Czech President Mocks Media, Declares Himself An “Agent Of Putin, Trump, China And Israel”

Taking the recent escalation in global conspiracy theories, according to which such and such president is a Manchurian Candidate of this or that foreign power, to their next comedic level, on Friday the Czech Republic’s conservative Euroskeptic president, Milos Zeman, declared that he is an agent of not only Putin, but also various other leaders and nations, during a press conference where he announced his intention to run for a second term.  Speaking in Prague, Zeman launched his 2018 re-election campaign, and during the televized event vowed not to change his controversial conservative platform, which includes prioritizing Czech interests over pan-European ones.

Zeman has often been at odds with the government of Social Democrat Prime Minister Bohuslav Sobotka, which has been a supporter of Brussels on issues like anti-Russian sanctions and immigration. Though largely a figurehead like in many other European states, with limited executive authority in the Czech Republic, Zeman, who won the office in 2013, remains one of the country’s most popular figures, especially in the villages. Among other policies frowned upon by Brussels, he has advocated nurturing closer ties with Russia and China, supporting Israel, and limiting the inflow of asylum seekers from Muslim nations.

Czech President Milos Zeman, Reuters

When asked by a Russian TV channel whether he was concerned about being branded a Russian agent, Zeman – who like Trump has been accused of having a pro-Russian bias by the local press – satirized the Czech media for criticizing his position on Moscow.

“I am an agent of Russia, and particularly of Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin” he declared, speaking in Russian. “I should add that I am also an agent of the Chinese President. Lately also of the new American President. I am an agent of Israel, which I have been supporting all this time.”

On a more serious note, he then clarified by saying that, in reality he is the agent of only one country, the Czech Republic

Zeman said media criticism was among the factors that had prompted him to seek re-election. “Each of their attacks encouraged me more to run. Thank you, Czech media,” he explained.

As RT adds, the only other contender for the presidency is businessman and writer Michal Horacek, who has launched a campaign with the slogan “We can do better.”

Zeman will name the country’s next prime minister before he leaves office. Sobotka’s Social Democrats are running an uphill battle against their ruling coalition rivals, the ANO movement of billionaire Finance Minister Andrej Babis. In taking a page out of the Trump playbook, Babis’ campaign is based on rooting out corruption and running the country like his business, an idea that resonates favorably with many voters.

Sobotka, who won the party’s leadership on Friday, argues that Babis dislikes democracy and has conflicts of interests. Zeman may favor Babis over Sobodka to form a new coalition government, if neither party wins a majority of parliamentary seats in October.

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Peter Schiff Talks Trumpcare: Different Plan, Same Problems

Authored by Peter Schiff via Euro Pacific Capital,

With his widely followed, and positively reviewed, address to Congress last week, President Trump showed how easy it could be to unite Washington around a big-budget centrist agenda on health care, immigration, taxes, infrastructure and the military. But the continued accusations surrounding his campaign’s alleged Russian connections, and the President’s conspiratorial responses, have insured that the battle lines have only hardened. However, anyone with even a casual concern with ballooning government debt should take notice just how easily both parties in Washington would agree to vastly expand the gushing red ink if a political truce can be brokered. Those fears should galvanize around the newly-issued Republican replacement for Obamacare.  If such a monstrous bill could successfully navigate Congress, we would find ourselves stuck deeper in a deficit deluge than we can possibly imagine. 

Obamacare attempted to rewrite the laws of economics by preventing insurance companies from charging high-risk customers more than low-risk customers. But to make this work without bankrupting the companies, all agreed that the young and healthy would need to be forced to buy insurance.  The flaw that doomed the law was that the penalties for not buying were too low to actually motivate healthy people to buy.  Consumers were charged just a few hundred dollars per year to forego insurance that would have cost many thousands. Given that they could always decide to get insurance in the future, at no added cost, the choice was a no-brainer. Without these healthy people keeping costs down, insurance premiums have risen alarmingly.

Ironically, the Supreme Court noticed this flaw as well. In sustaining the Law’s constitutionality, Justice Roberts argued that the relative lightness of the penalties was insufficient to compel anyone to buy insurance and, as a result, he considered them to be a “tax” that could be voluntarily avoided rather than a coercive penalty to force commercial activity. (Presumably had the tax been high enough to actually work, it would have rendered Obamacare unconstitutional – see my 2012 commentary).

However, the Republican replacement plan, which removes all taxes on individuals who don’t buy insurance, and all penalties on employers who do not provide insurance to their employees, will actually make the problem far worse.

The only reason healthy people buy health insurance is that they know that if they wait until they get really sick no insurance company will sell them a policy.  The same principal holds true for all insurance products.  You can’t buy auto insurance after you get into an accident. You can’t buy life insurance at a reasonable cost after your doctor has given you six months to live. The fact that your car is already wrecked, or your arteries already clogged, are pre-existing conditions that no insurance company would be expected to ignore.

Allowing voters the low-cost option to buy health insurance after they actually need it is very popular. It’s like promising motorists they can stop paying their monthly auto insurance premium and just buy a policy after they have an accident.  If the government were to require this, all auto insurance companies would quickly go out of business (unless they were bailed out by the government).

Obama’s solution was to use the penalties to force healthy people to buy insurance before they actually needed it.  As the years wore on, the relatively low cost of the subsidized exchange plans and the availability of those plans to anyone proved popular.  However, the mandates and penalties, as well as skyrocketing premiums for non-subsidized policies, were clearly unpopular. 

The Republicans have taken the “brave” political approach of keeping the parts that are popular (subsidized access, pre-existing conditions waivers, expansion of children’s coverage until age 26) and jettisoning those that are not (the mandates and the penalties).  The new plan pretends to offer a replacement to the Obamacare penalties by allowing insurance companies to charge a 30% increase to the premium for those who come back into the system after having previously allowed their coverage to lapse. But the problem here is that the premium increase is far too small to force anyone healthy to buy insurance. In fact, it is so low that any healthy person currently insured may decide to drop coverage.

The effect of this law, were it actually enacted, would be the death of the health insurance industry.  As the law removes the requirement that larger employers provide insurance, I believe that big companies would look to self-insure employees for routine care.  For example, employer and employees could pay into a common risk pool that would set their own deductibles and co-pays. For employees who incur medical charges in excess of the cost of an actual policy, the pool could provide funds to pay for outside insurance at the increased 30% premium. As a result insurance costs would be encountered only if there is a need.

Self-employed individuals would only buy insurance if the total cost was less than the tax credit provided by the new plan.  If they can’t find such coverage, they would likely buy a new form of insurance that this law may create: A policy that would pay for health insurance premiums if the user ever got sick enough to need them.  Such insurance would be very cheap, as the maximum exposure to the insurance company is only 130% of the premium for a standard health insurance policy.  

In the end, the only people buying health insurance would be those who can buy it for free using their tax credits and really sick people for whom insurance premiums are cheaper than their medical bills.   But as insurance companies lose money on the latter group, they will be forced to raise their premiums on the former.  This puts us right back in the box we are stuck in with Obamacare.

As premiums soar well above the amount of the tax credits, more people will drop out.  Unless the amount of the tax credits rises substantially, which will cost a fortune, all health insurance companies will eventually go out of business.  The end result will be socialized medicine, only it will be Trump not Obama that gets the blame.  It seems to me that this would be a political loser for the conservative cause. I would rather we go down in flames with Obamacare as then, at least, we will have a chance at a free market solution that could actually work.

The government has a very poor track record with containing the cost of a service when it gives consumers money to buy it. Think student aid and college tuition.   Plus the plan is constructed in a way that makes it ripe for potential abuse.  Whenever the government is giving away money, people always game the system to get it.  Think about the wide-spread fraud in welfare, food stamps, disability, and even cell phone credits. Trumpcare will be no different. Many people will buy catastrophic plans with extremely high deductibles just so they can pocket the difference between the tax credits and the costs of the plans.  If they actually incur a medical condition that results in a high out-of-pocket expense, they can just switch their coverage to one with a much lower deductible.  Such a switch may even be possible without the 30% premium for lapsed coverage.

If Trump and the Republican leadership can push this monstrosity through, despite the obvious mathematical shortcomings, look for them to make similar efforts on infrastructure and defense spending. All this adds up to uncounted trillions in new debt, and a giant step closer to the utter bankruptcy of the nation. But the real danger lies in the possibility that the law is voted down by conservative Republicans and Trump turns instead to Democrats.

In contrast to the former mission statement of the Republican Party, Trump believes that government solutions can work as long as they are “smart.”  The opening weeks of the Trump presidency were dominated by combative rhetoric, conservative and pro-business appointments, and nationalistic executive orders. And while this approach sent Democrats and the media into convulsions, it solidified the loyalty of Trump’s political base, and allows him to pivot toward the center if he wants. If he could peel off some “Red State” Democrats, he would be in a position to enact some of the biggest spending increases that the country has ever seen, even if fiscally conservative Republicans bolt.

If those conservatives defeat the new health care bill, Trump could look to partner with Democrats in a heartbeat. Of course, to get that support, he would have to make the current bill even more generous. Let’s hope that his self-inflicted wounds continue to prevent such an unholy alliance.

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Dutch-Turk Row Deepens; Geert Wilders Says ‘Turks Aren’t Welcomed’ in the Netherlands

Geert Wilders is the favorite to win the elections in the Netherlands in about 3 days and may one day become their new leader — running on a blatant anti-Islam platform — pushing forth the narrative that Islam is anti-human rights, anti-democratic, and invokes violence amongst ardent followers of the faith. Over the past two days, relations between the Dutch and the fucking Turks have deteriorated because the Turks wanted to hold political demonstrations in the Netherlands, as part of their effort to appeal to the 5.5m Turkish citizens living in Europe, in order to pass a referendum on April 16th that will convert Turkey into a ‘Presidential republic’ from its current parliamentary system.

Both Netherlands and Austria have told them to fuck off.

The Prime Minister of Turkey, Binali Yildirim, held a campaign rally himself in Germany on Feb. 18th — much to the delight of Merkel.

Turkey is holding a referendum on 16 April on whether to turn from a parliamentary to a presidential republic,

Bear in mind, foreign-led protests are in fact banned in Turkey — yet Erdogan is out calling “the west”, specifically the Netherlands, as being nazis and fascists — because they’re uninterested in having foreign nations campaign inside their borders.

“I have said that I had thought that Nazism was over, but that I was wrong. Nazism is alive in the West”, said Erdogan.

Turkey’s PM, Binali Yildirim said “This situation has been protested in the strongest manner by our side, and it has been conveyed to Dutch authorities that there will be retaliation in the harshest ways … We will respond in kind to this unacceptable behavior.”

Meanwhile, Erdogan said Turkey would continue acting belligerent towards the Netherlands, asking the UN to apply sanctions to until they apologized (lolz). The Dutch PM, Mark Rutte, did not offer one — instead diagnosing Erdogan with a mental disorder.

“This is a man who yesterday made us out for fascists and a country of Nazis. I’m going to de-escalate, but not by offering apologies. Are you nuts? This country was bombed during the Second World War by Nazis. It’s totally unacceptable to talk in this way.”

Here’s Geert laying down the gauntlet on Erdogan, saying they’ll never become a member of the EU — because ‘they are no Europeans.’ He added human rights were incompatible with Islam, saying Erdogan was a ‘dangerous Islamicist who raises the flag of Islam.”

“We do not want more, but less Islam, so Turkey, stay away from us.”

The subsequent result of this acrimonious back and forth has been riots in Rotterdam, which the Dutch police responded to strongly.

More than 400,000 Turks live in the Netherlands. Protests and riots were rampant in Rotterdam last night.

Dutch police controlled the crowd using dogs, water cannons, mounted police, and hard sticks.

In footage captured by CNN Turk, a Dutch dog took a nibble out of an unruly protester.

Meanwhile, in Istanbul, Turkish authorities have cordoned off the Dutch Embassy due to ‘security concerns’ after a night of loud egg pelting protests.

But some enterprising lad did manage to slip through the tight security to hoist the Turkish flag over the Dutch Embassy, amidst chants of ‘Allah Akbar’ reverberating in the background.

Content originally generated at iBankCoin.com

 

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Hedges Are “Pricing A World Almost Free Of Risk” Says BofA: Here’s How To Trade It

Over the weekend, Bank of America’s volatility experts Jason Galazidis and his team, pointed out that while US equity vol remains at historic low levels, it is not just equities where market participants are remarkably complacent, and write that both US credit & Chinese equity hedges “are pricing a world almost free of risk.

To Galazidis this is perplexing  as “there appear to be abundant potential sources of global market uncertainty: a CB policy miscalculation, the propensity for political surprises, unanticipated consequences of the first US rate hike cycle in over a decade and the feasibility of Trump’s economic growth agenda, to name a few.”

And as Goldman pointed out recently when it demonstrated that the cost of liquid long-dated hedges in equity and credit has collectively reached its lowest level in six years…

 

… BofA agrees that risky assets for the most part remain euphoric, exhibiting what the bank’s Michael Hartnett has famously termed an “Icarus” moment before “hubristic positioning, complacent profit expectations, and hawkish policy signal a reflection point.

Notably, Galazidis adds, cross-asset vols (baring a few isolated assets such GBP and JPY) have declined to  very low levels (Table 1 and Table 2) making select hedges relatively cheap to own.

How to capitalize on this? Simple: buy those puts which are pricing in a world of “absolute perfection” and no uncertainty as far as the eye can see. BofA has the following suggestions on how to identify  value in puts across asset classes

Chart 1 shows crash returns of different assets during historical tail events per unit of current OTM option implied volatility. We measure tail events by the 10 largest 3M drops since Jan-06. Ranked by the average, the screen shows that the hedges which are most underpricing historical drawdowns are: US (IG & HY) Credit payers, GLD (Gold ETF) calls and HSCEI (Chinese equity) puts:

  • US (IG & HY) Credit payers – which we are reintroducing to our universe of assets – screen as the best value hedges across asset classes owing to historically low credit volatility (Chart 2). European credit and HYG (US HY Credit ETF) puts also screen high, ranking immediately after Asian equity puts.
  • GLD calls are the 3rd top ranking hedge as current options costs are discounting the historical propensity for Gold to rally strongly during risk-off episodes.
  • HSCEI puts continue to screen as best value within equities. In contrast, ESTX50 puts are near the bottom of our screen (most expensive) as 3M option prices now embed French election risk premium (voting takes place on 23-Apr and 7-May).

And, as a reference, the following table shows the largest drops within 3M in each asset class between ‘06 and ‘16, ranked in the same order as the assets in Chart 1. For those who believe that the period of low volatility is ending, this is the best reference to find the derivatives that are “coiled” the most.

Who knows: maybe this time those willing to fight the central banks, and betting on a rebound on volatility, will finally be right.

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What Does OPEC Do Next?

Authored by Salmon Ghouri via OilPrice.com,

Time is of the essence. If you fail to comprehend future market conditions and fail to steer the ship in the right direction, it can lead to disaster. This is what we have learned during the past few years. OPEC’s failure to understand the future market conditions and speed of technological advancements has resulted in economic setbacks.

A 2012 paper about the role of U.S. shale oil in global oil markets suggested that “It could be in the interest of OPEC to already increase its production now and allow oil prices to decline to below $60 to discourage further development of shale oil”. The industry, and more particularly OPEC, continued with their “business as usual” strategy, unaware of the dramatic impact U.S. shale would have on oil prices.

$100+ oil prices allowed companies to master the fracturing technology. As a result, the shale industry was able to increase average productivity per well by employing advanced horizontal drilling techniques, multi-stage fracturing and concentrating towards the most productive areas of the basin. For example, oil productivity per rig for the Bakken increased from 112 b/d in January 2007 to 746 b/d in March 2016 – over 6.6 fold increase. Improvements were also made in terms of Estimated Ultimate Recovery (EURs) which in some of the basins reached 50 to 60 percent in 2015/16.

The higher U.S. shale oil production started to take its toll on oil prices in the second half of 2014. To counter the new enemy (shale oil), OPEC, contrary to its traditional tool of curbing its own production, flooded the market for an extended period of time, explaining that it was merely defending its own market share and assuming that such policy would incur permanent damage to the U.S. shale industry.

Having executed this strategy for over 2 years, OPEC realized that the continuation of such a policy was quite detrimental to the economies of its members. Most OPEC members had to take some unpopular decisions to curb government expenses, including downsizing, drastic cost cutting measures, removing subsidies and cancelling megaprojects. All these efforts provided them with some breathing space and also avoided complete economic collapse.

Eventually, OPEC reverted back to their old wisdom of cutting oil production, which saw oil prices creep up to the mid-fifties. The oil bust taught them a good lesson and made them realize how dependent their economies are on oil revenues. A good example of this is the Saudi Vision 2030 diversification plan, which is aimed at reducing reliance on oil income.

Oil prices around $50 might provide some relief for OPEC countries, U.S. shale producers directly responded and the number of drilling rigs substantially increased in the last couple of months. And now the U.S. shale patch has brought break-even costs per barrel down even further, Shale oil production could even increase as oil prices fall below $50 per barrel again.

Offering some clues on how the cartel could defend its market share, an article by the author, published last year on Oilprice.com forecasts the responsiveness of U.S. shale oil production against various oil price scenarios.

In the base scenario, if oil prices gradually increase to $78/bbl, than by December 2020, total U.S. shale oil production from the given seven basins would increase to 6.79 MMBPD – an increase of 37 percent compared to March 2016. In contrast, under low oil price scenarios (range of mid thirties and mid twenties), shale oil production would decline in all the basins and by December 2020 would fall to 3.03 MMBPD, a decline of 67 percent compared to March 2016.

(Click to enlarge)

The hard lesson learned during the past few years is that due to technological advancements, U.S. shale oil producers can lower their breakeven prices and challenge OPEC’s market dominance.

One strategy, if OPEC aims to harm U.S. shale oil producers, is to stop intervening in oil markets, provoking a drastic fall in oil prices – possibly back to $30 per barrel. Such a drop in crude prices could crash shale oil production in almost all the seven U.S. basins. By the end of 2020, their cumulative production could fall down to 3.03 mmbpd. This could potentially evaporate excess global supply, however, this strategy will once again have a devastating impact on the economies of individual OPEC members. As such, OPEC are unlikely to initiate such a self-defeating strategy.

Higher oil prices of over $60/bbl on the other hand, will allow most of the seven shale oil producers to increase production, keeping oil prices in a narrow range. In such a scenario, oil prices within the range of $50 to $60/bbls will balance the global demand/supply and will not be detrimental to either producers or consumers.

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The 3 Biggest Picture ‘Long-Short’ Trades In The World

8 years after the beginning of "Bull & Fed's Excellent Adventure", BofA's Michael Hartnett is starting to have his doubts.

The bull market catalyst – extraordinary, unprecedented central bank policies – is fading globally and the so-called "Humpty-Dumpty' Trade looms:

The Fed has hiked 2 times in past 10 years; March 15th will be the 2nd hike in 3 months and they will continue tightening until “event”

This is the "great fall" in risk assets catalyst = hawkish Fed & weaker EPS in H2 – BofAML suggests buy long-dated SPX puts (June FOMC/ECB = volatility); accumulate gold; avoid “ZIRP winners”…CRE, HY, EM debt, NZ$

But Hartnett suggests there are still opportunities among the "Biggest Picture" trades…

1. Long Robots, Short Humans

"You can’t build a wall to keep the robots out"

  • Number of global robots by 2020 = 2.5 million; in 2010 was 1 million
  • Until we “tax the robots” (which we are likely to end up doing) Disruption, Demographics, Debt likely caps rise in inflation & interest rates
  • The “deflationary D’s” won’t prevent cyclical rise in inflation; but are likely to prevent a secular rise in inflation

2. Long Main Street, Short Wall Street

Economic Nationalism is back

  • Electorates are voting for trade & immigration policies to boost wages on Main Street, not for central banks to support stock & bond prices on Wall Street

 

3. Long Global, Short US Stocks

A multipolar world looms

  • US equities @ all-time highs; global equities 27% below all-time peak in 2007
  • US equities trade on 3.0X book; non-US equities trade on 1.3X book
  • Japan & Europe to outperform US stocks

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Reason Nominated for 13 Western Publishing Association ‘Maggie’ Awards

BDS? ||| ReasonI am tickled to share the news that Reason in all its journalism-producing subdivisions has been nominated for 13 awards for its 2016 coverage by the Western Publishing Association, which assesses magazines and weekly newspapers and websites headquartered west of the Rocky Mountains. The lucky number of noms tops the previous Reason record for work in 2012 and 2013, and more than doubles up on last year’s six (which led to a Best Feature Article award for Elizabeth Nolan Brown). More importantly, we squashed Mother Jones and its five nominations this year like a bug.

And the nominees are:

* Best Magazine, Special Interest/Consumer. For the May 2016 issue (pictured). The competition here is Mother Jones, Boys’ Life, Off-Grid, and Jewish in Seattle.

* Best Web Publication. The other nominees are The Advocate, Via, Aspen Sojourner, Study in the USA, and VegNews.

* Best Publication Blog. Other contenders are Meetings Today and Study in the USA.

* Best Feature Article. Shikha Dalmia, for “Muslim in America: A trip to two of the most Islamic cities in the U.S.”

* Best Signed Editorial or Essay. Matt Welch, for “Trump Is Not the Peace Candidate: Don’t be fooled by the false prophet of anti-interventionism.”

* Best Regularly Featured Department, Section or Column. Veronique de Rugy, for “Beyond Permissionless Innovation: Exciting things happen outside the reach of regulators,” and “Marco Rubio’s Sweet Protectionism: The 2016 hopeful gives the feds cover to keep propping up Big Sugar.”

* Best News Story. Jim Epstein, for “Minimum Wage vs. the Carwasheros: New York’s new $15 wage floor pits man against machine.”

* Best Single Editorial Illustration. Jason Keisling, for “Should the U.S. Government Build a Death Star?

Probably not. ||| Jason Keisling, Reason

* Best Regularly Featured Web or eNewsletter Column. Brendan O’Neill, for “America Called Bullshit on the Cult of Clinton: The one good thing about Trump’s win? It shows a willingness among Americans to blaspheme against saints and reject the religion of hollow progressiveness,” and “Elitist Rage With the Pro-Brexit Masses Echoes Longstanding British Suspicion of Democracy: Reptiles, insects, shit flowing from the busted sewer of bad ideas—this is how the media elite views the minds and actions of Brexit voters.”

* Best Web or eNewsletter Article. C.J. Ciaramella, for “Why Are Detroit Cops Killing So Many Dogs? A Reason investigation reveals widespread, unchecked violence against pets during drug raids—including two officers who have shot more than 100.”

* Best Use of Video in Editorial Short Form. Austin Bragg, Meredith Bragg, and Andrew Heaton, for “Star Trek: The Libertarian Edition“:

and Austin Bragg and Meredith Bragg, for “#DrunkenSocialism vs. The State: How Virginia is Screwing over Bars, Customers, and Common Sense”:

* Best Use of Video in Editorial Long Form. (We are still awaiting word on which entry was nominated.)

Winners will be announced April 28.

None of this journalism, nor recognition of its quality, would be possible without your generous support of the Reason Foundation, the 501(c)3 nonprofit that publishes all of our journalism. So thank you! You can donate more at this link, or simply subscribe to the magazine!

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Preet Bharara Fans Speculation He Was Probing Trump When He Was Fired

There may have been much more to the termination of US attorney for the Southern District of New York, Preet Bharara, than meets the casual glance.

According to Reuters, which cites a law enforcement source, two days before U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara was fired on Saturday, the high-profile New York prosecutor declined to take a call from President Donald Trump.  Bharara reportedly contacted the DOJ for authorization to speak to the president on Thursday – one day before the DOJ announced it had requested all Obama-era attorneys to hand in their resignations. When he apparently did not receive it, Reuters adds that he called back the woman who had contacted him to say “he did not want to talk to Trump without the approval of his superiors.”

As reported previously, Bharara – in his role as chief federal prosecutor for the Southern District of New York – oversaw several notable corruption and white-collar criminal cases and prosecutions of terrorism suspects. He was one of 46 Obama administration holdovers who were asked to resign by the Justice Department on Friday.

On Saturday afternoon, Bharara tweeted that he had been fired after he defied the request to resign. The move was a surprise because Bharara told reporters in November that Trump had asked him to remain in the job. 

As Reuters also notes, the DOJ would not comment on reports of Bharara’s contacts with Trump representatives and Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ office in the days before his firing. The White House had no comment on Sunday on any contacts with Bharara.

Among some of Bharara recent caseflow, he was most notably overseeing a probe into New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio’s fundraising. Bharara said his deputy, Joon Kim, would serve as his temporary replacement.

More importantly, in light of recent speculation that Trump terminated Bharara due to an alleged investigation into Trump himself, Reuters’ source declined comment on whether or not the office had any active investigations related to Trump. On Wednesday, three watchdog groups asked Bharara to take steps to prevent the Trump Organization from receiving benefits from foreign governments that might enrich Trump, who has not given up ownership of the business.

Norm Eisen, a former White House ethics lawyer who leads one of the groups, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, questioned the timing of the firings. “I do believe that something odd happened,” he said. “You don’t decide to keep 46 folks on, then suddenly demand their immediate exit, without some precipitating cause or causes.”

 

Democrat Elijah Cummings, ranking member of the House Oversight Committee, said on Sunday it was the president’s prerogative to fire U.S. attorneys. But he questioned why Trump had suddenly changed his mind on keeping Bharara. “I’m just curious as to why that is,” Cummings said on ABC’s “This Week” program. “Certainly, there’s a lot of questions coming up as to whether … President Trump is concerned about the jurisdiction of this U.S. attorney and whether that might affect his future.”

In a cryptic follow up tweet on Sunday afternoon, his first since announcing his termination, Bharara said he tweeted Sunday that he now understood what the “Moreland Commission” felt like.

The tweet appears to be a jab at Trump; with many immediately hinting the reference to the commission as suggesting the president fired Bharara because he was looking into possible corruption in the administration.

As the Hill summarizes, the Moreland Commission to Investigate Public Corruption focused on investigating possible corruption activities in New York. Bharara, the former U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, ran it until Gov. Andrew Cuomo shut down the anticorruption panel while it was investigating allegations that the Democratic governor interfered with one of its investigations.

Many belive the powerful politician dismantled the Moreland Commission for investigating him.

For now, the mystery over why Trump fired Bharara after asking him to stay on just three months ago, remains.

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The Deep State Dystopia To Come

Excerpted from The Deep State and The Dark Arts

authored by Jason Hirthler via Counterpunch.org,

Long-time Congressional staffer Mike Lofgren refers to the murky agencies at work to ensure this planetary plan stays on track as the “deep state,” in his book of the same name.

He writes that it includes key elements of the national security state, which ensure continuity of policy despite the superficial about-faces from one administration to the next. The deep state is effectively a warlike oligarchy, hell-bent on full spectrum dominance, driven by a lust for wealth and power, and anxious to inscribe its name in history. Specifically, Lofgren says, the deep state includes the Department of Defense, the State Department, the National Intelligence Agencies, Wall Street, the defense industry, and the energy consortium, among other major private players. They share common agendas, operate a revolving door of employees, and have a collective distaste for democracy, transparency, and regulation.

The deep state is the link between military interventions and trans-pacific trade deals, between sanctions and IMF loans. All of these tools, be they arms or loans or legal structures, serve a single purpose: the overarching control of world resources by a global community of corporate elites. One can also see how these three instruments of policy and power all do tremendous damage to a particular entity, the nation-state.

It is the nation-state that is considered by elites to be the sole remaining barricade between populations in nominal democracies and their unfettered exploitation by multinationals, although one might reasonably argue that the state more often abets exploitation rather than deters it.

The Dystopia to Come

So where is this all headed? Aside from the theatrics of the Trump presidency and its sequestration or removal. What would full-spectrum dominance look like?

Probably something like a one-world market, populated by enfeebled states, ruled by a worldwide raft of interlocking investor rights agreements that allowed private capital to plunder natural resources free of state restraints, such as labor safeguards, environmental protections, reasonable tax regimes, capital controls or border tariffs. Faceless multinationals would pillage the planet, their anonymous appointees manning the joysticks of power behind the reflective glass of their cloud-draped spindles, unreachable and unelected by the armies of the destitute that prowled the wastelands below. The amalgamated forces of corporate elitism would coolly play labor arbitrage across continents, threaten and destroy defiant economies through currency flight and commodity manipulation, and continue to consume an outsized percentage of the world’s resources. This would fulfill the hegemonic dreams of former State Department Director of Policy Planning Kennan, who once argued that we must dispense with humanitarian concerns and “deal in straight power concepts,” the better to control and consume an outsized portion of the world’s resources, presumably a privilege reserved for elite whites, and a selection of mandarins from other ethnicities with special clearances.

A criminal corporate commonwealth, supported by a fiat dollar as global reserve currency enforced by threat of war and economic collapse, will be deaf to protest from below, its weaponized satellites aimed at populations like sunlit magnifiers at a column of ants. Currency itself would be wholly digitized. This move would be sold as a positive advance as it would provide better tax accountability and therefore fund future programs of social uplift. Rather it will be employed as a means of totalitarian financial control over populations. Their wealth will be institutionalized. The concept of withdrawal will fade along with the fiction of ownership.

Terrorism will become the chosen tool of this elite power (insofar as it isn’t already). Surgical strikes, be they military, economic, or news-driven, will “keep the rabble in line” as all societies become subservient to the portents of war, the fear of inaccessible funds, and the black smears of an amoral media. The ‘deep state’ will become an obsolete term, as the nation-state will recede in memory as a relic of a strife-ridden dark age.

After all, the laissez faire cult of the beltway actually believes the planet would prosper sans nation-states. As another scene from Syriana reminds us, elite capital has a very different worldview from the majority of labor, who continue to believe the state has a role to play defending their interests. At one point in the film, Texas oil man Danny Dalton lectures lawyer Bennett Holiday on the true definition of corruption, “Corruption!? Corruption is government interference in market efficiencies in the form of government regulation. That’s Milton Friedman! He got a goddamn Nobel Prize!” The U.S. already practices free-market militarism, refusing to recognize borders, legal constraints, or geostrategic jurisdiction. Why not free-market finance and trade?

The good news is that, if you can clamber into the top one percent of the U.S. population, for instance, serving as a parasite on the grizzled hide of the corporate beast, you might yet partake of unimaginable luxuries, high in the clouds, sipping Mimosas as you transit between the ring-fenced metropoles of the world, where stateless elites intermingle.

via http://ift.tt/2mgcbc6 Tyler Durden

Eric Peters: “If China And The World Bank Are Right, We’re Headed For A Depression”

From the latest weekend notes from Eric Peters, CIO of One River Asset Management

“Some people blindly invested offshore and were in a rush to do so,” explained China’s central bank chief, justifying his recent capital controls.

“Some of this outbound investment was not in line with our own policies and had no real gain for China.” No doubt he’s right. The tycoons fleeing Chinese capital markets have done so selfishly. “So to regulate capital flows, I think it is normal,” concluded the central banker.

Chinese credit relative to GDP has doubled in the past decade to 300%. Which remains less than the US at 350%, but the rate of Chinese credit growth is as unsustainable as it is difficult to reverse — without tanking the economy. The tycoons are running from this dynamic. Because such loops almost always end badly.

Anyhow, after so many years of secular stagnation fears, global investors have grown conditioned to run. They’ve been running away from fear for so long, they’ve forgotten how to run toward greed. Which has left them blindly holding over $10trln of bonds, which yield negative interest.

Now, this might make sense in a deflationary depression. But the global economy has not seen such strong synchronized cyclical growth in years. Inflation is likewise firming everywhere.

But China lowered its growth target again. As the World Bank warned that today’s strong global upswing in confidence and financial markets are not enough to pull the world out of a “low-growth trap.” If they’re right, we’re surely headed for depression. Because all this new debt requires robust economic strength to shoulder the weight.

But European debt markets are still largely priced for depression. And with JP Morgan’s CEO Jamie Dimon announcing the return of animal spirits in America’s economy, it seems more likely that this cycle ends like every other. With a blind run toward greed.

via http://ift.tt/2mXpl1i Tyler Durden