Maduro Reassures Venezuelans: "I'm A Socialist And I Know What I Am Doing"

Venezuela's (freely elected) President Nicolas Maduro (amid toilet-paper and food shortages nation-wide) pointed out this in a State of the Nation address – which Bloomberg's Peter Jeffrey notes was unnecessary as everyone who lives in Venezuela knows the State of the Nation and it is Excruciating – "I'm a socialist, and I know what I'm doing." As Jeffrey ascorbically notes in this wonderful Op-ed, the Venezuelan treasury is now free to issue notes bearing the motto E Non Sequitur Gloria, or "Out of that which makes no sense shall we stitch the fabric of our glorious destiny."

 

Via Peter Jeffrey of Bloomberg Extra,

"I'm A Socialist, And I Know What I'm Doing"

No, not me. I’m a monarchist and I need directions to Versailles. I’m talking about Nicolas Maduro, the president of Venezuela. He’s the socialist who knows what he’s doing.

He pointed it out this week in a State of the Nation address he needn’t have given since everyone who lives in Venezuela already knows the State of the Nation and it is Excruciating.


News to Me


Still, it seemed to me a commanding reassurance: “I’m a socialist and I know what I’m doing.” The Venezuelan treasury is now free to issue notes bearing the motto E Non Sequitur Gloria, or “Out of that which makes no sense shall we stitch the fabric of our glorious destiny.” (It’s OK. I’m a Latinist and I know what I’m doing.)

It works with doctors. They do embarrassing things to embarrassing parts of you inflamed by embarrassing conditions and, if you look uncomfortable, may say with a smile, “It’s all right. I’m a doctor.”

Thus did President Maduro, with his own avuncular bedside manner, let his comrades know that he had seen many such ugly inflammations, having created them himself, and that there was no need for embarrassment or concern.

I am reminded also of the amorous warning Booth Jonathan gives Marnie on the High Line in the first season of “Girls,” about what he intends to do to her in bed, noting that it might scare her, “because I’m a man and I know how to do things.”

So, what is Maduro doing, other than that?

To be fair, he is just trying to whip inflation. To that end, he has removed the finance minister from his post after the guy presided over a doubling of consumer prices to 56 percent during his nine-month tenure, which has to be a record. Ted Williams, on his hottest streak, raised inflation by only 48 percent.

Who is the new finance minister? An army brigadier general.

What unsuccessful effort at battling inflation did the government try two months ago? Troops.

Look, it seemed to make sense at the time. It’s a syllogism:

We want to fight inflation

Troops fight

(Wait for it)

Troops can fight inflation

Quod erat demonstrandum. (That’s on the other side of the nation’s 12 million-bolivar note.)

And the guy who failed to whip inflation as finance minister — what is his fate?

A. He has resigned in disgrace from public affairs.

B. He has fled the country in the dead of night, stopping only at Arby’s for an Ultimate Angus (19 million bolivars but that’s with fries).

C. He has dug a hidey hole, only deeper than Saddam’s.

D. He goes back to running the nation’s central bank.

Right.

For Maduro is a socialist, and he knows what he’s doing. That’s why he decreed on Wednesday that company profits can no longer exceed 30 percent. A comfortable operating environment for J.C. Penney, yes, but a solution?

Don’t be so skeptical. Things are under control. As the vice president (whose motto is I am an oboist and I know when I’m squeaking) explained on Thursday, “Our fundamental anchor is the dollar at 6.3 bolivars,” just as the Titanic’s fundamental anchor was a rubber bath toy named Davey.

It’s a war on inflation, so give war a chance. As Bloomberg’s Anatoly Kurmanaev and Corina Pons reported yesterday, Venezuela’s military men are now in charge of finance, industry, defense, the interior, and air and aquatic transport (hence the anchor). That’s a lot of brains and brawn. Certainly a lot of brawn.

Nobody’s saying Mision Cumplida. There’s a lot of work to be done in Venezuela. Inflation is rampant. Goods are scarce. A 10-story-tall zombie of Hugo Chavez roams the streets squashing cars and giving three-hour speeches. OK, that’s next week.

Life isn’t easy. But Nicolas Maduro is a socialist. And that’s saying something.


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1cGKXhE Tyler Durden

Guest Post: Over-Financialization – The Casino Metaphor

Submitted by Graham Barnes via The Foundation for the Economics of Sustainability,

The casino metaphor has been widely used as a part-description of the phenomenon of over-financialisation. It’s a handy pejorative tag but can it give us any real insights? This article pursues the metaphor to extremes so that we can file & forget/get back to the football or possibly graduate to next level thinking.

What is the Financialised Economy (FE) and how big is it?

The FE can be loosely described as ‘making money out of money’ as opposed to making money out of something; or ‘profiting without producing’. Its primacy derives largely from two sources – the ability of the commercial banks to create credit out of thin air and then lend it and charge and retain interest; and their ability to direct the first use of capital created in this fashion to friends of the casino as opposed to investing it in real economy (RE) businesses. So the FE has the ability to create money and direct where it is used. Given those powers it is perhaps unsurprising that it chooses to feed itself before it feeds the RE. The FE’s key legitimate roles – in insurance and banking services – have morphed into a self-serving parasite. The tail is wagging the dog.

The FE’s power over the allocation of capital has been re-exposed, for those who were perhaps unaware of it, as we see the massive liquidity injected by the central banks via QE disappearing into the depths of bank balance sheets and inflated asset values leaving mid/small RE businesses gasping for liquidity.

By giving preferential access to any capital allocated to the RE to its big business buddies the FE enables those companies to take out better run smaller competitors via leveraged buy outs. By ‘investing’ in regulators and politicians via revolving doors and backhanders, it captures the legislative process and effectively writes its own rule book.

Five years after the 2008 crisis hit, as carefully catalogued by FinanceWatch, economies are more financialised than ever. If the politicians and regulators ever had any balls they have been amputated by the casino managers, under the anaesthesis of perceived self-interest. They have become the casino eunuchs. An apparent early consensus on the systemic problems of over financialisation has melted away into a misconceived search for ‘business as usual’.

Derivatives

Derivatives are one of the most popular games in the casino.

Over the counter derivatives, which are essentially bets on the performance of asset prices, stocks, indices or interest rates, have a nominal value (as of December 2012) of USD 632 trillion – 6% up from 2007 levels – and 9 times world GDP. If the world decided to stop living and buy back derivatives instead of food, energy, shelter and all the stuff we currently consume, it would take nine years to spend this amount.

OK – it’s a nominal value. Many observers believe (even hope) that its real value is a minute fraction of this, but the only way we will ever find out is if the derivative contracts unwind. That is, prompted presumably by some form of crisis, parties progressively withdraw from the contracts or fold. The regulators (and the FE itself of course) will do everything they can to prevent this from happening, including grinding the population into the dust via austerity, because while no-one knows who precisely holds the unwound risk, most will certainly belong to the FE’s top tier.

Many of these derivatives started life as sensible financial products. Businesses need to insure against an uncertain harvest, or hedge against uncertain currency movements. But only a small proportion of current holders now have an insurable risk. So whereas in the past you could say we insured against our own house burning down, now they bet on their neighbour’s house burning; whereas in the past we bet on our own life expectancy, they now bet on the deaths of others; whereas in the past we insured against currency losses we experienced in our own business transactions, now they bet on currency movements in general. What might be expected when there are incentives to burn your neighbour’s house down? Organisations have even purposely set up junk asset classes, had them AAA rated, sold them to outsiders and then bet on their failure.

Government & Politicians

Politics operates as a debating society in a rented corner of the casino. The rent is high but largely invisible to the populace. The debaters are themselves well off, at least in the U.S. they are.

Now the strange thing is that the government actually owns the casino, but they have forgotten this. For the last 40 years or so, they have asked the casino managers to issue all the chips. The government use the same chips to spend on public services, and require us all to pay taxes in those chips. Mostly they don’t have enough chips for all the services they provide, so they ask the casino managers for loans. The casino managers are happy with this, provided the government pay interest on the loan of chips. This hidden subsidy effectively funds the casino. It’s perverse because the government pays interest on money they could issue themselves debt-free.

It’s not entirely clear why the government thinks the casino managers are better at managing chips than they would be. Arguably the government is elected to carry out a programme and they should be the arbiters of the country’s strategic priorities, so there should be some strategic guidance over the way the chips are spent.

But the government is only here for five years, and the casino managers are here permanently. So perhaps they think it’s safer just to trust the casino managers to get on with it. When asked, the casino managers explain that they allocate chips according to ‘what the market needs’ and no-one quite understands why that doesn’t seem to include much real investment. In any case the government have forgotten that they could issue the chips themselves, and although prompted, have failed to show any interest in reclaiming that power. Occasionally they create a whole new batch of chips themselves (QE) – if they think the tables are quiet – but give them straight back to the casino managers. Maybe it’s too complicated for politicians. Many of them haven’t had proper jobs. There are a few civil servants who understand what’s happening, but most of them don’t want to rock the boat – they are here permanently too and have good pensions. They research for the debaters and have lunch with the casino managers. That keeps them quite busy enough, thank you.

The Real Economy

The Real Economy also operates from a corner of the casino. It’s hard to put an exact figure on it, but perhaps 3-5% of the overall floor space depending how you measure.

It’s a very important corner of the casino, but not for the reasons it should be. It should be important because it’s the place where food is grown, houses are built, energy for warmth and work is created and so on. But these precious things are taken for granted by the casino managers. They have always had enough chips to buy whatever they need – they issue them for God’s sake – and they think food, shelter and energy will always be available to them. Crucially though, they have also managed to financialise this remaining RE corner, and this ‘support’ is trotted out as a continuing justification for the FE’s central importance .

The RE corner has always included important social and cultural, non-GDP activities. The enormous real value of these activities is now being properly articulated and is spawning citizen-led initiatives (e.g. sharing economy approaches, basic unconditional income) but they are often presented as beggars who annoyingly keep petitioning for their ‘entitlements’ and generally clutter up this remote corner of the casino.

On the finance side, individuals and businesses are exploring ways of funding their future activity without going cap-in-hand to the casino managers. They are exploring peer-to-peer finance, crowdfunding, prepayment instruments and so on. What these initiatives have in common is the disintermediation of the casino. They provide ways for people to invest more directly and take more control over their savings and investments. Of course a new breed of intermediary is surfacing to broker and risk-insure these new models, and these new intermediaries can also be captured.

With transparency and short-circuit communication via social media though, there is definitely scope to do things differently. We must hope for progress because the casino managers have little interest in what’s going on outside.

The Planet – outside the casino

The planet outside is used by the casino in two ways – as a source of materials and as a dumping ground for waste.

The materials are not essential to the core FE which is all about making money out of money and needs nothing but ideas, a few arcane mathematical models to give spurious gravitas, and credulous or naive investors. But RE activity performs a valuable role for the casino managers – it provides them with an endless stream of innovative ways of using chips. The shale gas bonanza for example is apparently grounded in the real world need for energy, and is presented as such. Its significance to the FE is as another bubble based partly at least on land-lease ‘flipping’.

Without an RE-related rationale/narrative, the FE might disappear up its own waste pipe as it re-invested/sliced-and-diced/marketised its own products to itself. So materials from outside the casino are important for the managers’ big corporate proxies in the RE.

FE-favoured RE activities also create lots of waste, some of which is toxic, and may eventually prove terminal, as it builds up. This fact is of little interest to the casino managers. There is a minor interest in waste-related financialised vehicles – carbon markets for example are a relatively new casino game – and in the slight impact on some of the FE’s RE-friends like big energy companies. But mostly the casino managers are too busy with their games and their chips. Occasionally a manager will wake up to the dangers and defect to the real world where they, somewhat perversely, carry more credibility because of their casino experience. A small minority of managers stay within the casino and try to gently modify its behaviour. This is portrayed as a healthy sign of openness; the casino is secure in the knowledge that their ways cannot easily be re-engineered.

Combating the casino’s influence

Essentially there would appear to be three possible lines of response for those who believe there should be more to life than casino capitalism. Marginalise, convert or destroy……

These approaches map on to the three ‘broad strategies of emancipatory transformation’ suggested by sociologist Erik Olin Wright – interstitial, symbiotic and ruptural. I have a fourth suggestion/ variation of which more in a moment.

The challenge for interstitial initiatives is the sheer pervasiveness of the FE. There are few spaces left where the effects of the FE can be ignored. They may not be well understood, but whenever we pursue dreams, they pop up in front of us, usually as obstacles. Developments that are most heavily attacked by the FE establishment perhaps merit the most attention – community scale renewable energy, crypto currencies, co-ops, the sharing economy, and so on. The more these alternative directions are attacked as utopian or uneconomic the more we can be sure they offer promising interstitial opportunities.

Symbiotic opportunities may represent the triumph of hope over experience. Armed with the power of ideas, we back our ability to persuade policy makers and business leaders to change the game. The main challenges here are the arrogance of the powerful and the danger of being captured by supping with the devil. Vested interests generally feel secure enough that they don’t need to negotiate or even to spend brain power on listening and evaluating alternatives. If enough interest is manifested that symbiotic trial projects are begun, their champions can be captured by being made comfortable.

Ruptural alternatives come in a spectrum from those that would destroy business models to those that would destroy societies. They probably share the above analysis but differ in their degree of radicalism and disconnection from the main. The impact of FE-driven globalisation is beyond the scope of this article, save to note that its effects have unnecessarily radicalised whole populations making more measured responses more difficult to promote than they might have been.

The role of the internet and social media in progressing both interstitial and ruptural initiatives is significant. Most of the space to develop and assemble communities of interest and mission-partners is here, explaining why both are likely to experience increasingly determined attempts to capture.

The nature of one’s chosen response will be a matter of personal choice. We should not be judgemental of those who don’t have the will, energy or resourcefulness to play a more active role. We all suffer from our subservience to a dysfunctional system, some much more than others. The fourth response? Perhaps there’s some mileage in judo principles.


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/KhOmwY Tyler Durden

Reason TV Replay: Cops Vs. Cameras – The Killing of Kelly Thomas & The Power of New Media

Last week, a jury
acquitted
two Fullerton police officers accused in the beating
and death of Kelly Thomas, a homeless man with schizophrenia. That
the the jury reached a “not guilty” verdict despite viewing video,
audio, and images of the incident shocked many observers and

sparked protests
in the streets of Fullerton.

Reason and Reason TV have covered developments in the
case for years. Check out Reason TV’s original documentary, “Cops
Vs. Cameras: The Killing of Kelly Thomas & The Power of New
Media,” produced by Paul Detrick and released on September 21,
2011, only months after the beating occurred.

Approximately 8 minutes. The original write-up is below, and
here is all of
Reason‘s past coverage of the Kelly Thomas case.

The autopsy results from the
death of Kelly Thomas
, a schizophrenic drifter who was allegedy
beaten to death by Fullerton, California police will be
announced today by Orange County District Attorney Tony Rackauckas.
Rackauckas will also announce whether he will file charges against
the officers involved in Thomas’ death, following the office’s
investigation. The confrontation with police took place at a
municipal bus station on July 5, with Thomas dying in the hospital
five days later. This press conference comes weeks after the
Fullerton police  refused to answer questions about the
case.

Regardless of today’s announcements, Thomas’ death  is a
case study of how ubiquitous phones with cameras and the Internet
are transferring power from the government, police, and the media
to the masses. Images and word of the beating spread not
because of official communications but by viral cell phone
video of the incident and a
horrific hospital photo
taken by his father of Thomas in a
coma.

We already know how influential citizen video can be from the
1991 Rodney King beating in Los Angeles. Now that practically
everyone has a camera with them on their cell phone or other
device, says Michael German, policy counsel for the American Civil
Liberties Union, it is increasingly difficult for authorities to
dictate the flow of information.

“Technology has changed so much that we now carry cameras and
recorders on our very person everywhere we go so it is very easy to
immediately pull them up and take a video of whatever is
happening,” says German.

That is how the Kelly Thomas video was recorded, but it didn’t
find its way to the nightly news right away like the Rodney King
beating. Ron Thomas, Kelly Thomas’ father, told Reason.tv that
after initial interest, the media stopped covering the story.

“Nothing was going on, I tried contacting everybody, nobody
cared to do anything,” said Ron Thomas. “So, I released the picture
of my son [in his hospital bed] and that got everybody’s
attention. When the cell phone video came out, I released that. The
audio had their attention again. You put together the picture with
the sound of what’s happening is very, very compelling.”

Those images came after the Fullerton police department
decided not to release any information, including the names of the
officers or even whether Kelly Thomas had a Taser applied to him, a
detail that is heard in the video.

Jarrett Lovell, a criminologist at California State University,
Fullerton, says the fact Ron Thomas was able to release information
before the Fullerton police department‘s public information
officer, Sgt. Andrew Goodrich, underscores a shift in power away
from authority to citizens. “That the victim’s father, Ron Thomas,
was able to release public information before the public
information officer from the Fullerton department shows this shift
in political power at the local level from police to the
citizenry,” says Lovell. ”Citizens can be the media
themselves.”

Lovell has written about the role of public information in his
book
Good Cop/Bad Cop: Mass media and the cycle of police
reform
, and points out that the Kelly Thomas case seems to
be a case study for what public information officers and what law
enforcement agencies, “should not do.” He says that because the
Fullerton police department has not gone public with the facts of
the case or released the names of the officers, it looks like they
have something to hide. “Public information is essential to keep
check on government,” says Lovell.

After the photo and video were released, the Fullerton community
reacted in outrage at city council meetings and at protests outside
the Fullerton police department. Whatever charges are filed (or
not) today, the death of Kelly Thomas will remain an example of how
new media is changing the old guard.

Written and produced by Paul Detrick, who also narrates.
Camera by Detrick, Alex Manning, and Zach Weissmueller. Special
thanks to Ron Thomas.

About 8 minutes.

Go to Reason.tv for downloadable
versions of this video. Subscribe to Reason.tv’s YouTube Channel for
automatic updates when new content is posted.

Related videos:

You’re
Killing Me: Was a police-related jailhouse death an accident or a
homicide?
, August 11, 2011

The
Killing of Allen Kephart: How the police lost the trust of a
law-and-order town
, July 5, 2011.

The
Government’s War on Cameras
, May 26, 2011.

View this article.

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/1e2oX1E
via IFTTT

Reason TV Replay: Cops Vs. Cameras – The Killing of Kelly Thomas & The Power of New Media

Last week, a jury
acquitted
two Fullerton police officers accused in the beating
and death of Kelly Thomas, a homeless man with schizophrenia. That
the the jury reached a “not guilty” verdict despite viewing video,
audio, and images of the incident shocked many observers and

sparked protests
in the streets of Fullerton.

Reason and Reason TV have covered developments in the
case for years. Check out Reason TV’s original documentary, “Cops
Vs. Cameras: The Killing of Kelly Thomas & The Power of New
Media,” produced by Paul Detrick and released on September 21,
2011, only months after the beating occurred.

Approximately 8 minutes. The original write-up is below, and
here is all of
Reason‘s past coverage of the Kelly Thomas case.

The autopsy results from the
death of Kelly Thomas
, a schizophrenic drifter who was allegedy
beaten to death by Fullerton, California police will be
announced today by Orange County District Attorney Tony Rackauckas.
Rackauckas will also announce whether he will file charges against
the officers involved in Thomas’ death, following the office’s
investigation. The confrontation with police took place at a
municipal bus station on July 5, with Thomas dying in the hospital
five days later. This press conference comes weeks after the
Fullerton police  refused to answer questions about the
case.

Regardless of today’s announcements, Thomas’ death  is a
case study of how ubiquitous phones with cameras and the Internet
are transferring power from the government, police, and the media
to the masses. Images and word of the beating spread not
because of official communications but by viral cell phone
video of the incident and a
horrific hospital photo
taken by his father of Thomas in a
coma.

We already know how influential citizen video can be from the
1991 Rodney King beating in Los Angeles. Now that practically
everyone has a camera with them on their cell phone or other
device, says Michael German, policy counsel for the American Civil
Liberties Union, it is increasingly difficult for authorities to
dictate the flow of information.

“Technology has changed so much that we now carry cameras and
recorders on our very person everywhere we go so it is very easy to
immediately pull them up and take a video of whatever is
happening,” says German.

That is how the Kelly Thomas video was recorded, but it didn’t
find its way to the nightly news right away like the Rodney King
beating. Ron Thomas, Kelly Thomas’ father, told Reason.tv that
after initial interest, the media stopped covering the story.

“Nothing was going on, I tried contacting everybody, nobody
cared to do anything,” said Ron Thomas. “So, I released the picture
of my son [in his hospital bed] and that got everybody’s
attention. When the cell phone video came out, I released that. The
audio had their attention again. You put together the picture with
the sound of what’s happening is very, very compelling.”

Those images came after the Fullerton police department
decided not to release any information, including the names of the
officers or even whether Kelly Thomas had a Taser applied to him, a
detail that is heard in the video.

Jarrett Lovell, a criminologist at California State University,
Fullerton, says the fact Ron Thomas was able to release information
before the Fullerton police department‘s public information
officer, Sgt. Andrew Goodrich, underscores a shift in power away
from authority to citizens. “That the victim’s father, Ron Thomas,
was able to release public information before the public
information officer from the Fullerton department shows this shift
in political power at the local level from police to the
citizenry,” says Lovell. ”Citizens can be the media
themselves.”

Lovell has written about the role of public information in his
book
Good Cop/Bad Cop: Mass media and the cycle of police
reform
, and points out that the Kelly Thomas case seems to
be a case study for what public information officers and what law
enforcement agencies, “should not do.” He says that because the
Fullerton police department has not gone public with the facts of
the case or released the names of the officers, it looks like they
have something to hide. “Public information is essential to keep
check on government,” says Lovell.

After the photo and video were released, the Fullerton community
reacted in outrage at city council meetings and at protests outside
the Fullerton police department. Whatever charges are filed (or
not) today, the death of Kelly Thomas will remain an example of how
new media is changing the old guard.

Written and produced by Paul Detrick, who also narrates.
Camera by Detrick, Alex Manning, and Zach Weissmueller. Special
thanks to Ron Thomas.

About 8 minutes.

Go to Reason.tv for downloadable
versions of this video. Subscribe to Reason.tv’s YouTube Channel for
automatic updates when new content is posted.

Related videos:

You’re
Killing Me: Was a police-related jailhouse death an accident or a
homicide?
, August 11, 2011

The
Killing of Allen Kephart: How the police lost the trust of a
law-and-order town
, July 5, 2011.

The
Government’s War on Cameras
, May 26, 2011.

View this article.

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/1e2oX1E
via IFTTT

Physical Gold Shortage Goes Mainstream

While the topic of rehypothecation and the shortage of physical gold is well covered here at Zero Hedge (and the ever-changing COMEX gold vaults' inventories), it appears the concept of the exploding "leverage" or default risk of the COMEX has now hit the mainstream media. As BNN reports, veteran trader Tres Knippa, pointing to recent futures data, says "there may not be enough gold to go around if everyone with a futures contract insists on taking delivery of physical bullion." As he goes on to explain to a disquieted anchor, "the underlying story here is that the people acquiring physical gold continue to do that. And that’s what is important," noting large investors like hedge fund manager Kyle Bass are taking delivery of the gold they're buying. Knippa's parting advice, buy physical gold; avoid paper.

 

One of the problems…

That won't end well…

And the excellent summary from a veteran trader:

 

Knippa warns that if 1 entity asks for delivery of a position-limit-size long in gold, it will absorb 81% of COMEX’s inventory… and if 2 entities were to do so… COMEX has a problem…


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/LmGJWe Tyler Durden

The Russia That Putin Does Not Want The West To See – The HIV “Scourge”

As Vladimir Putin proudly shows off his holiday vacation spot – Sochi – to the world and proclaims it clean, safe, and accepting of homosexuals ("just don't tell the kids"); there is a considerably darker side to Russia that he would very much like the outside world not to know about. As Bloomberg reports, hidden from the outside world and abetted by policies that critics say promote infections rather than curbing them, the HIV scourge plaguing Russia is one that even the poorest countries have begun to subdue. With an estimated 2.4 million users of injected drugs and 1.3 million of Putin's countrymen with the life-threatening virus that causes AIDS; among the top 20 global economies, only India, with a population almost nine times bigger than Russia’s 143 million, has more people living with HIV.

 

 

As Bloomberg notes,

At the root of Russia’s woes is an unchecked outbreak among addicts: 21 percent of the world’s HIV-positive injecting-drug users live in the country, compared with 15 percent in the U.S. and 10 percent in China, the UN Office on Drugs and Crime says.

 

Russia’s surging epidemic runs counter to the global trend. Worldwide, annual HIV infections dropped by almost a third to 2.3 million in 2012 from 2002.

 

 

Russia trails in curtailing HIV infections because it forbids or refuses to fund approaches that have worked elsewhere, says Michel Kazatchkine, the UN secretary-general’s special envoy on HIV/AIDS in Eastern Europe and Central Asia.

 

The country bans methadone, a treatment the World Health Organization recommends to curb heroin use and thus prevent infection from contaminated needles, under a 1998 law that prohibits addictive drugs.

 

 

There is a climate of suspicion about everything that comes from the West — and the U.S. particularly,” Kazatchkine says. “I don’t see much progress coming in Russia unless it changes quite radically. It’s so shocking. The nation’s HIV policies result in death and suffering that could be avoided.”

 

 

Instead of funding heroin-substitution and clean-needle programs, Russia is trying to curb HIV with measures designed to fight drug use and addiction.

 

 

Pokrovsky, the Russian AIDS center director, disagrees. He says anti-drug efforts don’t stem HIV… efforts to stop heroin abuse in the 2000s prove his point. A government crackdown pushed addicts onto intoxicants such as krokodil, which users inject more frequently than heroin, increasing infection risks. The concoction is based on the pain reliever codeine mixed with gasoline, iodine, acid and phosphorus, according to the New York State Office of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Services.

 

 

Russia has also stymied international aid groups that fight HIV.

Suddenly, everything was wrong,” recalls Cantau, who says the challenge was ideological, not medical. “Everything that the Global Fund had supported was not good; harm reduction didn’t work. We ran into a closed door.

Putin enraged AIDS and gay-rights activists in June when he signed a law that prohibits distributing to minors “propaganda” on homosexuality. While no more than 2 percent of reported HIV cases in Russia originate from gay sex, the law will make it harder to prevent infections among gay men, Pokrovsky says.

As the following graphic images suggest:

The situation is really serious,” Pokrovsky says softly. “We have no effective prevention measures. We can only expect the most negative scenario.”

 

On the outskirts of Yekaterinburg is a grim illustration of the unchecked consequences of Russia’s AIDS epidemic: a hospital on Kamskaya Street for HIV and TB patients that locals call the Last Way.

 

It doesn’t have this name for nothing,” says Ivan Zhavoronkov, a consultant with local charity Chance Plus. “Every day, someone dies.”

A drug user prepares a batch of krokodil in the Russian city of Yekaterinburg.

Irina Maptynenko, an HIV-positive drug user in Ukraine, shows a wound from injecting krokodil.

Russian youth watch television in a rehabilitation center in Yekaterinburg called City Without Drugs.

Ruslan Rotar became addicted and infected with HIV in Russia. He fled to Ukraine in 2012 to seek treatment

So, while Putin assures the West that Russia is all fresh pow-pow and snow-bunnies… it appears reality is somewhat different.

 

Source: Bloomberg


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1dIZooS Tyler Durden

The Russia That Putin Does Not Want The West To See – The HIV "Scourge"

As Vladimir Putin proudly shows off his holiday vacation spot – Sochi – to the world and proclaims it clean, safe, and accepting of homosexuals ("just don't tell the kids"); there is a considerably darker side to Russia that he would very much like the outside world not to know about. As Bloomberg reports, hidden from the outside world and abetted by policies that critics say promote infections rather than curbing them, the HIV scourge plaguing Russia is one that even the poorest countries have begun to subdue. With an estimated 2.4 million users of injected drugs and 1.3 million of Putin's countrymen with the life-threatening virus that causes AIDS; among the top 20 global economies, only India, with a population almost nine times bigger than Russia’s 143 million, has more people living with HIV.

 

 

As Bloomberg notes,

At the root of Russia’s woes is an unchecked outbreak among addicts: 21 percent of the world’s HIV-positive injecting-drug users live in the country, compared with 15 percent in the U.S. and 10 percent in China, the UN Office on Drugs and Crime says.

 

Russia’s surging epidemic runs counter to the global trend. Worldwide, annual HIV infections dropped by almost a third to 2.3 million in 2012 from 2002.

 

 

Russia trails in curtailing HIV infections because it forbids or refuses to fund approaches that have worked elsewhere, says Michel Kazatchkine, the UN secretary-general’s special envoy on HIV/AIDS in Eastern Europe and Central Asia.

 

The country bans methadone, a treatment the World Health Organization recommends to curb heroin use and thus prevent infection from contaminated needles, under a 1998 law that prohibits addictive drugs.

 

 

There is a climate of suspicion about everything that comes from the West — and the U.S. particularly,” Kazatchkine says. “I don’t see much progress coming in Russia unless it changes quite radically. It’s so shocking. The nation’s HIV policies result in death and suffering that could be avoided.”

 

 

Instead of funding heroin-substitution and clean-needle programs, Russia is trying to curb HIV with measures designed to fight drug use and addiction.

 

 

Pokrovsky, the Russian AIDS center director, disagrees. He says anti-drug efforts don’t stem HIV… efforts to stop heroin abuse in the 2000s prove his point. A government crackdown pushed addicts onto intoxicants such as krokodil, which users inject more frequently than heroin, increasing infection risks. The concoction is based on the pain reliever codeine mixed with gasoline, iodine, acid and phosphorus, according to the New York State Office of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Services.

 

 

Russia has also stymied international aid groups that fight HIV.

Suddenly, everything was wrong,” recalls Cantau, who says the challenge was ideological, not medical. “Everything that the Global Fund had supported was not good; harm reduction didn’t work. We ran into a closed door.

Putin enraged AIDS and gay-rights activists in June when he signed a law that prohibits distributing to minors “propaganda” on homosexuality. While no more than 2 percent of reported HIV cases in Russia originate from gay sex, the law will make it harder to prevent infections among gay men, Pokrovsky says.

As the following graphic images suggest:

The situation is really serious,” Pokrovsky says softly. “We have no effective prevention measures. We can only expect the most negative scenario.”

 

On the outskirts of Yekaterinburg is a grim illustration of the unchecked consequences of Russia’s AIDS epidemic: a hospital on Kamskaya Street for HIV and TB patients that locals call the Last Way.

 

It doesn’t have this name for nothing,” says Ivan Zhavoronkov, a consultant with local charity Chance Plus. “Every day, someone dies.”

A drug user prepares a batch of krokodil in the Russian city of Yekaterinburg.

Irina Maptynenko, an HIV-positive drug user in Ukraine, shows a wound from injecting krokodil.

Russian youth watch television in a rehabilitation center in Yekaterinburg called City Without Drugs.

Ruslan Rotar became addicted and infected with HIV in Russia. He fled to Ukraine in 2012 to seek treatment

So, while Putin assures the West that Russia is all fresh pow-pow and snow-bunnies… it appears reality is somewhat different.

 

Source: Bloomberg


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1dIZooS Tyler Durden

The Junior Banker Survival Cocktail: “Zero Social Life, Coffee, Propranolol And Modafinil”

Most people on Wall Street know all about it: the junior banker hazing ritual. Fresh out of college, pulling all nighters after long hours of starting at an excel screen playing solitaire in the background, writing and re-writing pitch books for the sake of generating work which nobody will read, waiting for senior bankers to get back with their revisions, eating (expensed) meals after midnight, and so on. The justification is well-known: greater money and benefits than anyone can make in any other job. But is the trade off worth it? Increasingly more banks and their executives are asking that question, leading to various banks telling their young bankers to take one, even (gasp) two weekends off per month.

So how are the young bankers themselves seeing these developments? According to a recent FT poll, many are unhappy but there is little they won’t do for the almighty buck.

Bankers say working conditions for young staff have become tougher in recent years as investment banks – suffering from lower profits – have loaded more work on to junior staff.

 

The high workload is illustrated by a poll of more than 550 Financial Times readers working in the financial services sector, aged between 18 and 25. It showed that just over half were working more than 60 hours a week. Nearly one in seven respondents said they were working 90 hours a week or more.

 

Mirroring the tone from the top, just over half of the young employees said the working culture needed to change. But only about 18 per cent of those polled said they had seen any attempts.

 

“There are occasional token comments and emails mentioned, particularly during times of the year when the workload is OK. But when push comes to shove during busy season, it won’t change,” said one UK-based financial services employee.

Of course it won’t: feel overworked? Well the local Starbucks is hiring. At minimum wage – you are lucky to get some benefits. There are 100 other people hungry for your spot. Naturally this means that the whole “we love our junior bankers” campaign was merely a PR stunt aimed at difusing public hostility over yet another aspect of banker folklore.

So how are the young professionals coping with the long hours? Caffeine, alcohol and working out are the most commonly mentioned strategies. Taking naps in the bathroom and suicidal thoughts get a few mentions, as do drugs.

“A cocktail of zero social life, coffee, propranolol (helps with stress and panic attacks) and modafinil (keeps you up all night),” wrote one UK-based banking employee. Another noted that the “emotional stress” had been reduced since “splitting from my partner”.

That’s all good, just don’t overindulge in the cocaine: remember that according to Berlusconi coke was the drug responsible for market volatility. Come to think of it, perhaps the reason there is so little volatility these days is because nobody is doing blow anymore?

The bottom line is that as it was then, so it is now: “Research published this week by High Fliers, which monitors graduate recruitment, found investment banking remains a popular career choice among top graduates. One in eight of those graduating from top universities wanted to go into the sector – a return to pre-recession levels.”

Of course, they do: the voluntary choice of hardship is merely to chase the money, and until the second coming of the Soc Intern has put a maximum wage cap and a millionaire tax in every country crushing all ambitions for greed and, well, ambition, this won’t change. The bigger problem for all young aspiring bankers is whether there is even a capital market left by the time they get to the really big money: at the rate the Fed is going, the far biggest threat to the livelihoods of junior bankers everywhere is not a life of hard work but ubiquitous central planning. Hopefully they, too, understand this.


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1fKlN9z Tyler Durden

The Junior Banker Survival Cocktail: "Zero Social Life, Coffee, Propranolol And Modafinil"

Most people on Wall Street know all about it: the junior banker hazing ritual. Fresh out of college, pulling all nighters after long hours of starting at an excel screen playing solitaire in the background, writing and re-writing pitch books for the sake of generating work which nobody will read, waiting for senior bankers to get back with their revisions, eating (expensed) meals after midnight, and so on. The justification is well-known: greater money and benefits than anyone can make in any other job. But is the trade off worth it? Increasingly more banks and their executives are asking that question, leading to various banks telling their young bankers to take one, even (gasp) two weekends off per month.

So how are the young bankers themselves seeing these developments? According to a recent FT poll, many are unhappy but there is little they won’t do for the almighty buck.

Bankers say working conditions for young staff have become tougher in recent years as investment banks – suffering from lower profits – have loaded more work on to junior staff.

 

The high workload is illustrated by a poll of more than 550 Financial Times readers working in the financial services sector, aged between 18 and 25. It showed that just over half were working more than 60 hours a week. Nearly one in seven respondents said they were working 90 hours a week or more.

 

Mirroring the tone from the top, just over half of the young employees said the working culture needed to change. But only about 18 per cent of those polled said they had seen any attempts.

 

“There are occasional token comments and emails mentioned, particularly during times of the year when the workload is OK. But when push comes to shove during busy season, it won’t change,” said one UK-based financial services employee.

Of course it won’t: feel overworked? Well the local Starbucks is hiring. At minimum wage – you are lucky to get some benefits. There are 100 other people hungry for your spot. Naturally this means that the whole “we love our junior bankers” campaign was merely a PR stunt aimed at difusing public hostility over yet another aspect of banker folklore.

So how are the young professionals coping with the long hours? Caffeine, alcohol and working out are the most commonly mentioned strategies. Taking naps in the bathroom and suicidal thoughts get a few mentions, as do drugs.

“A cocktail of zero social life, coffee, propranolol (helps with stress and panic attacks) and modafinil (keeps you up all night),” wrote one UK-based banking employee. Another noted that the “emotional stress” had been reduced since “splitting from my partner”.

That’s all good, just don’t overindulge in the cocaine: remember that according to Berlusconi coke was the drug responsible for market volatility. Come to think of it, perhaps the reason there is so little volatility these days is because nobody is doing blow anymore?

The bottom line is that as it was then, so it is now: “Research published this week by High Fliers, which monitors graduate recruitment, found investment banking remains a popular career choice among top graduates. One in eight of those graduating from top universities wanted to go into the sector – a return to pre-recession levels.”

Of course, they do: the voluntary choice of hardship is merely to chase the money, and until the second coming of the Soc Intern has put a maximum wage cap and a millionaire tax in every country crushing all ambitions for greed and, well, ambition, this won’t change. The bigger problem for all young aspiring bankers is whether there is even a capital market left by the time they get to the really big money: at the rate the Fed is going, the far biggest threat to the livelihoods of junior bankers everywhere is not a life of hard work but ubiquitous central planning. Hopefully they, too, understand this.


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1fKlN9z Tyler Durden

Straight-A Student Reportedly Suffered Ruptured Testicle After Philly Pat Down: Police Commissioner Says He Wants to Know What Happened, Student Charged With Multiple Misdemeanor Counts

dead giveawayPhiladelphia police commissioner Charles
Ramsey, who
we learned last week
is paid a whopping $261,375, apparently
more than the city charter allows and possibly as a result of
prohibited double-dipping, held a press conference yesterday to
make sure Philadelphia residents knew he was concerned about a
police pat-down earlier this month that reportedly led to a
straight-A high school student suffering a ruptured testicle. But,
says Ramsey, he doesn’t know what happened because the student and
his family haven’t filed a formal complaint.
Via CBS Philly:

“We want to know what happened,” Ramsey said
today.  “This is a young man with no history in terms of
negative contact with the law.  My understanding is he is a
good student.  I don’t know what took place, and I’m not in a
position to say at this point in time because I don’t have all the
facts.”

Ramsey showed reporters video of the incident from a police
camera.  But the coverage is intermittent because the camera
had been set to automatically pan back and forth across the
intersection every ten seconds.

From what was shown, it looked like a routine patdown and struggle
between a pair of officers and a young man.

According to a report from
Philly.com
the incident began when a police officer approached
the student, Darrin Manning, and his classmates. The officer claims
the students were covering their faces with ski masks and running.
The students deny wearing ski masks, but were given scarves by one
of their teachers. Manning admits one of his classmates might have
said something smart to the police officer once he saw them. He is
now charged with multiple misdemeanor counts, including one for
resisting arrest. Police have tried to talk to Manning and his
mother, who have both talked to the media, about the incident, but
their lawyer has advised them not to speak unless charges are
dropped.

Last year,
Ramsey invited
the Department of Justice to review his
department’s use of deadly force. That report is still
forthcoming.

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/1bhf9Up
via IFTTT