyphosate,” the herbicide which is suspected of causing cancer, and “Stop Monsanto.”

“I think it`s very corrupt and they have too much power over our government,” one of the rally`s participants told Maupin, referring to the biotech giant`s outreach.

“I`m tired of being lied to about what is in my food. We are getting sick, there`s cancer, there`re kids that are being affected, so we want to put a stop to that,” said another activist.

The safety of glyphosate, which is an active ingredient in Monsanto`s herbicide Roundup, has been doubted by many environmental organizations, including Greenpeace.

“If I were Monsanto right now, maybe a Monsanto executive gonna hear this, I would be worried. I would than change my life and come over to the right side of history. Amen,” another protester said.

Well-attended rallies also took place in Tokyo, across Germany and in Canada. Monsanto, which has repeatedly put out publicity campaigns to try and demonstrate that its product range is safe, issued a conciliatory statement to the protesters.

“The 22,000 people of Monsanto are committed to having an open dialogue about food and agriculture – we’re proud of the work we do, and we’re eager for people to know more about us,” said a Monsanto text sent out to the media. “We know people have different points of view on these topics, and it’s important that they’re able to express and share them.”

Marches against Monsanto have become a regular event over the past half-decade, but activists may soon need to find a new target for their anger, following Bayer’s proposed bid for the US company, which has a market cap of nearly $46 billion.

via http://ift.tt/1U7c4e9 Tyler Durden

Ads About Killing Politics, Tools to Make it Work Better: The MacAfee Campaign’s Nuts and Bolts

On some level antivirus software pioneer John McAfee seems to think he can energize his campaign for the presidential nomination of the Libertarian Party purely on the abundant sparking octane of his own outsized legend and wild pronouncements.

But that isn’t all to his campaign. His vice presidential pick Judd Weiss, and his campaign manager Tiffany Madison (along with a dedicated army of volunteers, Madison stresses), have launched an interestingly strange and attention getting set of campaign ad videos (Weiss) and started building an internet resource for the Libertarian Party that, if it comes to fruition and sticks around, should make the Party a better fit for the modern communication age.

Weiss’s fourth and latest video (all of them using the McAfee/Weiss slogan “Let Life Live”) is over five minutes long, a length he’s quite aware most normal political consultants would call crazy. It’s called “Exit Politics.”

It uses storytelling, pop culture, tense and maddening music and quick-cut bricolage to create a general aura of disquiet, of detecting something alarming beneath consensus reality and consensus politics, arty-paranoid collages of politicians and pop storytelling, a kind of 4 a.m. in the Nerve-Wracking Room at an EDM club vibe, with an emotional imagistic style that might resonate with a generation who learned their politics from earnest conspiracy theory videos like Zeitgeist:

Washington Examiner noted this anti-political yet pro-Libertarian message in it:

“Every four years Americans come together to bully their neighbors,” reads text onscreen in the ad. “Politics is dying. Kill politics so it can be reborn. Be a Libertarian.”

The Hill called it “unusual” (though the URL for the article indicates they considered calling it plain “bizarre”) and explained:

the video shows a Defense Department representative speaking, mixed with violent footage. It runs through clips of Democratic presidential front-runner Hillary Clinton and presumptive GOP nominee Donald Trump, interspersing images of former President George W. Bush with Trump.

At one point, the video shows a scene from the TV show “The Simpsons,” where a citizen threatens to vote for a third-party candidate and aliens Kang and Kodos laughingly reply, “Go ahead, throw your vote away.”

“Unusual” or even bizarre is perhaps just half the reaction Weiss and McAfee want out of the videos. At a McAfee fundraiser last Monday night after the Blaze televised debate in Las Vegas, Weiss premiered the above video for McAfee supporters. He explained the thinking behind them at length.

“We are going after youth,” he said. He knows they may turn some people off, and they are even “hoping to create a certain outrage and then pour gasoline on the fire. We want to make something beautiful the media can’t resist. We want people on the streets with picket signs [in protest]. That’s the goal. I haven’t gotten there yet, but give me time, I’m just starting.”

In length, in messaging, in lack of lots of verbal information, and especially in libertarian movement terms an appeal via image to emotion and glamour or even a sense of dread—he knows this is “something very different and that’s how we will catch attention. I want to create something I would be a fan of and I can’t tone it down.”

Too much modern libertarian messaging is purely from an engineer’s mentality, Weiss thinks. You can’t toss complicated economics tomes at most people and expect to hook them. He doesn’t think every bit of libertarian messaging needs to do everything, thinking of these videos as a hook in that will lead the interested to the more complicated stuff, applying an assembly line model of sorts of long-term libertarian messaging. “Engineers” in the libertarian movement, “please allow us to sell the engineering you worked so hard on.” Mostly, he wants his videos to give people an opportunity to feel something about liberty, something he thinks is lacking in too much traditional movement messaging.

Beyond messaging, the McAfee team also wants to supply useful tech tools to the Party and movement, his campaign manager Tiffany Madison explained in a phone interview. A team of volunteer developers in just a couple of weeks launched the VoteDifferent site, still in early rollout consisting of a national candidate search engine and a survey to “Help our team understand how we can best empower and support our fellow Libertarians now.” (The L.P.’s own website candidate list is a bit clunkier and less easy to navigate, as more or less a one-page dump.)

Madison says she anticipates the site becoming a full service site of resource modules helping candidates learn whatever they need to learn, from writing and distributing press releases to how to accept bitcoin donations on their campaign websites, and eventually become a central connecting resource for movement-wide efforts, not just political campaigns.

“We are bringing a startup spirit and lean approach to help people automate and get things done fast,” Madison says, helping provide “leveraging tools for ballot access, getting people elected, messaging, if we can get that all” in a highly usable and modern way at one place, she thinks, “that will do wonders” and help provide new ways for people to get involved with the L.P. who might otherwise never do so. Madison hopes and intends that the resource will grow and survive the context of the 2016 nominating race, whether McAfee wins or not.

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The $4 Trillion War on Terror: New at Reason

The war on terror has cost at least $4 trillion since 2001.

As James Bovard reports:

The biggest costs in the war on terror come from foreign wars. Between late 2001 and 2014, the U.S. government spent roughly $2.6 trillion in Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Iraq—not just for warfare but also for reconstruction, foreign aid, and health care for veterans, according to the Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs at Brown University.

The Pentagon spent an additional roughly $100 billion to thwart terrorism overseas in 2015, according to the National Priorities Project, a nonprofit budget watchdog group. And it will likely spend a similar amount this year.

What’s more, most estimates of ongoing spending sharply understate the full cost. Why? Because they fail to account for the debts we owe to service members after their return. Almost half the veterans of the Iraq and Afghan wars—more than 700,000—have already sought compensation for injuries incurred, and that percentage will likely rise in the coming years. The Watson Institute estimates that the wars will require an additional $1 trillion for medical and disability payments, and the administrative burdens that come with them, through 2054.

View this article.

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