Why Young People Are Turning on Obama

As
write at The Daily Beast
, between
2008 and 2012, Barack Obama pulled 2.4 million fewer votes from
voters between the ages of 18 and 29. New polls shows that 54
percent of that group disapprove of the job he’s doing as
president. Wha happened?

The abysmal
and pathetic
 launch of healthcare.gov is simply the cherry
on top of a shit sundae Obama’s been whipping up for the kids. You
can protest that the stimulus should have been bigger, but when you
judge its success against what the Obama administration claimed it
would do, it was an
epic fail
. While masquerading as the peace and freedom
candidate – easy to do against such hawkish characters as Hillary
Clinton in the primaries and John McCain in the general election –
Obama prided himself on tripling troop strength in Afghanistan and
tried to extend our stays there and in Iraq. But for
the vocal pushback
 from Rand Paul, Justin Amash, and a
bunch of younger, non-interventionist Republicans, there’s every
reason that the U.S. would have started an unsanctioned war in
Syria, just as it did in Libya (where things are working out…how,
again?)….

The president has been genuinely awful on pot legalization and
dragged his feet on gay marriage – issues on which younger voters
are in front of the general population – and he spent his first
term deporting more immigrants than George W. Bush managed to in
eight years (despite minor reprieves announced in time for the 2012
elections, the
deportations
 keep on happening). The revelations of
widespread, Obama-approved drone strikes, the compilation of a
presidential kill list, and the data collection of phone logs and
internet traffic don’t exactly inspire warm and fuzzy feelings from
a generation that lives online. His response to the Gulf oil
spill was
dithering to non-existent
 and his alt-energy plans have
come to naught even as fracking has put the country on a
path to
something like energy independence
. And clandestine
attempts
 to expand onerous copyright laws and outlaw
cellphone unlocking via the Trans-Pacific Partnership Treaty aren’t
helping either.


Read the whole thing.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/21/why-young-people-are-turning-on-obama
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Philly Fed Tumbles, Number Of Employees, Employee Workweek Both Plunge; Stocks Surge

With the market not sure what bad news would send it soaring higher today, here comes the Philly Fed to save the day by tumbling from October’s 19.8 to a paltry 6.5, slamming through expectations of 15.0 – the biggest miss since February – and assuring that ahead of today’s POMO there is enough ammunition for a stock ramp to end the three days of declines.

But while the leading indicators of New Orders, Shipments and Unfilled Orders all plunged (from 27.5 to 11.9; from 20.4 to 5.6 and from 9.1 to -4.2, respectively), it was the jobs number that showed just how bad things really are with the Number of Employees and Average Employee Workweek both sliding from 15.4 to 1.1, and from 8.5 to -8.6. This is what the report said: “Labor market indicators showed little improvement this month. The current employment index fell 14 points from its reading in October (which was at a two?year high), to 1.1. Nearly 13 percent of the firms reported increases in employment, which is lower than the 23 percent that reported increased employment last month. Firms, on balance, reported lower work hours, with the average workweek index falling from 8.5 to ?8.6 this month.” Thank you Obamacare for making even more people into part-timers.

And broken down by components:

And now, since the economy is once again sliding on every possible banana peel, we can calmly go back to the “market” ramp.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/B66FOuoDiKg/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Senate Banking Committee Votes To Approve Janet Yellen As Next Fed Chief

That didn't take long…

  • *SENATE BANKING PANEL VOTES 14-8 TO APPROVE YELLEN AS FED CHIEF
  • *REPUBLICANS CORKER, COBURN, KIRK VOTE IN FAVOR OF YELLEN
  • *MANCHIN ONLY PANEL DEMOCRAT TO OPPOSE YELLEN FED NOMINATION
  • *YELLEN NOMINATION AS FED CHAIRMAN SENT TO FULL SENATE

Given this, the full Senate vote will be a rubber-stamp heralding the new era of Yellenomics as the QEeen takes her thrown.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/DvVhxFU3w1U/story01.htm Tyler Durden

This Is How A Fed Dove Crushes Any Hawkish Opposition To The Fed’s True Religion

The relatively new Minneapolis Fed president Narayana Kocherlakota is not known for any insightful, original ideas. Before he took over the MinnFed, he was a research economist at the bank in the late 1990s, a consultant there from 1999 to 2009, taught at the University of Minnesota from 2005 to 2010 and was chairman of the U’s department of economics before being named president of the bank. What he is best known for is his epic flip-flopping: from one of the Fed’s staunchest hawks early in his presidential career, to a dove so starved for the Fed’s monetary liquidity, he often puts even Charles Evans to shame. He is among the first to suggest that the Fed should hold rates at zero until unemployment hits 5.5% (which it never will unless of course the plunge in the labor participation rate continues) something which both Goldman and Yellen have now adopted as gospel. Nobody knows what precipitated this shocking metamorphosis, although it is said Ben Bernanke can be quite persuasive during unrecorded phone calls. Which brings us to the topic of this post: what does a suspiciously reformed Fed dove do when faced with increasingly louder, conflicting voices that challenge the delusion that the only thing that will fix a failing QE is more QE? He fires them of course.

As the Star Tribune reports, two top economists at the Minneapolis Fed were “shown the door” when they disagreed with their tyrannical money printing advocate. Who were the two?

The departing economists are Patrick Kehoe and Ellen McGrattan, both highly regarded researchers with long tenures in Minneapolis. Kehoe, a Harvard Ph.D. who has taught at the University of Pennsylvania and the University of Chicago, joined the Fed as a monetary adviser in 1997. He was the bank’s highest-ranked research economist, according to data from the St. Louis Fed.

 

“He’s a high-profile person in the profession, a world-class economist,” said Stephen Williamson, a former Minneapolis Fed economist who now works at the St. Louis Fed and is a professor at Washington University in St. Louis. “He’s a big deal.”

 

Kehoe declined to comment. McGrattan said Kehoe was fired on Oct. 18. He already has a position at the U, which often shares economists with the Minneapolis Fed. “Patrick Kehoe did not choose to quit or leave the Fed,” McGrattan said.

 

McGrattan, a Stanford Ph.D. who taught at Duke University before joining the Minneapolis Fed in 1992, will take a position with the University of Minnesota in January and will go on unpaid leave at the bank. She has been an adjunct professor at the U since 1993 and said she was pushed aside at the Fed more implicitly than Kehoe.

As a reminder, “The Minneapolis Fed has a reputation as one of the premier economic research institutions in the country. A close partnership between the U and the bank over the years resulted in an innovative marriage of academic economic research and policymaking. It was a fruitful collaboration in which economists such as Prescott, Tom Sargent, Chris Sims and Neil Wallace helped put the Minneapolis Fed and University of Minnesota on the map. Former President Gary Stern and Art Rolnick, the former research director, continued the tradition. Sargent, Sims and Prescott eventually won Nobel Prizes in economics, and Sargent and Prescott still have ties to the U and the Minneapolis Fed.”

Sargent, incidentally, is the same person who a few days ago was heard uttering the most apocryphal words a Fed cardinal could hear, namely that deflation is actually a good thing, and that Greece might benefit from returning to a gold standard. It is easy to see why Kocher does not like him.

But back to Kehoe and McGrattan who were mercilessly sacked by their dovish boss: why did he do that one may ask? Simple – they disagreed with his monetary religion.

There are subtle policy differences between Kocherlakota and the economists who are leaving. Kocherlakota has been at the center of a debate over the effectiveness of the Fed’s low-interest-rate policy. He has pushed for nearly two years for the Fed to hold down rates until unemployment drops to 5.5 percent.

 

He argues, in general, that what are known as “New Keynesian” economic models are helpful. This school of thought has helped create an unprecedented intervention in the financial markets by the country’s central bank — the $85 billion a month bond-buying program known as quantitative easing.

 

But Kehoe and McGrattan published a paper in 2008 arguing that monetary policy can do little to affect the unemployment rate, and Fed policymakers should instead focus primarily on controlling inflation.

 

New Keynesian models are not yet useful for policy analysis,” they wrote.

Which is effectively the same as telling the Spanish Inquisition that god does not exist. Luckily, modern society is a little more developed (for now). Instead of Kehoe and McGrattan getting the iron maiden, they were merely fired.

Prescott laments that this sort of debate within the bank, long encouraged, no longer appears to be welcome. “A good administrator sets up a loyal opposition,” he said.

Don’t ask. Don’t question. Just accept. And with that it’s case closed for how the Fed’s pathological voodoo shamans deal with any dissent.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/64P8UQk-Dh0/story01.htm Tyler Durden

This Is How A Fed Dove Crushes Any Hawkish Opposition To The Fed's True Religion

The relatively new Minneapolis Fed president Narayana Kocherlakota is not known for any insightful, original ideas. Before he took over the MinnFed, he was a research economist at the bank in the late 1990s, a consultant there from 1999 to 2009, taught at the University of Minnesota from 2005 to 2010 and was chairman of the U’s department of economics before being named president of the bank. What he is best known for is his epic flip-flopping: from one of the Fed’s staunchest hawks early in his presidential career, to a dove so starved for the Fed’s monetary liquidity, he often puts even Charles Evans to shame. He is among the first to suggest that the Fed should hold rates at zero until unemployment hits 5.5% (which it never will unless of course the plunge in the labor participation rate continues) something which both Goldman and Yellen have now adopted as gospel. Nobody knows what precipitated this shocking metamorphosis, although it is said Ben Bernanke can be quite persuasive during unrecorded phone calls. Which brings us to the topic of this post: what does a suspiciously reformed Fed dove do when faced with increasingly louder, conflicting voices that challenge the delusion that the only thing that will fix a failing QE is more QE? He fires them of course.

As the Star Tribune reports, two top economists at the Minneapolis Fed were “shown the door” when they disagreed with their tyrannical money printing advocate. Who were the two?

The departing economists are Patrick Kehoe and Ellen McGrattan, both highly regarded researchers with long tenures in Minneapolis. Kehoe, a Harvard Ph.D. who has taught at the University of Pennsylvania and the University of Chicago, joined the Fed as a monetary adviser in 1997. He was the bank’s highest-ranked research economist, according to data from the St. Louis Fed.

 

“He’s a high-profile person in the profession, a world-class economist,” said Stephen Williamson, a former Minneapolis Fed economist who now works at the St. Louis Fed and is a professor at Washington University in St. Louis. “He’s a big deal.”

 

Kehoe declined to comment. McGrattan said Kehoe was fired on Oct. 18. He already has a position at the U, which often shares economists with the Minneapolis Fed. “Patrick Kehoe did not choose to quit or leave the Fed,” McGrattan said.

 

McGrattan, a Stanford Ph.D. who taught at Duke University before joining the Minneapolis Fed in 1992, will take a position with the University of Minnesota in January and will go on unpaid leave at the bank. She has been an adjunct professor at the U since 1993 and said she was pushed aside at the Fed more implicitly than Kehoe.

As a reminder, “The Minneapolis Fed has a reputation as one of the premier economic research institutions in the country. A close partnership between the U and the bank over the years resulted in an innovative marriage of academic economic research and policymaking. It was a fruitful collaboration in which economists such as Prescott, Tom Sargent, Chris Sims and Neil Wallace helped put the Minneapolis Fed and University of Minnesota on the map. Former President Gary Stern and Art Rolnick, the former research director, continued the tradition. Sargent, Sims and Prescott eventually won Nobel Prizes in economics, and Sargent and Prescott still have ties to the U and the Minneapolis Fed.”

Sargent, incidentally, is the same person who a few days ago was heard uttering the most apocryphal words a Fed cardinal could hear, namely that deflation is actually a good thing, and that Greece might benefit from returning to a gold standard. It is easy to see why Kocher does not like him.

But back to Kehoe and McGrattan who were mercilessly sacked by their dovish boss: why did he do that one may ask? Simple – they disagreed with his monetary religion.

There are subtle policy differences between Kocherlakota and the economists who are leaving. Kocherlakota has been at the center of a debate over the effectiveness of the Fed’s low-interest-rate policy. He has pushed for nearly two years for the Fed to hold down rates until unemployment drops to 5.5 percent.

 

He argues, in general, that what are known as “New Keynesian” economic models are helpful. This school of thought has helped create an unprecedented intervention in the financial markets by the country’s central bank — the $85 billion a month bond-buying program known as quantitative easing.

 

But Kehoe and McGrattan published a paper in 2008 arguing that monetary policy can do little to affect the unemployment rate, and Fed policymakers should instead focus primarily on controlling inflation.

 

New Keynesian models are not yet useful for policy analysis,” they wrote.

Which is effectively the same as telling the Spanish Inquisition that god does not exist. Luckily, modern society is a little more developed (for now). Instead of Kehoe and McGrattan getting the iron maiden, they were merely fired.

Prescott laments that this sort of debate within the bank, long encouraged, no longer appears to be welcome. “A good administrator sets up a loyal opposition,” he said.

Don’t ask. Don’t question. Just accept. And with that it’s case closed for how the Fed’s pathological voodoo shamans deal with any dissent.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/64P8UQk-Dh0/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Socialist Seattle Councilmember Says Boeing Workers Should Take Over Factory

During a rally for unionized Boeing workers, Kshama Sawant, a

recently elected
Seattle City Councilmember and self-identified
socialist, told her supporters that Boeing workers should consider
taking over the factory.

Sawant, who ran on a platform
to raise the Seattle minimum wage to $15 per hour, unionize Amazon
and Starbucks, increase rent control, and “reduce the unfair tax
burden on small businesses, homeowners, and workers,” has been
making big
headlines
for her electoral victory earlier this week. She is
one of the first Socialist party candidates to win a major
city’s election
in decades
. Now, just days after entering office, she is
stirring crowds with radical declarations.

The Boeing Machinists Rally was held on Monday in response to

contract negotiation disputes
between Boeing management and
union representatives. The union rejected a contract proposal that
would have guaranteed workers jobs for eight years to build the new
777X airliner in exchange for new employees giving up their company
pensions.

Boeing representatives responded that the company does not plan
to reopen a conversation with the union to renegotiate. Instead,
representative Raymond Connor said that the company would consider

moving its operations out of state
and possibly out of the
country. Angered by Boeing’s announcement, supporters of the union
gathered to hear Sawant speak.   

Sawant
told
the crowd: “[If Boeing leaves], that will be nothing short
of economic terrorism because it’s going to devastate the state’s
economy.”

Her solution? Simply don’t allow them to leave. According to

KIRO TV
, the Councilmember advocated a worker takeover of the
means of production:

The only response we can have if Boeing executives do not agree
to keep the plant here is for the machinists to say the machines
are here, the workers are here, we will do the job, we don’t need
the executives. The executives don’t do the work, the machinists
do. The workers should take over the factories, and shut down
Boeing’s profit-making machine.

Once workers take over operations, Sawant argued that they
should switch from producing “war machines” to public transit
vehicles like buses.

Slate‘s Matthew Yglesias
derided
Sawant’s proposal as unrealistic idealism:

Can Boeing’s front-line workers actually retool an airplane
factory and turn it to bus production and win contracts to sell
buses that raise enough revenue to keep everyone employed? Only
time will tell for sure, but in the real world the answer is “no.”
This is exactly what you need executives for.
Retooling plants, establishing relationships with suppliers and
customers, understanding the size of the market for buses, and all
that other stuff is a non-trivial task.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/21/socialist-seattle-councilmember-tells-bo
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“Massive” Civil Society Walkout at Warsaw Climate Conference Not So “Massive”

The activist groups who flock annually to the United Nations’
annual climate chang confereces are pleased to style themselves as
“civil society.” These self-chosen representatives of the planet’s
people, frustrated that they are not being allowed to reorganize
the entire world’s energy economy yet, staged a walkout today at
the Warsaw conference. From the Greenpeace press release:

In regards to the massive NGO walk-out today  from the UN
climate negotiations, Kumi Naidoo, Executive Director of Greenpeace
International said:

“The Polish government has done its best to turn these talks
into a showcase for the coal industry. Along with backsliding by
Japan, Australia and Canada, and the lack of meaningful leadership
from other countries, governments here have delivered a slap in the
face to those suffering as a result of dangerous climate change.
The EU is being shackled by the Polish government and its friends
in the coal industry, and must resume leading on the climate agenda
if Paris is going to deliver a treaty that matters.” …

“We believe in this process. We will never give up on it,
because people around the world desperately need a global treaty on
climate change. But a new treaty must also be meaningful. Warsaw
has simply not been good enough. As civil society, we will be back
next year with still more voices behind us, with more determination
and with more ambition to succeed. We expect governments to do the
same.”

Setting aside Naidoo’s grandiloquence, can a walkout of perhaps
100 white t-shirted people truthfully be characterized as
“massive”?

The number of journalists covering the event very likely equaled
the number of perambulating activists. Still, I expect Naidoo and
his colleagues for fulfill their threat to return in higher numbers
when the next climate change meeting convenes in Lima in 2014.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/21/massive-civil-society-walkout-at-warsaw
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"Massive" Civil Society Walkout at Warsaw Climate Conference Not So "Massive"

The activist groups who flock annually to the United Nations’
annual climate chang confereces are pleased to style themselves as
“civil society.” These self-chosen representatives of the planet’s
people, frustrated that they are not being allowed to reorganize
the entire world’s energy economy yet, staged a walkout today at
the Warsaw conference. From the Greenpeace press release:

In regards to the massive NGO walk-out today  from the UN
climate negotiations, Kumi Naidoo, Executive Director of Greenpeace
International said:

“The Polish government has done its best to turn these talks
into a showcase for the coal industry. Along with backsliding by
Japan, Australia and Canada, and the lack of meaningful leadership
from other countries, governments here have delivered a slap in the
face to those suffering as a result of dangerous climate change.
The EU is being shackled by the Polish government and its friends
in the coal industry, and must resume leading on the climate agenda
if Paris is going to deliver a treaty that matters.” …

“We believe in this process. We will never give up on it,
because people around the world desperately need a global treaty on
climate change. But a new treaty must also be meaningful. Warsaw
has simply not been good enough. As civil society, we will be back
next year with still more voices behind us, with more determination
and with more ambition to succeed. We expect governments to do the
same.”

Setting aside Naidoo’s grandiloquence, can a walkout of perhaps
100 white t-shirted people truthfully be characterized as
“massive”?

The number of journalists covering the event very likely equaled
the number of perambulating activists. Still, I expect Naidoo and
his colleagues for fulfill their threat to return in higher numbers
when the next climate change meeting convenes in Lima in 2014.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/21/massive-civil-society-walkout-at-warsaw
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Jacob Sullum on Tolerating Pot With a Frown

At the end of August, 296 days after voters in
Colorado and Washington decided to legalize marijuana, the U.S.
Justice Department responded with a memo that leans toward
accommodation rather than confrontation. As Jacob Sullum explains,
they did so because had no viable way to stop it.

View this article.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/21/jacob-sullum-on-tolerating-pot-with-a-fr
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Stocks & Oil Jump, Bonds & Bullion Dump

The confusion reigns. The USD (aside from against the EUR) is bid and Treasuries are being sold along with precious metals in a continuation of yesterday’s taper-tantrum. However, stocks (and crude oil) are surging. As JPY’s implosion of moar QE from Japan expectations lift carry traders back from the grave.

 


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/aUvInJqaBfk/story01.htm Tyler Durden