Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Canada Sucking Fiscal Wind Too...................


Canada Swings from Budget Surplus to Deficit Amid Crisis
By Eric Roseman
Just twelve months ago, Canada was basking amid a commodity boom accompanied by a bull market in the Canadian dollar, which actually surpassed par-value against the American dollar in late 2007.
But in the span of just six months, the Canadian economy has come unglued in a bad way. Exports are plunging, manufacturing is sliding deeper into recession and commodity prices are collapsing. The Canadian dollar, which hit a 7% premium above the U.S. dollar in late 2007 at C$0.93 cents, tanked more than 20% in 2008.
Canada, which was mired in a string of deficits starting in 1975 finally cleaned house under former finance minister and prime minister, Paul Martin. By 1995, Martin took Canada into budget surplus.
Canada, however, ranks among those countries in the G-7 with the highest ratio of total bank deposits to liabilities, according to Credit Suisse. Only Japanese banks have a higher ratio. At 70%, that figure is high and exceeds the United States and Europe, excluding the UK, by more than 20%.
Unlike the United States and other European banks, Canadian financial institutions didn't go whole-hog on mortgage derivatives or subprime loans over the last several years. In Canada, a prospective homeowner actually needs a job to support his mortgage payments and must typically put down a 25% deposit - not exactly the keen requirement in the United States before the subprime crisis surfaced in 2007.
Canadian banks, however, did suffer large losses on asset-backed commercial paper starting in late 2007 with a few hundred billion dollars written off bank balance sheets.
Still, despite harboring one of the lowest leveraged economies in the industrialized world, Canada is highly reliant on Asian demand for its raw materials and, of course, U.S. consumption, which is responsible for more than 85% of Canadian exports.
Canada is now in a recession. Economic growth has stalled, the loonie has declined by a third since its peak and exports climbed only 3% in November compared to a year ago.
After reveling in a string of impressive budget surpluses for more than a decade, the Harper Conservative government announced its 2009 budget yesterday - sinking Canada into its first deficit hole in more than ten years as a result of rapidly declining economic growth, rising unemployment and a housing boom gone bust.
Canadian finance minister, Jim Flaherty, announced a series of big spending initiatives to spur the economy. Canada will spend C$165 billion dollars (US$135 billion) on infrastructure projects across the country, tax breaks for companies and individuals while extending unemployment insurance for the more than 2.3 million workers now out of a job.
Canada is entering a recession with the best relative balance sheet among the world's largest economies. Despite Ottawa's first budget deficit in more than ten years, the banking system remains relatively strong with none of its major six banks requiring government support or bailouts - at least not yet.
If this economic downturn persists beyond 2010 and commodities don't recover, Canada will probably head back into the economic abyss circa 1970s. China is a major consumer of her raw materials along with the United States and both economies don't look set to rebound until 2010 at the earliest. That spells more trouble for Canada and, possibly, a banking crisis that has yet to hit her financial markets.

Ruining America One Day At A Time


Six Ways To Ruin America, How We're Moving Down That Road
By Herb Denenberg, The Bulletin
Published: Tuesday, January 27, 2009
The book How to Ruin the United States of America by Ben Stein and Phil DeMuth is right on target and I’d only suggest one change. The title of the book should be How We Are Ruining the United States of America, as that is exactly what is happening. The authors make the case that six things would ruin the United States, as we know it:
1. Exile God from public life.
2. Teach Americans contempt for America.
3. Debase American culture.
4. Weaken the United States military.
5. Be a country without borders.6. Practice voodoo economics.That’s exactly what we’re doing and that’s exactly why we better reverse course immediately, as we’re deep into this process.Exile God From Public LifeThe authors show how God was central to those who first settled America after coming from Europe and how God was a central construct of their governmental philosophy up to and including the United States constitution.Consider the mission statement “Instructions for the Virginia Colonies” dated 1606: “Lastly and chiefly the way to prosper and achieve good success is to make yourselves all of one mind for the good of your country and your own, and to serve and fear God the giver of all Goodness, for every plantation which our heavenly Father hath not planted shall be rooted out.”The same threat is woven through the “Mayflower Compact” of 1620, a colony established for the “glory of God.”The authors of this book observe, “The centrality of God to their purpose in America should not be surprising, since securing the freedom to worship as they saw fit was the major motivation behind their journey.”The presence of God is clearly evident in the Declaration of Independence, where God, according to the authors, is explicitly referenced as “Lawgiver, Creator and Judge, as well as Divine Providence. The equality of Americans is derived from the equality of all people before the Lord. Freedom to choose one’s own leaders (democracy) is explicitly commended in the Hebrew Bible, and implicit in the free will that God gave to humanity.”Prayer and God were central to the deliberations leading to the Constitution and in the Constitution itself. At the Constitutional Convention, Benjamin Franklin issued a reprimand to that body for not turning to prayer for guidance.He said, “…[H]ow does it happen, Sir, that we have not hitherto once thought of humbly applying to the Father of lights to illuminate our understandings?... Do we imagine that we no longer need his assistance?”The first Continental Congress opened with two hours of prayer on Oct. 14, 1774 and the Supreme Court’s first session started with a four-hour communion service. George Washington’s Thanksgiving Proclamation of Oct. 3, 1789, captures the flavor of the times. This is the opening of that proclamation:“Whereas it is the duty of all nations to acknowledge the Providence of Almighty God — to obey his will — to be grateful for His benefits — and humbly to implore His protection and flavor …”The history of America shows the Founders intended no high wall between church and state. The phrase about that separation does not occur in the Constitution. In fact one day after Congress passed the First Amendment calling for freedom of religion, it declared a national day of prayer.The Founders, by the language of the first amendment, wanted to ban any national religion. The authors write, “Our founders were concerned with protecting the church from the state — with gaining freedom for religion, not freedom from religion, as it were.”The famous phrase, “a wall of separation between church and state,” appears in only one of Thomas Jefferson’s letters, to a group of Baptists explaining why he did not issue a Thanksgiving Proclamation, as did Washington and Adams. This one phrase, lifted from the 18,000 letters Jefferson wrote, is the basis of the claims made to drive religion from the public square. His collected works span 30 volumes. If this separation of church and state were such an important idea, it surely would have received more attention. And one phrase of one letter dashed off to answer a complaint should not overrule our entire history leading up to the Constitution and the clear language of the Constitution itself.Nonetheless, that one little phrase in one letter has been used to drive God from the public square. This has led to forbidding prayer, or even a moment of silence, in classrooms. Clergy cannot deliver invocations at schools. And more recently there is a campaign to remove “In God We Trust” from our currency and “under God” from the Pledge of Allegiance. All this is based on courts legislating from the bench instead of interpreting the Constitution and on the resulting courts’ power grab from the states.The role of religion in keeping nations and individuals in the right track is crucial, and when religion disappears or is depreciated, bad things happen. The authors put it this way:“Now the spectacular trajectory of America through history, which shoots across the firmament like a bright meteorite, goes forward with the explicit connection of God and country severed. There’s no more allegiance to God, to ethics, or to anything outside of ourselves. This is a recipe for a return to the Hobbesian jungle — for more chaos, violence and unbridled avarice. In other words, for exactly what we find today.”Teach Americans Contempt For AmericaThis column has often written about the hate-America crews found in the mainstream media and in our colleges and universities. And that’s exactly what the authors focus on. They also elaborate on the disastrous and destructive consequences of having so many Americans who hate America.A Marxist theoretician, Antonio Gramsci, understood that the Communist revolution had failed to spread across Europe. He thought for it to succeed, it would be necessary to capture the institutions of its cultural hegemony. By a stroke of good fortune, an educated class sprang up to do just that. It came from the media and the academe. The authors write:“… the ideas of atheism, exploitation, oppression, racism, sexism, homophobia, and fascism could be promoted until the culture lost its self-confidence and collapsed from within. While at first it might seem odd that people would want to destroy the same society that brought them such education, prosperity, freedom, and leisure, this is exactly what happened.”The media and the institutions of higher learning have become the promoters of anti-Americanism. It’s hard to explain this but it happened. Perhaps its because both groups are dominated by liberals, by Democrats and by leftists who are the ones who took up the hate America course. The authors go into the more fundamental causes. I prefer to attribute this anti-Americanism to the mental disease called liberalism.This development is closely related to another — the failure to teach and communicate the greatness of America in the history being taught to younger generations as they come along. America’s greatness and its Constitution were founded by brilliant men who had an understanding of the historical experience of man and what was necessary to create an institution that could assure life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.The foundation of our government and its perpetuation depend on a continuation of this historical understanding. But we find this history is no longer taught in any sensible way. If Americans no longer understand what a gem they have in our Constitution and our way of life, they will no longer have the dedication and willingness to fight and sacrifice to preserve what they have.The authors make their point by outlining what history was taught in 1908 and what is taught now. In 1908, students had to master an incredible array of historical subjects. That is compared to what is taught at Brown University, an elite Ivy League School said to be on the cutting edge, now. It lists 18 courses in gender and sexuality studies and no fewer than 90 courses in African studies. Almost all the other courses on American history focus primarily on slavery and sexuality.The bottom line is that their courses on American history teach a highly limited, highly negative and highly distorted picture, which would omit all of the most important aspects of our history. Instead of teaching the true history of this great nation, our schools are teaching what I would describe as somewhere between nonsense, gobbledygook and the irrelevant.The authors think that colleges and universities went off the track during the Vietnam War when they were transformed from ivied tower institutions into catalysts for social change: “This meant discarding the old notion of the university as a haven for the disinterested pursuit of knowledge, and substituting a passionate political agenda of their own choosing …”What they’re teaching now doesn’t even rise to the level of intellectual garbage. Two examples can make the point, as stated by the authors:“According to Professors Barash and Webel (authors of Peace and Conflict Studies, an $87.95 textbook used in more than 250 Peace Studies programs), the American founding fathers were terrorists, while the terrorists in Iraq are patriots.”“At the University of California-Davis, a professor told the class that the number one terrorist in the Middle East was Jesus Christ.”Do you need more proof that liberalism is a mental disorder?The authors conclude this indictment of higher education in America with this sentence:“We are still the shining ‘city upon a hill’ (as early Ronald Reagan speechwriter John Winthrop penned in 1630), a great country in its great days – but for how long? Not long if too many academics have their way.”Debase American CultureThe only good news in this department is that at least most Americans are aware of what is happening. A 2007 Gallup Poll asked Americans if “the state of moral values in the country is getting better or worse?” Eight-two percent answered worse.Another Gallup question was “how would you rate the state of moral values in the country today — as excellent, good, only fair, or poor?” Only 1 percent said excellent. Sixteen percent said good. Thirty-nine percent said only fair. And forty-four percent said poor.The authors gauge the decline of popular culture in various ways. One of the most interesting ways was comparing Pulitzer Prizes for literature in two periods:Back then:
• 1940: “The Grapes of Wrath”• 1944: “Oklahoma!”• 1947: “All the King’s Men”• 1948: “A Streetcar Named Desire”• 1949: “Death of a Salesman”• 1950: “South Pacific”• 1952: “The Caine Mutiny”• 1953: “The Old Man and the Sea”• 1955: “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof”More Recently:• 1999: “The Hours”• 2000: “Interpreter of Maladies”• 2001: “The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay”• 2002: “Empire Falls”• 2003: “Middlesex”• 2004: “The Known World”• 2005: “Gilead”• 2006: “March”• 2007: “The Road”The authors do the same for Pulitzers:Back then: Hermann Hesse, Andre Gide, T.S. Elliot, William Faulkner and Bertrand Russell.And now: Imre Kertesz, J.M Coetzee, Elfriede Jelinek, Harold Pinter and Orhan Pamuk.The authors give other examples and then draw this conclusion: “What’s completely inescapable is the stunning fall in quality and what might be called a generalized hatred of America.”And this is followed by a compelling observation: Hollywood has made many movies about the evils of the Nazis and the atrocities of the Japanese during World War II. But Hollywood is yet to come out with movies about the evils and atrocities of Soviet Communism. And there are no movies about the incredible evils of the Islamofascists, even as we’re at war with them. Hollywood finds endless evil in America but had trouble in finding it in Joseph Stalin’s Soviet Union or the present day lands of Islamofascists.And then there’s television, which has been inflicting catastrophic damage on our culture, and it continues to get worse. The Parents Television Council found television is getting more violent over time and that violence is increasingly of a sexual nature. Violence is more common in children’s than in adult’s television: six incidents of violence per hour compared to 4.41 for adults.Add to that the fact that virtually every study of the subject finds that television violence correlates with an increase of aggressive behavior in children. And if you want one more statistic to gag on consider this one: Deborah A Fisher, Ph.D., of the Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation, estimates that children are typically exposed to 1,000 television murders, rapes and assaults a year. Can we assume that these most impressionable little creatures aren’t impressed by that?There’s more and it gets worse. A study sponsored by the Culture and Media Institute found a correlation between high television viewing and lax morals. For example, the study found that people who watch four or more hours of television daily are less committed to honesty and charity and are more permissive about sex and abortion.Music provides an even more compelling example. Remember the songs of the 1940s:• “You Made Me Love You”• “When You Wish Upon a Star”• “White Christmas”• “Some Enchanted Evening”The list of great songs is almost endless.Compare that with rap music today and its endless flow of the n-word, the f-word, other profanity of all kinds, violence, misogyny and perversion.This all adds up and it’s easy to imagine that the final sum is bad news. The authors say a sampling of popular culture teaches the following:• The sociopath is a hero.• Saving and thrift are contemptible.• Family life is for squares.• The other guy is always to blame for everything.• Hard work is for suckers.• Self-discipline and mastery of any field or skill can be achieved through fantasy instead of hard work.This adds up to America the Beautiful being forgotten and that adds up to the possibility of losing America.The authors write: “With the eradication of history and its replacement with America-bashing, sloganeering, elementary truths once taken for granted throughout our society are perilously close to being forgotten. This weakens all the things that made America great and at the same time it makes us vulnerable to our enemies.”So the authors have an interesting observation about their most urgent concerns: “We aren’t worried about America’s financial capital. There’s plenty of money and plenty of trinkets. We are worried about our moral capital. It’s as if it has been loaded onto ships and is sailing out of sight. When it is gone, what will we do?”I’d add one more worry. The authors better start worrying about the money and the trinkets. Without America’s values and institutions that are our glory, we will not be able to continue to be the most productive, innovative and successful society in the history of the world.The three other ways to ruin America are brilliantly presented in three more chapters. But in my view, they require less amplification and explanation than the first three I’ve discussed. The other three ways to ruin America are to weaken the United States military, be a country without borders, and practice voodoo economics.We face external threats to our security from Islamofascism and the Axis of Evil. But a wise man pointed out that if we lose America, it will come from within, from those who inspire a culture in our own citizens that hates America, from those who create a culture devoid of values and finally from a culture that abandons the great rudder that helps keep a society moving in the right direction, religion.America seems to be going in the wrong direction, and we better start rising to the occasion and doing our duties as citizens if we want to keep living in this shining city on a hill.

The fox and the henhouse


The Flawed Liberal Mind


Liberals are liberals first
Posted: January 28, 20091:00 am Eastern© 2009
Pick the target, freeze it, personalize it and polarize it.
~ Saul Alinsky, "Rules for Radicals," No. 13
We have all heard about how crazy liberals are. Conservative intellectual and radio host Michael Savage even wrote a book about this phenomenon, his 2005 New York Times best-seller, "Liberalism is a Mental Disorder." Likewise, in 2008, Dr. Lyle H. Rossiter Jr., M.D., wrote in his best-seller, "The Liberal Mind: The Psychological Causes of Political Madness," the following:
The roots of liberalism – and its associated madness – can be clearly identified by understanding how children develop from infancy to adulthood and how distorted development produces the irrational beliefs of the liberal mind.
Liberals are liberals first. Am I being polemical? Yes, to a degree, but I am not being personal. I'm not contending that all liberals are crazy, but I will say, along with Dr. Savage and Dr. Rossiter, that a logical, legal and medical case can be made that liberalism (i.e., socialism, progressivism, egalitarianism) is not a rational political belief system.
On this point, last Friday, President Obama chided Republican leaders for being stupid enough to listen to conservative stalwart Rush Limbaugh. Obama said, "You can't just listen to Rush Limbaugh and get things done." With a hushed silence over the room, the messiah went further saying, "If we don't get this done we (the Democrats) could lose seats and I could lose re-election. But we can't let people like Rush Limbaugh stall this. That's how things don't get done in this town."
Rush was clicking on all cylinders over the weekend when he remarked about Obama's criticism of him in this manner:
Obama's plan would buy votes for the Democrat Party in the same way FDR's New Deal established majority power for 50 years of Democrat rule, and it would also simultaneously seriously damage any hope of future tax cuts. … Put simply, I believe [economic] stimulus is aimed at re-establishing "eternal" power for the Democrat Party rather than stimulating the economy, because anyone with a brain knows this is NOT how you stimulate the economy.

When President Obama promised America "FDR, part II," few of the political pundits took notice because ideologically they are elitists, liberals and socialists like Obama. The propaganda press, the professors of the academy, judges, the Democrats and most Republicans all have fallen prey to the siren song of socialism and leviathan government taking over more and more of private enterprise. Wall Street, the investment banks, Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, the home mortgage industry, the auto industry, states like California, Arizona and Michigan on the verge of bankruptcy, even the porn industry, is just the beginning. They all want "bailouts" i.e., "welfare," i.e., unearned, undeserved, unconstitutional confiscation of money belonging to "We the People" and given to others who didn't earn it and don't deserve it to secure Democrat Party votes in perpetuity. It's legalized thievery. It is Mafia tactics on a grand scale.
What the GOP seems oblivious to knowing and what I am trying to teach my students at Savannah State University is politics through a historical lens. That means we study politics (or any other subject for that matter) through the lens and judgment of history and through the non-partisan philosophy of Veritas – truth. All else is irrelevant propaganda.
That said, history has definitively demonstrated that since President Theodore Roosevelt, liberals (or "progressives," which was what socialists and liberals were called 100 years ago) made policy proposals not with the intent of solving real social, economic, education, legal, race, class, gender problems, but to solidify their power over the people forever. Just look at some of the political philosophy, policy and legislation passed by presidential executive order or by illegal collusion with Congress over the past 100 years:

~Theodore Roosevelt (1901-09) – the first true "progressive" president, though a Republican, invented the "imperial presidency" and used the "bully pulpit" and his "Fair Deal" policies to concoct all sorts of policies and programs that had no correlation with free-market capitalism (i.e., "trust busting") or respect for private property. (Roosevelt set aside more land for national parks and nature preserves than all of his predecessors combined, 194 million acres.)
Woodrow Wilson (1913-21) – Jonah Goldberg, in his important book, "Liberal Fascism," quoted this president: "True leaders" uses the masses like "tools"; "All progressives ask or desire is permission – in an era when 'development,' 'evolution,' is the scientific word – to interpret the Constitution according to the Darwinian principle."

~Franklin Delano Roosevelt [FDR] (1933-45) – Used the stock market crash of October 1929 and the Great Depression as a pretext to enact his "New Deal" to grow the government in gargantuan proportions over the people and to use the socialist welfare state as the "power to wage a war against the emergency, as great as the power that would be given to me if we were in fact invaded by a foreign foe. …"

~Lyndon B. Johnson [LBJ] (1963-69) – "The Great Society" or "War against Poverty" programs including AFDC, Food Stamp Act, Medicare, Medicaid; greatly expanded FDR's welfare state to connect every conceivable aspect of the American citizen to the tentacles of leviathan government. (Remember LBJ was a protégé of FDR.)

~Richard Nixon (1969-74) – Although a "Republican," Nixon gave America socialist wage and price controls, the Environmental Protection Agency and affirmative action. He also gave us two unremarkable liberal justices on the Supreme Court: Chief Justice Warren Burger and Harry Blackmun. Blackmun authored the Roe v. Wade decision in 1972, arguably (after Dred Scott v. Sanford [1854] upholding slavery) the most murderous, infamous decision in the history of American constitutional law.

~George W. Bush (2001-09) – singlehandedly deconstructed the Reagan Revolution by his bungling, incoherent, incompetent domestic policies (amnesty for illegal aliens, No Child Left Behind), foreign policy (the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan) and reinstituting a Bob Michaelesque GOP irrelevance that will probably mimic the wilderness years of 1954-94.

~Barack Obama (2009- ) – His first call as president was to Mahmoud Abbas, Yasser Arafat's protégé and the leader of the "former" Palestinian terrorist group Fatah. His first public interview as president was with the Dubai-based Al-Arabiya. Obama's first executive order was to limit lobbyist influence in Washington, D.C., while at the same time granting Deputy Secretary of Defense William Lynn an exemption because Lynn was a lobbyist for the defense contractor Raytheon. Other early policies that seem critical to Obama's legacy and the Democrat majority in Congress can be summarized in three words – abortion, abortion and abortion.

Rush Limbaugh was right – "liberals are liberals first." Liberal Democrats create policies not to solve problems, but to win elections and make more and more people dependent on the government welfare programs they provide. Since FDR, liberals have used every Machiavellian tactic to create a Leninist groupthink mentality; a slavish and addictive dependence on government that Democrats hope will keep them in power in perpetuity. This is what Rush meant he said, "Obama's plan would buy votes for the Democrat Party in the same way FDR's New Deal established majority power for 50 years of Democrat rule."
When I see the GOP sitting politely with President Obama before the cameras – neutered, compliant and irrelevant – I start shouting at my TV set: "WHERE ARE THE REAL MEN IN THE GOP!?" Then Rush helped me to remember: Don't think Obama, think Saul Alinsky, Obama's community organizer mentor, who said in Rule 13 of Alinsky's "Rules for Radicals" – "Pick the target [Rush Limbaugh, the conservative base], freeze it, personalize it and polarize it." This is what President Obama masterfully executed at last Friday's press conference with the GOP.
Why don't the Republicans understand that they are playing checkers while Obama and the Democrats are playing chess? The GOP is trying to win an election in the next two years, and the Democrats are using Machiavellian tactics to win elections for the next 40 years. Perhaps that's why the GOP doesn't stand for the "Grand Old Party" anymore. The more appropriate acronym is "GIP" … the "Grand Irrelevant Party."

Figures, Republicans Embarrass A Conservative



Republicans chew on DeMint

By: Manu Raju

January 27, 2009 09:13 AM EST
Just after November’s election, Republican senators huddled in a closed-door meeting to consider a package of rules that would have tossed Ted Stevens out of their conference, imposed term limits on party leaders and otherwise changed the way the Senate Republican Conference does business. South Carolina Sen. Jim DeMint, who proposed the rules, saw quickly that they weren’t going to be popular with his colleagues. So one of his staffers urged him to withdraw the proposal setting term limits on the GOP leader, and DeMint hoped the others would remain packaged together so they could be considered in a single vote. But Conference Chairman Lamar Alexander of Tennessee took issue with the staffer and quickly called a vote on the term-limit proposal before DeMint decided to withdraw it. Then party leaders proceeded to call up each of DeMint’s other proposals separately, creating a long series of votes that DeMint lost badly. “No doubt,” DeMint said, Republican leaders were “trying to humiliate” him. But some Senate Republicans say privately that DeMint has done plenty to humiliate himself. As Republicans seek a way forward after two disastrous elections, social and fiscal conservative activists off Capitol Hill are rallying behind DeMint because of his unrelenting style to force his party to return to its small-government, free market roots. DeMint, 57, said in an interview that he’s not dwelling on his previous battles with the GOP leadership and sees areas where his party’s leaders and the Obama administration can work together to solve the country’s problems. But DeMint is less willing to compromise with Democrats than many in his party, and some Senate Republicans doubt his fiery tactics can lead their party out of the political wilderness when the public is seeking an end to legislative gridlock. DeMint’s critics, including senior Republican senators and top aides in the Senate, say his refusal to work within the norms of the body — by showing deference to party leaders and chairmen and building support behind closed doors without airing concerns first to the news media — undermines his ability to draw support for his cause.

say privately that while they believe he is fighting for a worthy cause, the drama he creates between GOP leaders and himself is designed to project his image as an unyielding reformer — even though he agrees with his leaders on most issues. Asked in early December for his thoughts on DeMint, Sen. Bob Bennett of Utah — a close adviser to Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky — said: “I have no comment. That should be a comment in and of itself.” After learning of the Utah Republican’s comments, DeMint said that Bennett is “a good guy, but I think sometimes he’s part of the problem.” DeMint, up for reelection in 2010, is genial by nature and says he tried to work within the Capitol’s seniority system during his three terms in the House and his first two years in the Senate. But he has learned, he said, that lawmakers in both parties “only respond to pain.” “They don’t respond to good policy, persuasion, being nice. I’ve tried it all,” he said. “There’s nobody nicer than I am.” In a chamber where relationship building is seen as paramount to legislative successes, DeMint said that “club friendships [have become] more important than the party and where we’re going as a country.” DeMint has also tried to build support from within the party, as chairman of the Senate’s conservative Steering Committee, which holds weekly lunches. DeMint, however, says his approach to build pressure off Capitol Hill is most effective. He claims credit for drumming up grass-roots anger through blogs and radio talk shows that led to Barack Obama’s support for a one-year ban on earmarks, the defeat of the immigration bill in 2007 and GOP leaders’ rejection of the auto bailout last month. And he plans to take the same approach to derail the proposed economic stimulus package. But GOP leaders don’t always respond well to DeMint’s sometimes uncompromising tactics. For instance, members in both parties criticized DeMint last summer for forcing a Friday vote on a Global AIDS bill and then a Saturday vote on a housing rescue bill after Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) would not allow his amendments to come forward for a vote. Adding to frustration from his party, DeMint insisted on his amendments even though they were likely to fail, and he missed the Friday vote because of a family wedding he had to attend.

DeMint recognizes that his style may cost him the support of leadership when it comes to some things he wants — such as a seat on the powerful Senate Finance Committee. Nowhere was the tension between DeMint and the leadership clearer, however, than at the Nov. 18 Republican Conference meeting in the Capitol’s Mansfield Room. According to people who attended the meeting, Sen. John Ensign (R-Nev.) argued that the adoption of term limits for leadership could be perceived as an attack on McConnell, even though the rules would have taken effect after McConnell’s tenure as minority leader ended. The argument caused DeMint to reconsider the motion. But when one of DeMint’s staffers stood up to remind his boss he had the right to withdraw it, Alexander took strong exception, scolding the aide because only senators are typically allowed to address such meetings. Alexander then called for a vote before DeMint withdrew the motion — and Republican senators overwhelmingly crushed his proposal. DeMint says that he wanted senators to be able to vote for eight other motions at once, so the vote could be concluded quickly. (He previously withdrew the motion to kick Stevens out of the conference until after the Alaskan’s reelection race was called, promising a vote at another meeting later that week — but that never occurred.) By holding the votes one by one, DeMint said, party leaders were sending him a message about how little support he had within the conference. “It’s part of the whole display [to say], ‘Here’s what happens, guys, if you buck the tide,’” DeMint said. “It’s the milieu, it’s the Senate, and we don’t do that.” GOP leadership aides said the votes were spread out so each motion could be considered on its own merits, including one that was actually adopted: to require that all internal secret ballot elections be conducted by the party’s secretary. “Discussion time had been requested for each proposal, so there was going to be a significant period of debate regardless of the vote process,” one GOP leadership aide said. A senior GOP aide rejected DeMint’s contention that it was the leadership who tried to embarrass him. The aide said that while the senator has “certainly contributed to leadership policy positions, the rejection of an amendment to the rules was a rejection by the caucus as a whole, not by any faction — leadership or otherwise.” Yet Florida Sen. Mel Martinez told Politico at the time of the meeting the session had been “terrible” and “caused consternation” within the conference. DeMint says he’s sympathetic to McConnell, who has to reconcile views of a diverse caucus, and he says that on most issues, the GOP leaders “actually appreciate somebody going out there ... and loosening the ground up, where they can’t necessarily go in the beginning.” Indeed, Alexander says that his relationship with DeMint is “terrific.” He’s hosted DeMint and his wife at his home in Knoxville, Tenn., and has given him a spot on the conference’s advisory board. Alexander declined to comment on the Nov. 18 conference deliberations, saying such meetings are intended to be private. Don Stewart, a McConnell spokesman, called DeMint a “valuable member of our conference and among the strongest advocates for the American taxpayer.” And DeMint’s home-state colleague, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) praised DeMint for fighting for what he believes — even though the two backed different Republican presidential candidates and Graham backed an immigration plan that DeMint derided as “amnesty” for lawbreakers. “People that I’ve even been at odds with — I didn’t think they’d speak to me again,” DeMint said. Singling out former GOP Sens. Pete V. Domenici of New Mexico and John Warner of Virginia, DeMint said that “a lot of them will whisper in my ear: ‘Keep fighting.’”

"Already In A Depression........" Funny, Sound Of Cannons Has Been Saying That For Over A Year..........


Merrill Lynch’s Chief Economist: We’re Already In a Depression
George Washington’s Blog Wednesday, Jan 28, 2009
Merrill Lynch’s chief economist for North America, David Rosenberg, writes in an economic commentary entitled “Some Inconvenient Truths” that we are probably already in a depression:
We are likely enduring a depression today
As for depressions, there is no official definition, except to say that they have existed in the past. There were no fewer than four in the nineteenth century, one in the twentieth century, and we are very likely enduring another one today.
As I have previously written, just like it took many months for the officials and talking heads to admit that we were in a recession - and in fact had been for a long time - it will take a while before the government admits that we are already in a depression.

No Where To Run, No Where To Hide.............



Stocks Could Drop 20%, No Safe Haven: Dr. Doom

US and global stocks are still likely to fall because the corporate and economic news will be worse than expected, Nouriel Roubini, RGE Monitor Chairman, told CNBC.

Investors will be hit by the realization that many banks are bankrupt, that companies will have to rein in debt and sell assets and that emerging markets may get into trouble, Roubini said.
"I think that there's a 20 percent downside risk to US and global equities," Roubini told "Squawk Box Europe."

The transmission mechanism oiling the wheels of the banking system is broken, he said, adding that "banks are getting the money and they are hoarding it, they're not lending it," because they expect higher losses.
There is no safe haven from the crisis as all countries are affected, and the collapse in aggregate demand may bring about prolonged deflation, Roubini added.
"We have to worry today about not ending up like Japan. That's the risk for the global economy," he said.
The rise in the price of gold is a signal of fear that countries and corporations may default on debt rather than of worries about future inflation, and the precious metal is used as a "safety valve."
Falling stock prices and very low bond yields are signaling depression, while credit spreads are still very wide, indicating fear of defaults, according to Roubini. And even the fast-growing Asian economies aren't spared.
"If you look at the data in emerging markets and around Asia, East Asia, there is a hard landing," he said. "All the numbers out of China suggest… the manufacturing sector is already in a recession."
Protectionism is the next danger, as history shows that it prolonged the 1930s depression, he said, regarding remarks by U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner that China was "manipulating" its currency to help its exports.
"Certainly starting a war with China on the issue of the currency is very, very dangerous," he said. "The US is relying on the kindness of strangers -- Russia, China, the Gulf States … to finance a huge, and growing, twin current account and fiscal deficit," Roubini said.
"If China were to pull the plug on financing the US dollar, then we'd have a freefall of the dollar," he added.

Itemization Of The Stimulus Rip-Off


Here is where the 825 Billion is going!
The Coming Depression Wednesday, Jan 28, 2009
• The non-job creating spending in this bill includes:
a) $50 million for the National Endowment for the Arts. ( will this create 1 job?)

b) $400 million to study climate change. ( What’s there to study? Its a climate change!)

c) $200 million to revitalize the National Mall, including planting new sod.( BULLDOZE IT DOWN around $10,000 +removal!)

d) $1.1 billion to allow the Secretary of Health and Human Services to establish a permanent board to ration health care services, a precursor to universal health care. (A Billion dollar BOARD OF HEALTH? Enough for FREE HEALTH CARE for a YEAR!)

e) Hundreds of millions of dollars for contraceptives and family planning services through Medicaid.

f) $650 million dollars for additional digital TV converter box coupons. ( turn the TV off and get to basics, IDIOTS!)

g) $166 billion in direct aid to help states pay their bills. ( Due to illegal immigrants)

h) $13 billion for reading programs.

i) $15.6 billion to increase the maximum annual Pell grant (for college students) by $500 from $4,360 to $4,860.

j) $3 billion to public health departments for additional immunizations. ( immunize yourself from a DUMB Gov’t)

k) $1 billion in additional funding to pay heating bills of low-income Americans. ( Give them a JOB, clean the streets ANYTHING)

l) $1 billion for the 2010 census. ( To count illegal IMMIGRANTS?)

m) $100 million for National Science Foundation scholarships.

n) $200 million for nutrition programs. ( Buy Macdonalds , Burger King and the rest of them foul places AND SHUT THEM DOWN!)

o) $200 million to provide incentives to teachers to raise test scores. ( Teach students how to write a check, pay a bill, apply for a scholarship, grocery shop, how to apply for a rental apt, EVERYDAY STUFF YA KNOW? BUT TEST SCORES? Bunch of Simpletons)

p) $2 billion in additional funds for low-income child care.q) $900 million in additional funds to prepare for the pandemic flu. ( WHAT? Probably find a cure for every disease in the world with that money!)

Ron Paul CNN American Morning 01-27-2009

Ron Paul says it all. Funny that America had the choice to elect a political and financial genius like Ron Paul; but instead chose an empty shirt windbag like Obama. Ron had a plan to cut the income tax, but Americans decided to saddle the next 8 generations with ridiculous debt. Amazing.

Ron Paul's Answer to The Spending Spree (uh....stimulus package?)


Ron Paul: Stimulus Packages Will Turn Recession Into A Depression
Congressman warns that destruction of Dollar will compound depression beyond scale of 1930s crash
Tuesday, Jan 27th, 2009
Texas Congressman Ron Paul has warned that passing the latest proposed economic stimulus package would be akin to pouring kerosene on an already raging fire.
Paul, who is also a member of the House Financial Services Committee, warned that such measures will cause a recession to turn into a full scale depression possibly worse than that of the 1930s.
During a Television interview with CNN, Paul explained why he believes stimulus funding is such a destructive policy.
“It’s because the government is spending it. If the people were spending it it would be fine, but the government never does anything productive. They have to take money from productive individuals and spend it in non productive ways, so it’s just digging a bigger hole, getting us into bigger debt, and that is the problem.” Paul said.
“This stimulus package is going to cost each and every American $6700 of more debt, so how can that be beneficial? If debt was the answer we would of never had a problem.”
“We are doing exactly what we did in the 1930s, we are taking a recession and working very hard to try and turn it into a depression.” The Congressman added.
“What we’re worried about right now, well certainly I am, is that it’s worse than the 30’s because we’re on the verge of destroying the dollar. So if you think the financial crisis is bad, and the financial system isn’t working, wait ’til you find out when the Dollar doesn’t work.”
The Congressman told viewers that only by liquidating debt, allowing the market to operate freely and allowing prices to come down will the problem be corrected.
Paul also spoke to those who have blamed the free market for the downturn and have suggested that deregulation is a primary cause of the financial crisis.
“We never had a hands off approach, that’s the fallacy, and as long as we believe that we will never correct our problem. If you blame Capitalism and free markets and sound money for this then we can’t win the intellectual fight.” Paul urged.
“If you want to regulate, regulate Government agencies, regulate the Treasury, regulate the Federal Reserve. The Federal Reserve has no oversight, they’re not even permitted to be audited by law, so that’s the kind of oversight we need. The Federal Reserve has committed trillions of dollars to individuals, corporations and banks, they don’t even have to tell us where it’s gone to.” he added.

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Offshore Tips


Locking Down YOUR Offshore Accounts...

"The Swiss government so far has refused to allow UBS to turn over these records," , "citing the country's bank secrecy laws. However, negotiations are underway that may permit banking records to be released on a case-by-case basis. If you're a U.S. person with an unreported offshore account at UBS - or anywhere else - contact a tax lawyer immediately for assistance. The IRS has you in their cross hairs."
"U.S. clients have the option of transferring their assets to U.S.-based wealth-management units, or to another offshore bank. They can also repatriate the assets to the United States. All these options create a paper trail that many clients - especially those who didn't report the income or gain from their accounts to the IRS - would prefer to avoid."
"U.S. persons - U.S. residents especially, but increasingly, even U.S. citizens living abroad, are persona non gratae at offshore banks. Moreover, as the Obama administration beefs up the Securities & Exchange Commission, you can expect renewed efforts by this agency to penalize offshore banks that permit U.S. investors to purchase foreign securities that aren't SEC-registered. I know of at least one offshore bank that already prohibits U.S. residents from purchasing non-SEC registered securities. I think this number will increase in the months and years ahead."
"Here are a few ideas that you may help you bypass these restrictions:
~Have the bank or a private portfolio manager trade your portfolio. That way, you're not providing investment instructions from the United States.
~Place your assets in a tax-compliant offshore structure, such as an offshore trust, an offshore corporation, an offshore LLC, an offshore insurance policy, or an offshore annuity. Again, you may lose the ability to make investment decisions.
~If you want to manage your own account, some offshore banks will accept investment instructions from U.S. persons if they originate outside the United States.

"Whatever you do, don't give up! As the global economy collapses, it's more important than ever to get a portion of your wealth out of the United States - away from litigious lawyers, nosy competitors, and most of all, out of the U.S. dollar."

Youtube censored the original--Trailer - The 0bama Decəption - A Film by Alex Jones

Alex Jones has his hand on the pulse of the Elites. Ignore his findings at your own peril.

Monday, January 26, 2009

Thain The Fucktard


The Yuppy-fication of Wall Street By Jack Crooks
One of the problems I've lamented about over the last several years is what I refer to as the Yuppy-fication of Wall Street. Instead of the guys who made it to the top because of their guts, instincts and brains, we are now faced with a world of Ivy-league MBA's with spreadsheets running these institutions.
We have guys who never had to worry about how to feed their kids, or make their mortgage payments or scrape together just enough of their own funds to launch a venture that later failed miserably. Instead we have an incestuous pool of people with powerful contacts populating the upper echelon.
The old-school guys who understood risk viscerally and did all they could to keep overhead at a minimum, knowing there is such a thing as a business cycle, seem to have been either pushed out or retired or runaway from the newly Yuppy-fied world in which we live.
Don't get me wrong. Our Ivy League turns out some very smart people indeed. But they are smart in terms of facts and figures and business case studies. They know strategic planning, have perfected the proper schmoozing with just the right person, and know how to make a spreadsheet sing. They are maestros.
But they never delivered mail in the mail room and grinded their way through every level of the organization, having to prove themselves every step of the way (later being sent to a top school by the company having proved real leadership skills) and learned about the firm's core culture and competencies that drive sustained long-term success in all business environments.
I think this is why we end up with egotistical clowns such as John Thain.
In a just world Mr. Thain would be taken out and beaten within an inch of his life for his arrogance ,incompetence and destruction of other peoples' wealth. Instead he walks away with millions, will likely spend a few years in the wilderness being "rehabilitated" (read friends in high places and journalist rebuilding his reputation with well placed lies at just the right time to polish the image) and re-emerge to "lead" another institution.
Sadly gone are the days when the head guy sat at a trading desk with the troops and lead by example — think John Gutfreund at Solomon.
"Salomon [Brothers] was an institution. The chairman, John Gutfreund, had a desk on the trading floor that he sat at every day. In my nine years at Salomon, I never sat more than twenty feet away from him.
...Here's a guy who is chairman of Salomon Brothers, which in those years was probably the most powerful firm on the Street, while I am a nobody trainee. It has been a year since that first encounter and he has the presence of mind and the interest to set me up like that," as told by Bill Lipschutz to Jack Schwager in The Market Wizards.
I guess a lot of this had to do with the fact that firms on the street were partnerships. The partners had real money on the line so they couldn't afford "social promotions." The key players had to know risk viscerally. Partners needed and hired really smart people with guts and integrity to safeguard their own wealth and grow the firm over the long-run.
Now, clowns like Thain play with other peoples' money. And sadly we see how Yuppy-fication has destroyed our once great trading institutions.

Sunday, January 25, 2009

The U.S Economic Collapse! A MUST WATCH!

The top of this video has a quote by Ron Paul. Truer words never spoken in a video piece every American should see! A Sound Of Cannons Essential!!!!

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Nicely Said.....................

"[War] is not a polite recreation, but the vilest thing in life, and we ought to understand that and not play at war." -Leo Tolstoy

But Where Is Your Money safe???


"Those of you who read Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand probably recall that John Galt (the central character) persuaded the leading industrialists and other productive capitalists in the U.S. to go on strike and move to a hidden valley called Galt's Gulch where they would be free of a socialist government. Of course, there isn't any place in the USA where a lot of people could be free of government intrusions or the increasingly confiscatory income tax."
"Charles Adams, author of For Good or Evil: The Impact of Taxes on the Course of Civilization stated that, "The list of notables who have fled their homeland to avoid heavy taxation would read like an international Who's Who. Flight is the number one device used by wealthy people to avoid heavy taxation.""
"If Galt's Gulch isn't in the USA, where might it be? The Heritage Foundation'sEconomic Freedom Index provides a ranking of economic freedom in 179 countries."
"The top two were in Hong King and Singapore, both of which are subject to the whims of the Chinese government, which is ranked at # 132. Australia was # 4 and New Zealand was # 5, with Ireland in between at # 3. The USA was # 6. Switzerland was # 9. Most of the Caribbean island nations were not listed, probably because they are part of the British Empire. In Central America, Panama is # 55, Belize is # 66 and Costa Rica is # 46."

This Ain't Good....................And It's Getting Worse


There were separate stories out of England and the USA about how both country's central banks were about to turn on the printing presses and monetize their respective debts. It's their only way out now...unless they want to revalue the gold price ..and it doesn't look like that's in the cards at the moment. John Exeter's inverse liquidity pyramid is posted above. We've gone from "Small Business" to "Paper Money" in an unbelievably short 18 months...and now the Fed is trying its best to prevent the final resolution to gold. They're fighting a losing battle. Now it's only a matter of when...and how high. Buy physical gold and silver and take possession, as I get the distinct feeling that we're nearly out of time. And it might be worth considering taking a few months’ worth of living expenses out of the bank while you're at it.

Paulson The Idiot


Hank Paulson did not leave his post without a final shot at China. In this Bloomberg story, "a Chinese central bank official attacked reported comments by U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson that China’s high savings rate helped trigger the global credit crisis." Paulson's logic is similar to that of a teenager pleading to a judge for clemency because he is an orphan after he killed both of his parents.

Ted Butler Says There's Less Silver Out There Than People Think


Real Silver Availability

Much has been written about the actual amount of physical silver that exists in world above ground inventories. Due to decades of industrial consumption depleting world inventories, there is remarkably little silver remaining. I have estimated perhaps one billion ounces of silver bullion equivalent exists at anywhere near current prices, and my estimates are much higher than most published estimates. Considering that the cumulative world mine production through the ages has been roughly 40 billion ounces, that means only 2.5% of that total production remains in bullion equivalent form. That’s shocking. This is one of the key reasons for buying silver, namely, there isn’t much left.
I’ve written countless articles over the years, trying to put this shockingly small amount of silver remaining into different perspectives. I’ve compared it to the total amount of money and credit in the world, namely, $11 billion of silver remaining compared to the many tens of trillions of dollars of money and credit sloshing around. Each ten trillion is a thousand times more than all the silver in the world is currently worth.
I’ve compared the amount of silver, in ounces and dollar terms, in per capita terms, namely, how much there is if evenly divided among the earth’s 6.5 billion inhabitants. For each man, woman and child, there exists 0.15 of an ounce. At current prices that’s around $1.65 a person. Not much of a surplus or overhang.
I’ve compared the amount of silver remaining above-ground to other commodities, and particularly to gold, it’s constant compatriot through millennia. I have explained that because gold was always highly valued as an investment and for jewelry, its high price prevented it from being industrially consumed, in stark contrast with what occurred in silver. Due to this plainly-observed historical reality, the world cumulative gold mine production of 5 billion ounces still exists in a relatively easy to recover form. So even though 8 times more silver than gold was produced throughout history, 5 times more gold than silver exists above ground today, due to silver’s industrial consumption profile over the past 100 years.
Further, when you assign a dollar value to gold and silver above ground inventories, given the current price disparity between the two, the comparisons are even more startling. Because gold is currently running at almost 80 times the price of silver, that means there is 400 times more gold than silver in the world in dollar terms. On a per capita basis, that comes to $660 per inhabitant, compared to $1.65 for silver. In the past, I’ve estimated that maybe one in a million knew these facts. My conclusion was the growing awareness of this situation alone would impact the price of silver for many years to come.
Today, I would like to look at the amount of above ground silver in a different perspective. This perspective is not unique to silver and applies to all investment assets. What I will say may not seem dramatic at first, but I ask you to think it through. I don’t recall seeing these thoughts in print before. My observations are just that - personal observations that I have contemplated for many years. If my observations and conclusions are correct, it could be considered another very bullish factor for silver. It has to do with what exists and what is available.
In today’s financial world, there is often very heavy daily trading of most investment assets, excluding real estate. Stocks, bonds, currencies, commodities, and especially derivatives are traded actively. Due to advances in computers and communications, it’s easier than ever to transact massive amounts of traded assets quickly. I have come to observe that the vast majority of all this daily trading, well over 90%, is just that - day trading. In other words, very little of this daily trading involves the accumulation or disposal of long term positions. Most of the trading involves quick in and out scalping-type transactions. My first observation is that long term holders are basically not involved in this daily trading.
Let me use COMEX silver futures as an example of what I am talking about, although I could use, quite literally, any other traded market. Certainly, I have never publicly suggested anyone buy a futures contract instead of real metal. Yet, even using a futures contract as an example, I think I can illustrate my point. That point is that in futures contracts, most trading is day trading.
On a typical day, maybe 20,000 COMEX silver futures contracts are traded, or close to 100,000 contracts in a week. The amount of silver that these contracts represent is enormous. So enormous that it would be absurd to think that real long-term silver holdings were actually being sold by old owners and bought by new owners. 100,000 silver futures contracts is equal to 500 million ounces of silver, not much less than a full year’s annual mine production.
Currently, there are around 80 to 85,000 silver contracts in existence (open interest). We know from published data, including daily open interest statistics as well as weekly COT data, that very few of the total existing open interest changes hands daily or weekly. Long term holders don’t trade that frequently and couldn‘t possibly trade in the amounts represented by daily and weekly volume statistics. Therefore, most trading must be daily in and out trading, with very little being carried overnight.
Away from futures trading, it is even more obvious that long term holders don’t trade frequently. They sit and hold. Think of how many times you buy or sell real estate, or real silver or gold, or bonds and stocks and other long term assets in a typical year. I would estimate, that over the course of a year, that no more than 5% to 10% of long term investment assets get turned over, including real estate. That’s over the course of a full year. Divide that 5% to 10% by the number of days in a year and you will come up with a very small percentage for how many long-term holdings are actually transferred daily.
This brings me to what I am driving at. When I write about there only being one billion ounces of above ground silver bullion in the world, I am vastly overstating the amount actually available for purchase at any point in time. As just discussed, very little, maybe 5% to 10% may be available for sale over the course of a full year, incredibly less on a daily basis. The distinction I am trying to make is between what may exist of an item and what is available for purchase or sale. There may be one billion ounces of silver in existence, currently worth $11 billion, but there may be only 50 to 100 million ounces, or $500 million to $1 billion available for sale in any given year. Not $11 billion.
As stated previously, this phenomenon is not unique to silver, it applies to all investment assets. But because silver’s inventory status is so limited to begin with, it takes on special investment significance. For example, when this phenomenon is applied to gold, it suggests that of the 5 billion ounces of gold in existence, only 250 million to 500 million ounces would be available for sale in any given year. But that still suggests a dollar amount of $200 to $400 billion being available for sale in any year, at current prices. (It’s that same 400 times more gold than silver ratio in dollar terms). My point here is simple - an item with only half a billion to a billion dollars potentially available for sale would experience much less selling pressure than an item with a potential $200 to $400 billion available for sale.
An additional observation is that the actual percentage of the amount of an asset that may be available for sale is influenced by price. At a low price, less is available than what would be available at a high price. The amount of what is in existence and what is available is a discussion that pertains to the supply-side of the supply/demand equation. Low prices constrict supply (availability), while high prices encourage supply to come to market. The current low price of silver will necessarily restrict supply and availability to lower levels than the normal 5% to 10% turnover of long-term assets.
What I am trying to introduce here is the difference between what exists and what may be available for sale. While we can all measure accurately the amount of visible silver in existence (in ETF’s and COMEX inventories) to the ounce, none of us can be sure of how much of that silver is actually available for sale near current prices. Just because we see it documented and visible doesn’t mean it is available for sale. Even the actual owners of silver stored in COMEX warehouses, for instance, are often surprised when they discover that their silver is counted as inventory. The first thing I hear from them when they discover this, is "my silver is not for sale." That’s my very point.
That this difference between what exists and what is available for sale is so underappreciated, is a powerfully bullish force for silver, simply because it won’t be underappreciated indefinitely. As it is, the small amount of silver in existence is bullish by itself. That amount being reduced drastically by the reality of availability is hard to comprehend. And if your head is spinning with trying to reconcile just how little real silver is available for purchase and the current ultra-low price, look no further than the great silver manipulation. It is the only plausible explanation. Help me fight that manipulation, but don’t fear it. Put it to your advantage by buying what little real silver is available.
Tighter Physical Supply?
There are a number of developments that may point to tighter physical supplies of wholesale silver. The amount of silver flowing into the big silver exchange traded fund (SLV) has been impressive since the first of the year. It looks like index funds have rebalanced their portfolios and this has resulted in the holdings of SLV reaching a new record of close to 230 million ounces, up 11 million ounces since the first of the new year.

What They've Done With The Bailout Money


The red line shows that, since August, banks have built their cash position in the form of Treasuries, agencies and deposits at the Fed by $865 billion, while their loans and leases have increased by only $325 billion. In other words, rather than lending the billions of dollars received from the Treasury’s Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP), as was originally intended, the recipient banks have squirreled away the bailout funds in order to shore up their balance sheets. Concurrently, the Federal Reserve is exchanging its excess reserves for toxic waste from the financial institutions. The combined affect is a “circular bailout” with the Treasury borrowing… in order to lend money to banks… that then lend it back by purchasing more Treasuries. Of course, the expense of this entire bailout scheme ultimately falls onto the back of the tax-paying public.

Golden Sanity Amid Fits of Fiscal Madness
"And as the bust continues, gold always becomes MORE valuable as everything else turns to crap and the government starts destroying everything with fits of fiscal madness in its insatiable quest for more money, more money, more money!"
by The Mogambo Guru
Completely surprising me, people continue to ask me questions, like I have any answers about anything - like, for instance, where I was last Tuesday night when somebody caused a disturbance at a local Chinese-food restaurant when the little proprietor had to be instructed that around here, an "order of egg rolls" means two egg rolls, not one! Two! And no, I did not eat one already, no matter what the waiter says, what the other customers say, what kind of tasty crumbs were on my lips or what my breath smells like!
Anyway, as I told the police, I don't know anything about that incident since I was obviously somewhere else; I forget where, but whoever the noble, brave customer was, he was absolutely right; an order of egg rolls means two egg rolls, not one. Two, dammit! Two!
But not even this scandal has stopped anyone from asking me questions, and one of the more popular questions is, "What in the hell is wrong with you that you are always yelling at us to buy gold? You make us completely miss fabulous, fabulous investment opportunities in all kinds of other things, like that terrific business opportunity they advertise on TV all the time where my computer makes money for me without me doing anything, and I just sit around scratching my big, fat butt and counting all the money that comes rolling in!"
As to "what in the hell" is wrong with me, alas, nobody knows, although there are several theories and a lot of powerful medications to try and keep it under control; I still hear the voices, but I can't understand what they are saying! Hahaha!
As to why I continually disrespectfully bellow, "Buy gold right now, unless you are an idiot!" until my throat is raw and sore from all the screaming, and my kids and neighbors are likewise hoarse from their yelling back, "Shut up! Please shut up, shut up, shut up!" - it is because I assume that you are, like me, a greedy paranoid little squirt and you want to make a lot of money when this whole fiat-money idiocy collapses.
And I even know WHY you want to make a lot of money! You want riches so that people will have to come to you and grovel for a loan, and then you can make them humiliate themselves for mirthful hour after hilarious hour ("Pick your nose and eat the booger! No, a bigger one!"), while laughing at them ("Hahahaha!), and then, finally, telling them, "No! No money! Now get the hell out of my sumptuous palace overlooking the ocean or someplace else equally as nice! Hahahaha!"
But regardless of your motives, gold is always popular at the beginnings of the busts that follow the booms that you get when somebody is stupid enough to use a fiat currency (like the U.S.A. and now all the other stupid countries of the world) that gets multiplied to excess so that inflations in the money supply causes inflation in other assets like stocks, bonds, houses and size of government and, unfortunately, food and energy.
And as the bust continues, gold always becomes MORE valuable as everything else turns to crap and the government starts destroying everything with fits of fiscal madness in its insatiable quest for more money, more money, more money!
And the reason that Congress wants to spend, spend, spend is perfectly summed up by Massachusetts Rep. Jim McGovern, who is quoted by the Wall Street Journal as having said, "Congress has to accomplish things." Hahaha! Says who? Hahahaha!
The weird news is that this quote comes in a piece by John Fund in the Wall Street Journal as he describes how the odious and thoroughly repugnant Nancy Pelosi and her fellow-travelers in the House of Representatives have changed the rules, and now, "The new rules mean that the only way to push for a tax cut will be to propose a tax increase somewhere else", which "Democratic leaders" said "were needed to make the legislative train run faster"!!
I deliberately inserted those two exclamation points at the end as part of my Mogambo Editing Duties (MED), mostly because there is nobody here big enough to stop me or even tell me that I can't, and now I can, unrestrained, use these punctuation marks to send secret signals to Junior Mogambo Rangers (JMRs) around the world that this is some Weird, Weird Crap (WWC), which (if you bother to look WWC up in your Mogambo Desk Reference (MDR)), means that "We are freaking doomed to die from consumer price inflation as a lagged result of excess monetary inflation, and you should be buying gold, gold, gold, beautiful, beautiful gold in self-defense, and if you are not, then that means you are some kind of mental defective!"
But we were not talking about how the socialist-communist/fascist morons running the place have doomed America, but "Why gold?" The reason is that there will be a lot of rich people selling the aforesaid stocks, bonds and houses, as that is how market tops are formed and why prices fall, and then the sellers will have a lot of money sitting there, meaning that now they have to find someplace to put it, and then they notice that everything else is turning to crap, and that is "Why gold"!
Nobody is ever satisfied with that explanation, and in the past I always had to convince people by out-shouting them (which is time-consuming) or wrestling them to the ground and getting them in a chokehold of some kind (which is tiring).
I say "in the past" because now I can use the Telegraph.co.uk headline, "Merrill Lynch Says Rich Turning To Gold Bars For Safety".
Without even the courtesy of mentioning me by name, or how I have been screeching about this stuff for years, "Merrill Lynch has revealed that some of its richest clients are so alarmed by the state of the financial system and signs of political instability around the world that they are now insisting on the purchase of gold bars, shunning derivatives or 'paper' proxies".
It shows that the rich ARE different in that they are not particularly stupid, which probably explains how they got to be rich in the first place.
And part of that intelligence is to understand the possibility of corruption inherent in derivative, paper assets, and to know that with the "possibility" eventually comes dead-bang "certainty", and thus they shun paper assets and demand real, physical gold.
And it is that "possibility that leads to dead-bang certainty" that makes the possibility of the Federal Reserve creating too much money and the possibility of the Congress allowing so much money to be created so that they can possibly spend which makes the decision to buy gold, silver and oil so simple that you shout, "Whee! This investing stuff is easy!"

Nicely Said..................

"What was originally supposed to be a war against terrorist groups with global reach - ostensibly al-Qaida - has now become a global war ... even against groups that do not threaten or attack the United States." -Charles Pena

Oils Away!!!!


I came across a great line in Barron’s the other day. You know all about bull markets and bear markets... what we have now is a “Jim Morrison market.”
Why a Jim Morrison market? Because the future’s uncertain and the end is always near.
(I thought that was too good not to share. For those of you who aren’t fans of The Doors, we’ll move right along...)
Something’s Happening Here...
Something very strange is going on with the price of oil. Not just in terms of straight-up price, but in regard to the huge discrepancy between the near-month and far-month futures contracts.
As I write, the going price for near-month West Texas Intermediate crude is $36.51 per barrel. The December 2009 contract, on the other hand, is trading at $55.13.
That is a monster spread. We’re talking a difference of more than $18 a barrel between spot crude – the stuff you can buy in the cash market – and crude slated for delivery at the end of this year.
The technical name for this situation is contango. That’s what they call it when a forward-month commodity contract is trading at a higher price than the near month. (You don’t really need to know this right now, but the opposite of contango, when near-term prices are higher than the back months, is backwardation.)

The reason this is strange is because of the massive profit opportunity embedded in the crude market.
Assuming you had the means, you could go out right now and sell millions of dollars worth of December crude contracts at $55 dollars a barrel... buy the equivalent amount in the cash market for $37 a barrel or less... and then just wait until it’s time to deliver the oil (and lock in your $18 profit).
The only hitch in the deal is finding a place to store the stuff. If you were to buy crude on the cheap now, you would have to take delivery and store it until late November (or whatever month your delivery date rolls in, when you close the trade and take your locked-in profit).
A number of big, savvy players are making exactly the trade I just described. They are selling millions of barrels worth of expensive far-month futures contracts, buying the equivalent amount of cheap oil in the cash market, and storing that oil in huge supertankers moored off the coast of Scotland and the Gulf of Mexico.
Storage and financing are counted as part of the trade, of course, and those big tankers don’t come cheap. Costs can run as high as $68,000 per day to keep one sitting idle.
But when you can lock in $18 a barrel, who cares? When the outlays are spread over millions of barrels – and a single ship can hold 2 million barrels of crude – there is still an obscene amount of profit left in the trade.
Frontline Limited (FRO:NYSE), the world’s biggest owner of supertankers according to Bloomberg, estimated last week that 80 million barrels worth of oil are being “stored” this way – the most they’ve seen in 20 years.
Not only are some big Wall Street players making this trade (Citigroup, Morgan Stanley, etc), big oil exporters are doing it too. Iran is filling up tankers with crude, no doubt waiting for the opportunity to sell at higher prices.
What It Is Ain’t Exactly Clear...
The puzzling question is why the anomaly persists. Why has the spread not come in?
Remember that once the far-month contracts are sold, price risk is removed from the equation. If you’ve entered into a deal to sell 2MM barrels of crude at $55 after buying at $37, you don’t have to worry about where prices go between now and your delivery date. You can just sit and wait.
When a no-brainer opportunity like this comes along, Wall Street normally jumps all over it. Traders exploit the anomaly in size until it disappears.
If markets weren’t so out of whack, you would gradually see the spread between near-month and far-month crude contracts get smaller and smaller as more and more players piled in. The profit in the spread would be reduced to the point where putting on the trade no longer made sense.
Two constraints that keep this from happening now are financing and storage.
First the finance angle: This is a trade that requires a serious cash outlay (or a major line of credit) to pull off. To fill up a supertanker with crude and sit on it for a year, you’re talking $50 million to $100 million as table stakes. The big Wall Street houses have been so bruised and battered, it’s hard for them to come up with that kind of dough – even for slam-dunk opportunities.
The other major constraint to the trade is storage. Such huge volumes of cash market crude are being held off the market now, traders are literally running out of places to put it. (It’s not like you can just pop into the local EZ-storage or stash a million barrels of oil in the shed.)
Curiouser and Curiouser
The storage issue is also creating headaches for the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) as traders question the pricing of West Texas Intermediate (WTI crude). The Financial Times reports:
The surge in oil inventories in Cushing, Oklahoma, where WTI is delivered into America’s pipeline system, has depressed its value not only against other global benchmarks, such as Brent, but also against other domestic US crudes.
Julius Walker, an oil market analyst at the International Energy Agency in Paris, said there was “anecdotal evidence” of traders moving away from WTI and “doing deals based on other US oil benchmarks.”
In other words, we’ve got oil coming out of our ears in the short-term... but the price of oil is still head-scratchingly higher – much, much higher – in the longer term.
So what does all this mean for us small-fry traders, i.e., those of us who can’t dial 1-800-TANKERS-R-US like the big boys?

I can think of at least a few takeaways worthy of food for thought:
~Why aren’t the big oil exporters all over this trade? Iran has locked up a few tankers, and it’s likely Russia and Venezuela etc. have too. But these guys are supposed to have lots of oil in the ground... and OPEC just made a big fuss of capacity cuts... so why aren’t they selling the hell out of the far-month crude contracts, locking in $18 a barrel, and bringing the spread back in with their size? Could it be capacity constraint? Could it be these guys don’t actually have all the spare capacity they’re letting on?
~Why are the drillers and oil service names so depressed? Stock markets are supposed to discount the future, not the past. Equity valuations are supposed to be forward looking. And yet, at current multiples, most of the high-quality drillers and oil service names are trading as if oil were headed to $20, not back to $60. Yet the December crude contract says otherwise... and the huge spread between near-month and far-month contracts persists. What gives?
~Could Wall Street still be “broken” in the aftermath of 2008? After the year we just went through, anyone who still believes in perfectly efficient markets should have their head examined. Markets operate in a range from “mostly efficient” to “wildly, insanely INefficient.” When credit mechanisms and normal channels break down, things just stop making sense. Could the huge disconnect between forward-month oil contracts and insanely cheap oil service names be yet another example of Wall Street not making sense?
~Could December crude contracts be expressing an opinion on the inflationary effects of U.S. debt monetization... or rebound possibilities for emerging markets... or both? It’s widely recognized that the U.S. Fed and Treasury are embarking on a “great experiment” now that has never before been tried – one that could be summed up as, “Print like crazy and see what happens.” Some observers, like Joachim Fels of Morgan Stanley’s Global Economics Team, further believe that emerging markets could outperform in 2009 due to better internals than they get credit for. Could the persistent crude spread be reflecting both views?
Yep, no question... something’s happening here.

$64 Billion Gone In 3 Months...................


And so goes the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP)… the government’s bank bailout plan has already lost 26% of taxpayer funds. Bean counters at the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) announced yesterday the current market value of the $247 billion in loans and purchases made by the Treasury through Dec. 31, 2008 has declined by $64 billion.
Wow. $64 billion… gone… in less than three months.
Meet Jerry Yang, last year’s World Series of Poker champion, and his $8.25 million prize. Jerry’s pile of winnings weighs more than he does… about 181 pounds.
How much does $64 billion weigh? Somewhere around 1.4 million pounds… if entirely denominated in $100 bills. Without a backhoe and tanker load of lighter fluid, we don’t think we could burn $64 billion as fast as the Treasury has lost it.
Thanks, guys.

Is The Goal Complete nationalization (We Think So)


Jaws to the floor ladies and gentlemen, every bank in the free world is hemorrhaging market capitalization all over the place as they head for the door marked "nationalization."
What happened here? Was there another banking crisis that happened while we were all watching the Inauguration yesterday?
Not quite. This is more of a confluence of different factors. Kind of like we've got the "Dream Team" of bank-killers scattered to the four corners of the globe and they're all working in unison somehow.
In Ireland, it was a combination of shady executive dealings and the whisper of bank nationalization. That's all it took to encourage investors to cut-and-run, cutting the market capitalization of the remaining Irish banks by about half and escalating the need and the urgency of nationalization on the Emerald Isle.
For the UK, it was Gordon Brown's announcement of further nationalization plans and his adamant request that banks' balance sheets be more transparent. Shares of Barclay's, Lloyd's and HSBC promptly went cliff diving, hit the pavement, and started digging.
One can't help but wonder whether nationalization becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy when it involves wiping out the shareholders. It was a little more static with Fannie and Freddie last year; with stock prices only hitting rock bottom when nationalization was clearly inevitable. But lately, these banks seem eager to free-fall anytime a government representative even utters the word ‘nationalization.'
Meanwhile, On Our Side of the Pond...
No, it's not much better over here. But at least over here, the rapidly falling share prices are the banks' fault and not necessarily that of the government.
As we mentioned yesterday, Bank of America has received an extra US$20 Billion to "digest" (great word choice there) Merrill Lynch..., which they willingly bought with the last round of free taxpayer money. If you see a pattern there, then you're not alone.
And there's more news coming out of Citigroup than Washington D.C. After unsuccessfully seeking out new investors and rich Arab princes, apparently they'll be splitting their retail operations off from their riskier enterprises. The shareholders aren't buying it, we're not buying it, and even Bloomberg isn't buying it. One of their recent headlines explains how, "Citigroup's Pandit tries to Save the Little that's Left to Lose." A classic, that headline.
You see that "little" that Citigroup's got left to "lose"? That's your tax dollars hard at work. At this point that's really all they've got left, and probably not even too much of that.
No, no. Let's make no mistake. The time for action - the time to prevent failure - has come and gone. A long, long time ago. As a blogger from the London-based magazine The Economist put it, "These banks grew so large that their failure threatened the global financial system, and then proceeded to fail. To simply hand over the money necessary to return them to solvency would abuse the taxpayer's trust, reward bad behaviour, and send a terrible signal to other bad financial actors out there. Time to quit mucking around and make with the nationalisations."
I know, I know. There's a sting of socialism in that comment. Even - as Legal Counsel Bob Bauman has pointed out before - a tinge of the economic component of fascism in that kind of thinking. But we must do that which is necessary to avert disaster, yes?
"The banks here are bust, with total writedowns probably more than the entire market cap of the financial sector at this point," Investment Director Eric Roseman told me candidly yesterday, "So, yes, the government will follow UK's course and backstop all bad assets and eventually nationalize the entire group. This is inevitable. The losses won't stop until we segregate bad assets off bank balance sheets combined with near or total nationalization. The markets won't relent unless some bold action is taken now."
But of course, there's always an alternative (however untenable it may be)... "The alternative is to let bad banks fail," Eric said, "Then we have a full scale Depression and the financial system will regress back to the Dark Ages."
That sounds pretty untenable.
So the Endgame here is nationalization then?
Wrong, Wrong, Wrong.
The Endgame here is that this isn't actually the endgame. Nobody wins...at least not yet. Because the crisis has only just begun, and the failure of the global banking system is just the first chapter in a much larger story.
In a very French, Jean-Paul Sartre sort of way, the world is throwing us a big curveball, and we're not sure if anyone's really seeing it yet. And even if they're seeing it, it still probably hasn't sunk in.
As of September 2008, some 173 million iPods had been sold across the world. In 2000, there were roughly 168 million personal computers in the US, and the number is probably more like 200-250 million today. There are 9 million mobile homes in the US, approximately 102-130 million single-family homes, and countless million apartments.
Do you see what we're getting at here? There aren't many necessary - or even unnecessary - goods left for American consumers to consume! We are already saturated.
We're digging in a little deeper with our saturation survey lately, but one could safely assert that there's already a home, an mp3 player and a personal computer for every man, woman and child in the United States. And this isn't just backed-up inventory; consumers already own or have purchased the lion's share of these goodies/housing. So when Obama, Gordon Brown or anyone talks about freeing up the flow of credit, you just have to ask yourself "why?"
So that we can buy more iPods? More double cheeseburgers and speculative property? We've already got more "stuff" than we know what to do with, and the best possible plan that the twin-worlds of government and finance can come up with is to get, "back to normal?"
Well folks, the market has the same plan. And unlike bankers and the government, the market realizes that the last decade of hyper-charged consumption was anything but "normal."
So the endgame is that - regardless of what happens to the banks - we're coming up on a multi-year run of what amounts to terrible business for them. The collapse of the Baltic Dry Shipping Index is a bell-weather for evaporating demand of foreign goods, and the 4th quarter's collapse in retail sales signals the death of domestic consumption. The bottom line - and there's no two ways about it - is that America is embarking on a new trend toward greater savings, less spending and a lower demand for credit. Thanks in part to the ravenous consumption of years past.
And instead of a banking system where the forces of open-market competition have narrowed the field down to a handful of the most honest, efficient players out there (banks like Wells Fargo or BB&T), we'll be dragging along a government-sponsored "competition-free zone," composed of banks who were successful in the race to get "too big to fail."
Now we'd like to leave you with a question; if these banks built themselves toward inevitable failure during the boom - when the sun shined and anyone could make money - then how do you think they'll do during the bust?
What a world.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

The LINT AGE by Bill Bonner


When Ben Bernanke gave his speech to the London School of Economics on Tuesday, our reporter was on the scene. Terry Easton put a tough question to America's central banker: aren't your interventions just making the situation worse, he wanted to know.
Amid the blah...blah...blah...of Bernanke's response was this:
"The tendency of financial systems to boom and bust ...is a very long-standing problem... but I think it's very important for us to try to put out the fire...then you think about the fire code."
In his 1988 book, The Collapse of Complex Societies, Joseph Tainter argued that all societies – like all organisms – are doomed. Tainter studied ancient Rome as well as the Mayan civilization. He noticed that problems always blaze up. Each one – whether climatic, political or economic – rings the firehall bell. And each solution – and readers may substitute the word "bailout" for solution – brings more challenges and takes more resources. Finally, the available resources are worn out.
Tainter observes that when the costs become high enough, people seem to give up. By the end of Roman era, for example, the burdens of empire were so heavy that people sold themselves into slavery to get free of them. So many people did so at one point that the authorities had to come up with another solution; they outlawed the practice. Henceforth, Roman citizens were required by law to remain free!
Another philosopher, Giambattista Vico, writing in the 18th century, put the beginning of the decline of Rome roughly at the time of the Great Fire during Nero's reign. Nero, partly to pay for his post-fire reforms and reconstruction, began taking the gold and silver out of the coins. All civilizations go through three stages, Vico said – divine, heroic, and human. The divine period is ruled by the gods. The heroic period is adorned with victories and statues. Then, comes the human era. (Here, we permit ourselves to add a footnote to Vico's oeuvre: the coin of the realm in early periods is the gods' money – gold. Later, people switch to money of their own invention – the kind of money you make from trees.) This last stage, says Vico, is when popular democracy arises, along with rational thinking and what Vico delightfully calls the "barbarie della reflessione" [the barbarism of reflection]. In earlier eras, people do what their gods and leaders ask of them. In the final era, they ask, "what's in it for me?"
Even as late as the early '60s, John F. Kennedy could still appeal to heroic urge without drawing a laugh. "Ask not what your country can do for you," he said in his inaugural address, "ask what you can do for your country."
But 11 years later, Richard Nixon, like Nero before him, began the process of debasing the country's money. That was a solution too; the United States had spent too much. Nixon could worry about the fire code later. First he opened up with the fire hose; he defaulted on America's promise to exchange dollars for gold at the statutory rate.
Barack Obama tried a Kennedyesque appeal to civic high-mindedness last week. We need to "insist that the first question each of us asks isn't 'what's good for me' but 'what's good for the country my children will inherit,'" said the president-elect. But now, like Doric columns in a trailer park, the words are ornamental, not structural. They are the homage that one age pays to a better one.
We are in the 21st century now. Barbarous reflections rise up like swamp gas. The whole place stinks of them. Bernanke and Obama offer solutions. But their plans to save the world from a correction are little more than a swindle. They offer to bail out the mistakes of one generation with trillions of dollars' worth of debt laid onto the next.
"Regarding the current financial meltdown," writes Rony Teitelbaum, "it is very clear that two main factors underlie the political reactions to the crisis, the first being pressure originating from ties between the financial and the political elect, manifested by taxpayer bailouts of large institutions that continue to deliver bonuses to the executives and donate to political campaigns. For those of us who are not blind, these are clear signs of political corruption which would have made the worst Roman emperor blush. The second factor is political pressure originating from the mass public. The kind of solutions offered so far, and I may add which were received with very warm enthusiasm, were tax rebates and gasoline tax holidays. These are actions aimed at a public who "impatiently expected quick and obvious results," to quote Cary's description of Roman society in AD300. (A History of Rome)."
Circa 2009, there is hardly a soul in the entire world who has not been corrupted by the barbarie della reflessione of the late imperial period. Both patricians and plebes are for bailouts. Both business and labor back stimulus programs. The taxpayers and the politicians who rule them are of one mind. Liberal, conservative, rich, poor, Republican, Democrat all speak with a single voice: "Screw the next generation!"
The golden age is over, in other words. In the space of 40 years it passed from gold, to silver, to paper...and is now somewhere between plastic and navel lint.

THE DAY THE REPUBLIC ENDED



Here at Sound Of Cannons we watched in awe and disgust at the same time. Millions (?) of mouth-breathing, low-IQ idiots and sychophants cheering the demise of The Republic for the new vision of a foreign born socialist. No wonder the rest of the world is happy we're on a downward spiral! Other countries happy we're about to abandon a world-leading standard-of-living for rationed food and healthcare.

While we know all good things must come to an end; we thought Joe Six-Pack might just appreciate Freedom & Liberty for awhile longer. But he seems too content watching sports on TV and allowing evil sociopaths destroy what our Founding Fathers worked so hard for. We'll continue the fight here at Sound Of Cannons Towers West, but it seems a simple measure of over-whelming odds. For every single freedom and liberty loving American, there seems to be 18 socialist-minded idiots who read and vote at a fouth grade-level.

Officially, we're going to commemorate this date as "The Day The Republic Ended," while we're sure the process has been ongoing for decades, this is a date that marks an overt change directly towards socialism by a woefully under-informed populace of sheep and slaves.

Monday, January 19, 2009

Throwing Darts


Peter Schiff Oblivious to the Bilderberg Group and NWO

Please make no mistake about it. Peter Schiff is a monetyary genius. We are HUGE fans of his at Sound Of Cannons Towers West. We've bought his books, listened to him speak and posted his writings. But genius does have it's limits and perhaps the Bilderberg issue is something that has escaped Peter's world. Perhaps it is something he just doesn't know about.
Few residents of the state of Texas are aware their governor violated the Logan Act by being present at the Bilderberg meeting in Europe last year. Schiff may not be aware because the American Press refuses to cover the Bilderbergs.

Saturday, January 17, 2009

Obama's Comrades


Browner: Redder Than Obama Knows
Steven MilloyJunk ScienceFriday, Jan 16, 2009
Incoming White House energy-environment czar Carol Browner was recently discovered to be a commissioner in Socialist International. While that revelation has been ignored by the mainstream media and blithely dismissed by her supporters, you may soon be paying the cost of Browner’s political beliefs in your electricity bill.
Socialist International is precisely what it sounds like — a decidedly anti-capitalistic political cause. Founded in 1951, its organizing document rails against capitalism, asserting that it “has been incapable of satisfying the elementary needs of the world’s population … unable to function without devastating crises and mass unemployment … produced social insecurity and glaring contrasts between rich and poor … [and] resorted to imperialist expansion and colonial exploitation.…” Socialist International also asserts, “In some countries, powerful capitalist groups helped the barbarism of the past to raise its head again in the form of Fascism and Nazism.” So Socialist International at least partly blames Adolph Hitler on capitalism.
According to its own principles, Socialist International favors the nationalization of industry, is skeptical of the benefits of economic growth and wants to establish a more “equitable international economic order.” In true Marxist form, it asserts that, “The concentration of economic power in few private hands must be replaced by a different order in which each person is entitled — as citizen, consumer or wage-earner — to influence the direction and distribution of production, the shaping of the means of production, and the conditions of working life.”
(Article continues below)

There’s much more in Socialist International’s principles, but you get the idea.
So what does all this have to do with your electricity bill? In late-December, Carbon Control News reported that Browner was a “strong backer” of utility “decoupling,” which had emerged as a “key climate policy priority for Obama.”
What is utility decoupling? The profits of electric utility companies have traditionally depended on the amount of electricity sold; basically, the more power that is sold, the more profit that is earned. The productivity-profitability link is a logical and standard business principle that is easy to understand, easy to implement and that has worked for, well, millennia in myriad business ventures — but no more for electric utilities, if Browner has her way.
Browner wants to sever, or decouple, a utility’s profits from the amount of electricity it sells. More electricity means more coal and natural gas burning, which, according to green dogma, means more greenhouse gas emissions and global warming. So Browner believes that less electricity production is, at least, a partial answer to climate change. But less electricity would mean less profitability for electric utilities, a powerful Washington lobby that Browner can ill afford to antagonize.
To date, the electric utility industry has aided and abetted the climate alarmist cause, if not by actually lobbying for global warming regulation, then at least by its willingness to entertain such regulation as public policy worthy of serious consideration. But since endangering utility profits would likely galvanize the industry once and for all against emissions regulation, the green dilemma boils down to figuring out a way to reduce electricity sales while guaranteeing utility profits. Enter decoupling.
How would decoupling actually function in practice? There are several different schemes for decoupling, but their tedious complexity precludes elaboration here. But the schemes all essentially amount to the same thing — sticking it to ratepayers and taxpayers. This should come as no surprise, when you stop to think about it.
Decoupling involves government guaranteeing electric utilities steady or steadily increasing profits for selling less electricity. That means implementing one of three basic scenarios: (1) consumers paying more for less electricity; (2) electricity prices remaining steady and taxpayers being called upon to subsidize the difference between the profits from actual electricity sales and the profits guaranteed by government; or (3) some combination of the two. There are no other possibilities.
Decoupling advocates assert that the consumers can avoid higher electric bills through “voluntary conservation measures” — that is, you can lower your bill by using less power. It’s a specious assertion since consumers will still pay higher rates for the electricity they use. Moreover, “voluntary conservation” is not necessarily without cost. Compact fluorescent lightbulbs, insulation, weather stripping, solar panels and other electricity conservation efforts all can entail significant added costs that can take many years to pay for themselves.
Getting back to Browner, what could be more anti-capitalistic than to disassociate profits from sales? It’s often difficult enough to determine profits when they are tied to sales — ask any author or recording artist. Imagine the difficulty, arbitrariness and potential for gamesmanship, if not just plain fraud, involved with government-dictated profitability based on reducing productivity. In the case of electric utilities, already a most heavily regulated enterprise, even greater government regulation of the industry will be required, which, of course, is what a good socialist like Browner would want.
Perhaps what’s most troublesome about all this is the stealthiness. Less than a week after Browner was outed as a Socialist International muckety-muck, the group scrubbed its web site of her photo and evidence of her commission membership. And in the larger picture, it’s intellectually dishonest for advocates of socializing electric utilities to promote the euphemistic “decoupling” as if it were some novel solution rather than what it really is — a subversion of our capitalistic system.
You know, one might get the impression that there’s actually something wrong with, and embarrassing about, a key White House adviser advocating the undermining of a basic principle of our economic system.

Mexico's Downfall May be Ours Too


Mexican Collapse and the Plan for a North American Union
Kurt NimmoInfowarsFriday, Jan 16, 2009
Mike Sunnucks, writing for the Phoenix Business Journal, exposes details of a recent report released by the Pentagon. According to the report, globalization and urbanization will fuel “social unrest, as well as a potential collapse of the Mexican government as that country deals with violence and corruption induced by drug cartels and organized crime.”



The Pentagon warns of “social unrest, as well as a potential collapse of the Mexican government as that country deals with violence and corruption induced by drug cartels and organized crime.”

On the surface, the Joint Operating Environment 2008 report by the U.S. Joint Forces Command is a self-serving document. It predicts multiple crises “if there are major reductions in U.S. defense spending,” including “terrorist networks obtaining nuclear and biological weapons, as well as instability and aggressiveness involving China, India, Pakistan, India and the Middle East.” On the other hand, the report may be seen as a blueprint for the establishment of a North American Union.
Glenn Williamson, CEO of the Canada Arizona Business Council, tells the Phoenix Business Journal he expects Obama to push for a North American Union, although Williamson does not specifically use that term. “I am starting to see a trend here from the new administration — possibly pulling in some U.S. assets in far-off countries that don’t even like us, and focusing more on a continental North America where Canada, the U.S. and Mexico could almost be energy self-sufficient,” Williamson said. “The U.S. and Canada need a strong Mexico for that to succeed. The concept of a broken Mexico or Canada on either border of the U.S. does not work.”
(ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW)

On January 13, the El Paso Times reported on the U.S. Joint Forces Command’s warning that Mexico may experience “a rapid and sudden collapse,” primarily due to the chaos spawned by drug cartels. Compared to the situation in Pakistan, the “Mexican possibility may seem less likely, but the government, its politicians, police and judicial infrastructure are all under sustained assault and press by criminal gangs and drug cartels. How that internal conflict turns out over the next several years will have a major impact on the stability of the Mexican state. Any descent by Mexico into chaos would demand an American response based on the serious implications for homeland security alone,” the Joint Operating Environment 2008 report stated.
More than a decade ago, a federal grand jury in Los Angeles charged Mexican banks and 26 Mexican bankers with laundering millions of dollars in drug profits. “The three Mexican banks that were charged are Bancomer and Banca Serfin, Mexico’s second- and third-largest banks, respectively, as well as Banca Confia, a smaller institution that was recently purchased by Citibank. Both Bancomer and Banca Serfin have branches in New York and Los Angeles and could face sanctions by regulators here,” the New York Times reported on May 19, 1998.

As Max Keiser and Catherine Austin Fitts explain in videos here, Wall Street and transnational corporations are not only intimately involved in the international drug trade, they in fact run this massive and extraordinary profitable illegal enterprise. Fitts proposes that without the infusion of drug money, the stock market would collapse.
In addition to the bankster involvement in the drug trade noted above, it is a well documented fact the CIA has a long and sordid history of running heroin and cocaine out of Southeast Asia and Latin America, not only in the service of Wall Street but also to fund covert operations around the world. For more on the CIA as international drug baron, see William Blum’s The Real Drug Lords: A brief history of CIA involvement in the Drug Trade
Thus we can safely assume the Mexican drug cartels are nothing if not franchise operations run by the banksters and their transnational corporate partners. If these cartels are engaged in murderous competition as we are told by the corporate media — a media owned and operated by the very same banksters — we can also assume the violence inside Mexico and on its border with the United States is not coincidental. It is part of a larger Hegelian dialectic.

Wall street not only profits handsomely from the international drug trade it has nurtured with the help of the CIA and its organized crime subset, but has exploited the violence and misery associated with the trade to propose not only draconian laws but regional and world government as well. It is a perfect example of the problem-reaction-solution paradigm used successfully since the days of Nero Claudius Caesar.
In addition to militarizing the border as outgoing Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff has proposed — the military parlance is unmistakable, as Chertoff calls his proposal a “surge” — president select Obama met with Mexican President Felipe Calderón earlier in the week. Calderón said the meeting “will be the beginning of an extraordinary age in the relationship between the United States and Mexico,” according to the Chicago Tribune. An earlier if not absurd phase of this “relationship” was implemented under the Mérida Initiative, a supposed “security cooperation” plan aimed at combating the manufactured threats of drug trafficking, transnational crime, and money laundering. Congress recently signaled its approval of the Mexican militarization plan costing several hundred million dollars.
Obama will focus on a “continental North America” scheme in response to the not only the drug violence in Mexico but also the faltering economies of Canada, Mexico, and the United States, both closely related and engineered contrivances of the global elite.
“On trade and the economy, President-elect Obama said that with both countries facing very difficult economic times, it’s important to work together to maintain a constructive and comprehensive dialogue,” an Obama transition press advisory stated after the meeting with Calderón. “He expressed his continued commitment to upgrading NAFTA to strengthen labor and environmental provisions to reflect the values that are widely shared in both of our countries, and proposed the creation of a consultative group to work on a host of issues important to the United States and Mexico, including NAFTA, energy and infrastructure.” Obama has promised to “amend” NAFTA.
“Starting my first year in office, I will convene annual meetings with Mr. Calderon and the prime minister of Canada,” Obama promised in late February, 2008. “Our relationship with Mexico should serve as a bridge to greater security and prosperity in North America and to better relations with Latin America” (emphasis added).
Security and prosperity, sort of like the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America, the globalist plan to merge the United States, Canada, and Mexico in a North American Union similar to the European Union?
Finally, the Hegelian dialectic above mentioned has yet another component — assisting the government in its efforts to further implement a high-tech control grid in the United States.
“Mexico wants Washington to do more to curb drug-taking in the United States and gun smuggling from north of the border because drug hitmen buy automatic weapons and other guns legally in the United States and bring them back to Mexico to use in the turf battles that killed 5,700 people last year,” Reuters report on January 11. “Drug trafficking is not a Mexican problem. It is impacting both societies and the criminals are operating in U.S. territory,” said Armand Peschard-Sverdrup at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.
Peschard-Sverdrup is most certainly correct — the criminals are operating in U.S. territory. He may not realize, however, that the ringleaders are based on Wall Street and London, not in the barrios of Nogales, Tijuana, and Juárez.

The Whole World Goes Bust...............


This Year: Global Insolvency?

George Washington’s Blog Saturday, Jan 17, 2009
The forecasters at Leap2020 (who have been right in many of their predictions, but wrong in large calls such as the timing of the collapse of the dollar) are predicting that 2009 will be an unfolding year of worldwide insolvency:

A new sequence of the fourth phase (so-called “decanting phase”) of the unfolding global systemic crisis has began: the sequence of global insolvency.***
Contrary to what political leaders and their central bankers seem to believe worldwide, the problem of liquidity that they are striving to solve by means of historic interest rate drops and unlimited money creation, is not a cause but a consequence of the current crisis. It is in fact a problem of solvency***
(Article continues below)

The situation prevailing today throughout the entire global financial system, a large part of the world economy and all the economic players (including States) who based their growth on debt in the past years. The crisis translates and magnifies a problem of global insolvency. The world is becoming aware of the fact that it is a lot poorer than it used to believe in the last decade. And 2009 is the year when all the economic players must try to assess their real level of solvency, knowing that many assets are still losing value. Moreover a growing number of investors no longer trust the traditional instruments and indicators of measurement. Quoting agencies have lost all credibility. The US Dollar is just a fiction of international monetary unit and many countries are striving to get away from it as quickly as possible. Thus, quite rightly, the entire financial sphere is suspected of being a giant black hole. Concerning companies, no one can tell if their order books are reliable because in every sector customers cancel their orders or just stop buying, even when prices are discounted, as indicated by dropping retail sales in the past few weeks. Concerning States (and municipalities), slumping fiscal revenues are likely to result in even higher deficits and then bankruptcies. As a matter of fact, Russian billionaires, Gulf oil-monarchies, Chinese commercial Eldorados, all the « golden-egg geese » of companies and financial institutions of the planet (namely European, Japanese and North-American ones) turn out to be insolvent or hardly solvent. The question of the solvency of the US federal State and federated states (as well as of Russia or the United-Kingdom) is beginning to be asked by some big international media; as well as the question of the solvency of large capital-based pension funds, major players in this past twenty years’ globalised economy.
According to LEAP/E2020, the trend is clear: the sequence that has begun this year is a sequence of global insolvency.
Is there anything to what they are saying?
Well, probably the leading expert on monetary policy - Milton Friedman’s co-author on the leading treatise on the Great Depression - agrees that the problem is not one of credit, but of solvency. She told the Wall Street Journal in October that insolvent American companies should be allowed to fail, so that the system can correct itself.
Paulson and Bernanke and Frank and the rest ignored her. Instead of letting poorly-run companies fail, and letting well-run companies pick up the pieces cheaply and then use them for valid business purposes, the fed enacted various schemes to try to stop or hide the failure of the weak and incompetent businesses.
The government has not only failed to stop “the contagion”, they have ensured that it infects larger and larger companies . . . and eventually the governments which try to “fix”their problems.
Due to this faulty approach to the economic crisis, the entire world now faces an insolvency crisis.

Faith In EU Shaken



Monetary union has left half of Europe trapped in depression

By Ambrose Evans-PritchardLast Updated: 6:52PM GMT 17 Jan 2009
Events are moving fast in Europe. The worst riots since the fall of Communism have swept the Baltics and the south Balkans. An incipient crisis is taking shape in the Club Med bond markets. S&P has cut Greek debt to near junk. Spanish, Portuguese, and Irish bonds are on negative watch.
Dublin has nationalised Anglo Irish Bank with its half-built folly on North Wall Quay and €73bn (£65bn) of liabilities, moving a step nearer the line where markets probe the solvency of the Irish state.
A great ring of EU states stretching from Eastern Europe down across Mare Nostrum to the Celtic fringe are either in a 1930s depression already or soon will be. Greece's social fabric is unravelling before the pain begins, which bodes ill.
Each is a victim of ill-judged economic policies foisted upon them by elites in thrall to Europe's monetary project – either in EMU or preparing to join – and each is trapped.
As UKIP leader Nigel Farage put it in a rare voice of dissent at the euro's 10th birthday triumph in Strasbourg, EMU-land has become a Völker-Kerker – a "prison of nations", to borrow from the Austro-Hungarian Empire.
This week, Riga's cobbled streets became a war zone. Protesters armed with blocks of ice smashed up Latvia's finance ministry. Hundreds tried to force their way into the legislature, enraged by austerity cuts.
"Trust in the state's authority and officials has fallen catastrophically," said President Valdis Zatlers, who called for the dissolution of parliament.
In Lithuania, riot police fired rubber-bullets on a trade union march. Dogs chased stragglers into the Vilnia river. A demonstration outside Bulgaria's parliament in Sofia turned violent on Wednesday.
These three states are all members of the Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM2), the euro's pre-detention cell. They must join. It is written into their EU contracts.
The result of subjecting ex-Soviet catch-up economies to the monetary regime of the leaden West has been massive overheating. Latvia's current account deficit hit 26pc of GDP. Riga property prices surpassed Berlin.
The inevitable bust is proving epic. Latvia's property group Balsts says Riga flat prices have fallen 56pc since mid-2007. The economy contracted 18pc annualised over the last six months.
Leaked documents reveal – despite a blizzard of lies by EU and Latvian officials – that the International Monetary Fund called for devaluation as part of a €7.5bn joint rescue for Latvia. Such adjustments are crucial in IMF deals. They allow countries to claw their way back to health without suffering perma-slump.
This was blocked by Brussels – purportedly because mortgage debt in euros and Swiss francs precluded that option. IMF documents dispute this. A society is being sacrificed on the altar of the EMU project.
Latvians have company. Dublin expects Ireland's economy to contract 4pc this year. The deficit will reach 12pc of GDP by 2010 on current policies. "This is not sustainable," said the treasury. Hence the draconian wage deflation now threatened by the Taoiseach.
The Celtic Tiger has faced the test bravely. No government in Europe has been so honest. It is a tragedy that sterling's crash should have compounded their woes at this moment. To cap it all, Dell is decamping to Poland with 4pc of GDP. Irish wages crept too high during the heady years when Euroland interest rates of 2pc so beguiled the nation.
Spain lost a million jobs in 2008. Madrid is bracing for 16pc unemployment by year's end.
Private economists fear 25pc before it is over. Spain's wage inflation has priced the workforce out of Europe's markets. EMU logic is wage deflation for year after year. With Spain's high debt levels, this is impossible.
Either Mr Zapatero stops the madness, or Spanish democracy will stop him. The left wing of his PSOE party is already peeling off, just as the French left is peeling off to fight "l'euro dictature capitaliste".
Italy's treasury awaits each bond auction with dread, wondering if can offload €200bn of debt this year. Spreads reached a fresh post-EMU high of 149 last week. The debt compound noose is tightening around Rome's throat. Italian journalists have begun to talk of Europe's "Tequila Crisis" – a new twist.
They mean that capital flight from Club Med could set off an unstoppable process.
Mexico's Tequila drama in 1994 was triggered by a combination of the Chiapas uprising, a current account haemorrhage, and bond jitters. The dollar-peso peg snapped when elites began moving money to US banks. The game was up within days.
Fixed exchange systems – and EMU is just a glorified version – rupture suddenly. Things can seem eerily calm for a long time. Politicians swear by the parity. Remember John Major's "soft-option" defiance days before the ERM blew apart in 1992? Or Philip Snowden's defence of sterling before a Royal Navy mutiny forced Britain off the Gold Standard in 1931.
Don't expect tremors before an earthquake – and there is no fault line of greater historic violence than the crunching plates where Latin Europe meets Teutonia.
Greece no longer dares sell long bonds to fund its debt. It sold €2.5bn last week at short rates, mostly 3-months and 6-months. This is a dangerous game. It stores up "roll-over risk" for later in the year. Hedge funds are circling.
Traders suspect that investors are dumping their Club Med and Irish debt immediately on the European Central Bank in "repo" actions.
In other words, the ECB is already providing a stealth bail-out for Europe's governments – though secrecy veils all.
An EU debt union is being created, in breach of EU law. Liabilities are being shifted quietly on to German taxpayers. What happens when Germany's hard-working citizens find out?

Doug Casey Says It All.............


Foundations of Crisis 1/13/09
By Doug Casey, Chairman,The Casey Report, Casey Research, LLC.


Everybody wants predictions. The following article does a little better than that, in that I wrote it back in November of 1997, outlining several theories of history, and pointing to a logical way of anticipating what will likely happen to the world at large over the next generation. As you will read, the methodology I relied upon for anticipating the events that are now unfolding – 11 years later – were actually quite accurate, confirming, in my mind at least, that now is a time to be very cautious in your personal and financial affairs.The article is unaltered in its text from the original, though I have added some current commentary in bold italics Doug Casey December 26, 2008
"Don't know much about the Middle Ages, look at the pictures an' I turn the pages. Don' know much about no rise and fall, don' know much ‘bout nothin' at all" "Wonderful World," Sam Cooke. The lyrics quoted above probably describe the average American's knowledge of history about as well as any academic study. Not only don't they know anything about it, and think it's irrelevant, but what they do know is inaccurate and slanted. And they must not think very much about the future either if the amount of consumer debt out there, mostly accumulating at 18% interest, is any indication.One point of studying history is that it gives you an indication of what's likely to happen now, if you can find an appropriate analog in the past. This is a tricky business because as you look at factors contributing to a trend, it's not easy to determine which ones are really important. Making that determination is a judgment call, and everyone's judgment is colored by his worldview, or Weltanschauung as the Germans would have it.Let me briefly spell out my Weltanschauung so you can more accurately determine how it compares with your own, and how it may be influencing my interpretation of the future.I'm intensely optimistic about the long-term future. It seems to me a lock cinch that the advance of technology alone – and nanotechnology in particular – will result in a future of incredible abundance and prosperity, and that alone will solve most of the problems that plague us. Space migration, intelligence increase, and life extension will be commonplace realities. These things, plus the growth of both knowledge and its accessibility and the concomitant rise of the individual from the group, will constantly diminish politics as an element of life. The future will be much better than anything visualized on Star Trek, and will arrive much sooner. That's the good news.The bad news is that within the longest trend in history, the ascent of man, there is plenty of room for setbacks, and much of history is a case of two steps forward and one back. My gloomy short-term outlook, and my reasons for maintaining it, is recounted here monthly. Whether it's right or wrong, from an investor's point of view, the short term is more relevant than the long term. Notwithstanding Warren Buffett's great success in going for the long term, Keynes was right when he said that in the long run we're all dead. History shows that goes for civilizations as well as people. The problem is that our civilization is probably just now on the cusp of the long term.
Hari Seldon: Where Are You When We Need You?
Isaac Asimov's classic Foundation trilogy centers around a scientist, Hari Seldon, who invents a science called psychohistory, which allows the fairly accurate prediction of broad trends in society going for centuries into the future. Seldon lives on Trantor, the planetary capital of a galactic empire; the entire planet is covered with a high-tech version of Washington, D.C., devoted to nothing but taxing and regulating the rest of the galaxy. Seldon forecasts that the empire will collapse and Trantor turn into a gigantic ghost town. And of course that's what happens, because it's a novel, and that makes for a good story. It's a good story because it's credible, and it's credible because people know nothing lasts forever, and there is a cyclicality to everything; birth, youth, maturity, senescence, and death. These stages are shared by everything in the material world, whether it's a person, a city, a civilization, or a galaxy. It's just a question of time and scale.From that point of view everyone knows the future, i.e., we all know that everything eventually dies. But we'd like a bit more precision on the timing of their lifecycles. Some gurus believe, or appear to believe, they can actually predict the details of the future; I consider them knaves. People who actually do believe them should be considered fools. That said – Nostradamus, astrology, channeling, tea leaf reading, and the like aside – I do think the best indicator of what will likely happen in the future is what has happened in the past. That may seem like an obvious statement, but it's not. There have traditionally been three ways of looking at the problem; call them theories of history.Oldest is what might be termed a chaotic view, which presumes mankind doesn't have any ultimate destination but is wafted on the wings of Fortune or hangs by the thread of Fate. Subject to the arbitrary will of the gods, whether it's the Old Testament's Yahweh, or Homer's Zeus, the future is unpredictable, and prophecy or an oracle gives you as good a read as anything else. I discount this theory heavily.A second ancient view is that everything is cyclical, and therefore somewhat predictable. History may be viewed like a giant sine wave that's possibly headed somewhere, but the direction is unknown. Or history is really a circle, constantly repeating itself, much like the four seasons of the year. There's a lot of wisdom to the cyclical view.The third view sees history as a linear sequence, one that's actually headed somewhere. That view holds a special appeal for followers of evangelically oriented religions, particularly Christians (many of whose beliefs have an apocalyptic tinge) and Marxists (who were, until lately, given heart by the "scientific" inevitability their views would prevail). The linear view ties in with the idea of Progress, that (more or less) every day and in every way, things are getting better and better – although there's also a subculture populated mostly by deep ecology, animal rights, and anti-technology types who believe things are headed to hell in a hand-basket. But they all believe we're headed somewhere in a more-or-less straight line. There can be a lot of truth to the linear view, certainly if you look at the technological progress of mankind over the past 10,000 years, and this view prevails today.My own view is a synthesis of the cyclical and linear theories. I see history evolving towards an incredibly bright future, but cyclically suffering setbacks, cyclically repeating the same patterns along the way. To me history looks like a spiral, heading off in a specific direction, but always covering the same ground in a different way with each revolution.That's one reason The Fourth Turning, (Broadway Books, NY, 1997) by William Strauss and Neil Howe got my attention; we're all drawn to those who see at least part of reality the way we do. The book is an extrapolation of their last work, Generations, and notwithstanding its literary faults, is simply brilliant. I've never met Howe, but did have lunch with Strauss once about five years ago. The way I see it, although they're both conservatives, neither of them has any particular economic, political, or social philosophy, and they're not trying to grind an ax. Their books are a value-free look at U.S. history, and their conclusions are more credible as a result.Their basic hypothesis is one I suspect Hari Seldon would recognize, and my thoughts are built on the research Strauss and Howe have done over the years. I suggest you get a copy of The Fourth Turning while it's still in the stores. That's also true for my own Crisis Investing for the Rest of the ‘90s, which has several chapters on related subject matter, and Arthur Herman's just-released The Idea of Decline in the West, which also bears on the subject. With 50,000 new books published every year, very few stay available for more than a few months. If something has appeal, you should buy it now, because it may be hard to come by when you have the chance to get into it. (Of course, I was wrong on that point -- websites such as Amazon and Alibris.com now make it easy to pick up many older books.)
Generations
Generational conflict has been recognized since ancient times. The twist here is the discovery of several things that have previously eluded observers. One is that the well- known conflict between fathers and sons is only half the story; there aren't just two generational types that alternate (e.g., liberal and conservative), but four. The reason for looking at it this way is that a human life can be conveniently divided into four stages: Childhood, Young Adulthood, Midlife, and Elderhood. Throughout all of history, a long life might be considered to be 80 to 100 years, with each of the four stages equaling a quarter of it.Just as each person's life holds four stages of about 20 years each, each generation comprehends a group of people born over about 20 years. Members of a particular generation tend to share values and ways of looking at the world not only because their parents also shared a set of views (which the kids are reacting to), but because every new generation experiences a new set of events in a way unique to them. They hear the same music, see the same events, are exposed to the same books. Members of a generation share a collective persona. There appear to be four distinct archetypal personae that recur throughout American history. And throughout world history as well, although that's a bit beyond what I hope to explore here. It also seems, throughout history, that there are periodic crises. About once every century, or about when each of the four generational types has run its course, a cataclysmic event occurs. It generally takes the form of a major war, and it generally catalyzes a whole new epoch for society.The four mature generations alive today each represent an archetype. Let's review them from the oldest now living, to the youngest.
Hero Archetype
The "GI" generation, born between 1901 and 1924, includes basically all living people in their mid-70s and older. They grew up and came of age in the midst of the most traumatic years in human history: the 1930s and ‘40s. This was a time of catastrophic financial and economic collapse, world war, political dictatorship, genocide, and virulent ideology, among other unpleasant things; a period of intense turmoil. The times required them to be civic minded, optimistic, regular guys who could be counted on to do the right thing, fit in, and see that everybody got a square deal. As a consequence of what they've been through, they tend to be indulgent parents. As kids they're "good"; as adults they're selfless, constructive, and communitarian. Hero archetypes encounter a Crisis environment in Young Adulthood; assuming they survive it, the odds are the rest of their lives will be lived in growing economic prosperity, leading to a leisurely retirement.
Artist Archetype
Meanwhile, another generation was being born at the height of the Crisis – something that seems to occur roughly every 80-100 years – from 1925-42. This generation, the "Silent," watched these titanic events happen but were too young to take part in them. They were relegated to being protected, while trying to be helpful in the limited ways available to them. They're overprotected as children, when they might be characterized as "placid"; they tend to underprotect their own children as a reaction. As adults they're sensitive, well-liked, sentimental, and caring.
Prophet Archetype
Next came the group we call the "Boomers," born from 1943 to 1960. This was the first generation born after the Crisis was over, and they grew up in an environment where their parents (mostly GIs and early cohort Silents) felt obligated to protect them from all the trauma of the preceding years and were desirous of giving them all the things they never had. As kids they're seen as "spirited.'' Later in life, they tend to be narcissistic, presumptuous, self-righteous, and ruthless. Born after a Crisis, their Childhood years coincide with a rebirth of society, and their Elderhood coincides with another Crisis. More on them below.
Nomad Archetype
The fourth generational type is represented by today's "Generation X," born 1961-81, during what might be called an Awakening period when the Boomers were in the limelight. As a consequence, they were overlooked and a bit abandoned. Their reputation as kids can be summed up as "bad." They're oriented toward survival, which is partially a result of their being underprotected as children. When they become parents, they react and become overprotective. They tend to be savvy, practical, tough, and amoral.The kids born between 1982 and perhaps 2002 should be another Hero archetype. My own experience with them is that they're shaping up that way. Represented by clean-cut, straight-arrow Power Rangers. Quite a reaction to the sewer-dwelling Mutant Ninja Turtles that were analogs for the previous generation. They're "'can do" kids, programmed to do the right thing in a smoke-free, drug-free, eco-sensitive, politically correct world. Like all Hero types, they respect their elders, do what they're told without much questioning authority. That's just the type of person you want to have fighting a war for you, and that's probably just what they'll wind up doing. Just like the last Hero types, the GIs. (Iraq was first. Iran next? Or will it be Saudi Arabia?)It's risky to characterize everyone born in a certain time frame as sharing a persona; after all, people are individuals, not ants or atoms, each like the other. But it's really no different than characterizing people by the country they're from. There's no question in my mind that people share characteristics by virtue of the milieu in which they live, and that's true of time as well as geography. Take a look at the people you know by age groups, and see if they don't roughly fit the brief descriptions.The interesting thing is that through about 400 years of American history, it's possible to see these generational types repeating themselves. It's not an accident. The characteristics of each type shape the next generation, as well as current events. And events leave a further imprint on all of them.
Making an Example of the Boomers
Just as every generation has its own persona, the character of each generation evolves as it moves through life. The Boomers are perhaps the most relevant example of this. First they were Mouseketeers and Beaver Cleaver clones. Who could have guessed they would mutate into Hippies and even Yippies as they reached Young Adulthood, reacting against everything they'd grown up with, everything their parents worked so hard to give them.They came of age during a period that might be called an Awakening, and it's recurred on schedule five times so far in American history. Awakenings are times of religious and moral ferment, when the youth tend to challenge prevailing cultural values pretty much across the board. Young adults were into New Age things this time around, in the 1960s and ‘70s. At the time it seemed utterly shocking and completely new, but that was only because nobody then alive had seen the previous Utopian Awakening in the 1830s and ‘40s, the Pietist Awakening of the 1740s and ‘50s, the Puritan Awakening of the 1630s and ‘40s, or the Protestant Reformation of the 1530s and ‘40s.Like all the generations before them that grew up in similar times, they eventually put away the things of their youth. But who guessed that their next mutation would be into Yuppies, whose motto was not "Peace and Love" or "Revolution for the Hell of It," but "Shop Till You Drop" and "He Who Dies with the Most Toys Wins" as they moved into midlife.But even now the acquisitive mania that characterized the ‘80s is ebbing, now that the first cohorts of Boomers are crossing over 50. You can already see the signs of their next stage of evolution, in the judgmental behavior of people like William Bennett (George Bush) and Dan Quayle (Ann Coulter) on the "right," and Al Gore and Hillary Clinton on the "left." They did sex, drugs, and rock ‘n' roll in the ‘60s. They believe they've fought the war of good against evil in both Vietnam and the segregated lunch counters of the South. They know they were the first generation to have traveled widely thanks to the jet, to have been brought up by television, and had the telephone as a given. They've been there, done that, and now that they're getting older, they're going to make sure that everyone else benefits from their wisdom – like it or not.The Boomers are an archetypal Prophet generation, a type born after a secular crisis, just in time to create another one. Get the image of a grim elder, with a well-defined vision of what's right and wrong, calling down wrath, and laying down the law for a troubled nation in chaotic times. That's the type of person who tends to lead countries into wars, as well as through them. Interestingly, the Boomers in America have their counterparts abroad today, especially in China, where they grew up during the Cultural Revolution. Two ideologically driven, righteous groups running two such powerful and alien cultures is almost a guaranteed formula for a millennial-sized crisis. Which should appear, coincidentally, sometime shortly after the millennium. (We're right on schedule.)So What's Next?
The real watersheds in history, crises that make or break a civilization, occur roughly every 100 years. The most recent ones in American history that will resonate without looking up the facts in a reference book are the Revolution, circa 1782; the Civil War, circa 1863; and WW II, circa 1943. We've had other wars, and they were traumatic enough; that's the nature of war. But the War of 1812, Mexican, Spanish, World War I, Korean, and Vietnam wars had nothing to do with the country's survival as an entity, as a civilization. They were optional wars, sport fighting, if you will, by comparison. Wars that occur at a secular Crisis, a "Fourth Turning" to Strauss and Howe, when a Prophet generation is acting as elder statesmen, with Nomads as operational commanders, and Heroes as front line soldiers tend to be total wars that have an ideological underpinning. They're life-and-death struggles not just for the individual participants, but for the civilization as a whole.That major wars occur at such long remove from each other probably isn't an accident. Really catastrophic wars, from at least the days of Troy on down, have usually been the Great Events that resound through living memory. The Great Event of a century forms the thought and character of everyone alive when it happens, influencing them relative to the stage of life they're in at the time. Perhaps that's why a people will collectively do its best to avoid a repeat, at least while there's anyone still alive who saw the last crisis. (It's been said that war is a force that gives life meaning. And I think that's true, although it's perverse that the most destructive and idiotic activity that it's possible to engage in would just have to be the most important. Maybe, after the orgy of self-indulgence and conspicuous consumption that has characterized the past couple decades, Americans collectively feel they need to prove something. There has to be some rationale for the current war hysteria other than pure stupidity...)In any event, the way the current generations line up relative to historical analogs, an excellent case can be made the U.S. is approaching another time of secular crisis, a Fourth Turning, with an expected due date of 2005 – seven years from now – plus or minus a few years in either direction. The Stamp Acts catalyzed the American Revolution, the election of Lincoln catalyzed the Civil War, the Crash of ‘29 catalyzed the Depression/WW II era. What might precipitate the elements now floating in solution? The answer is, practically any random event that's sufficiently traumatic. Any of the theses of current disaster/action novels and movies will do nicely. Perhaps the accidental or intentional release of a super plague vector. The crashing of an airliner into the Capitol during a joint session. (Close, but not quite.) An all-out assault on the IRS computers by an armed group – or perhaps the computers just melting down due to the Year 2000 Problem. Perhaps a financial disaster that cascades into the Greater Depression. In any of these, or a hundred other scenarios, the federal government would almost certainly act precipitously and with a heavy hand, which would bring on a whole other set of consequences. (In the historical context, 9/11 will be viewed as the opening kick-off for the coming Crisis... and the messianic overreaction of Bush and his cronies as the catalyst for turning things from bad to worse. It may be that Hurricane Katrina, for instance, a completely accidental event, may be blamed for providing a pin to burst the financial bubble – which would be a pity, since the neocons could then blame it, not themselves.) There's no way of telling where the Crisis will lead, or how it will end. That's going to depend not only on exactly who's in control, but what they do, whom they're up against, and a hundred other variables we can't even anticipate. One thing that seems certain is that real crisis brings out strong (although not necessarily wise) leadership. Because of its age and size, it will come from the Boomer generation, and it will be in the mold of Roosevelt or Lincoln – both very dangerous precedents. The Boomers in Elderhood will be dogmatic, harsh, puritanical, and quite willing to burn down the barn in order to destroy whatever rats they see. Admix that attitude to a time resembling the Revolution, the Civil War, or WW II, overlain with today's ethnic strife, urbanization, financial overextension, and powerful, compact new weaponry in the hands of foreign fanatics out to teach the Great Satan a lesson, and it's a real witch's brew.If things evolve over the next decade as they did in past analogs, it will be a very un-mellow time indeed. That's assuming things end well, and there's no guarantee they will, as many foreign countries have discovered throughout history. We've been uniquely blessed.
What to Do
Strauss and Howe aren't financial types, and their advice is nebulous along those lines. To sum it up, their suggestion is to learn to swim with the tide by not hoping the current good times last forever; the chances of the good times are coming to an end now. They'd also advise not sticking your head up above the crowd, something that is always very risky when times are in turmoil; remember what happened to Japanese-Americans during the last crisis. They suggest that there will likely be a resurgence of nationalism, much as was the case during past crises. It won't be a good time to be a maverick in the U.S., a thought that makes places like Argentina and New Zealand look even more appealing.(I bought property in both places shortly after this was written, and have been rewarded with a quadruple in both instances – considerably better than would have been the case in the U.S.). Strauss and Howe suggest you look to diversify in all things, so everything won't go bad at once. Brace for the collapse of public support mechanisms. Set your roots with your family, because people you can rely on will be at a premium. Heed emerging community norms, bond with like-minded people, and return to basic, classic virtues. This is sound advice any time, but critical if you're rigging for heavy weather.Assuming you wanted to stay in the U.S., you'd rather be on some land near a small town, and far away from a major city. You'd want to be self-sufficient in as many ways as possible – freeze-dried food. etc. Perhaps Howard Ruff will make a comeback with advice like that, which seems quaint today. But then I'm nothing if not a contrarian.(In hindsight, the original article could have been a bit more specific – other than the suggestions about Argentina and New Zealand. Personally, I believe that unassailable wealth is the best protection against global crisis. For it to be unassailable, your wealth must be at once substantial, free from threat of confiscation, divorced from the whims of the masses, and located in a country or currency that has a good risk/reward profile. Unfortunately, the U.S. doesn't make the cut.In the first instance, the single best way to build wealth now, while there is still time to do so, is in carefully selected gold and other resource stocks. In order for it to be free from the threat of confiscation, at least some part of your wealth needs to reside in a country where you don't. To state the obvious, I would be very cautious about traditional stocks and bonds until we see how things shake out. Rather, get positioned in gold and silver stocks now, ahead of the curve, then sell out for a big profit to the panicking masses and move an increasing percentage of your wealth into tangibles such as gold, silver, and maybe, as part of a diversified portfolio, real estate in especially attractive areas – but only after the bubble has decisively burst.)
A Parting Parable
In case you have any doubts, I buy the theory outlined above and its many ramifications that there isn't room to explore here. It really is scary to think that we could again experience a real Crisis with a capital C; I'm not talking about just a bear market in stocks. If it happens, I promise you stocks and mutual funds will be about the farthest things from most people's minds. At the same time, there's no point in feeling terrorized. This stuff has been going on since the dawn of history. So let me leave you with a parable. I could appropriately quote Ecclesiastes (To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under heaven: a time to be born, and a time to die, a time to plant, and a time to pluck up that which is planted, etc., etc.). But everyone knows that reference. Let me rather give you John O'Hara. At the beginning of O'Hara's novel Appointment in Samara, he tells a brief parable, which I'll summarize:There was a merchant in Baghdad who went to the market with his servant. There they saw Death, who stared at the servant in what seemed a threatening way. Later the servant said "Master, lend me a horse. I shall ride to Samara, and there Death will not find me." The merchant did so, then returned to the market, where he again saw Death, whom he approached and asked why he had stared at his servant in such a threatening way. Death responded, "I wasn't threatening him. I was just very surprised to see him here in Baghdad, since I have an appointment with him in Samara later this afternoon." (Strange, the location for the proverb, in that this was well before the current war).
***There is no doubt that we are now in the Crisis stage… which, according to Strauss and Howe’s “Turnings” theory, may last another decade or more. Is there any way to escape this economic tsunami unscathed?

Personal Privacy Going Down The Drain Too


Who Benefits From Keeping Salaries Secret?
Debate About Whether Transparency on Pay Is Good for Business, Employees
By AUDREY BAKER
Jan. 16, 2008—
The average American office is a place filled with secrets. None of them is more guarded -- or arouses more fascination -- than other people's salaries.
Who wouldn't love to know what a colleague is worth to his or her employer?
Asking about, or revealing, a salary is an entrenched social taboo. But now it's time to bring paychecks out of hiding, financial expert Suze Orman says.
"I think salaries should be posted," Orman said. "Every salary. From the highest down to the lowest. Because then somebody knows what they're worth."
Watch the story tonight on "20/20" at 10 ET
Finding out that someone doing the same job is making more money can be catastrophic for office morale. But Orman says it's the employer who benefits from salary secrecy.
"They can pay you a lot less and pay somebody else a lot more if nobody knows who's getting paid what," she said.
Orman, whose latest book "2009 Action Plan" tops the New York Times' Bestseller's list, says that for generations, keeping salaries secret has made it easier for corporations to protect their bottom line and to discriminate, particularly against women.
Former Goodyear Tire employee Lilly Ledbetter says she's a perfect example of that.
On her first day of work in 1979, she says, she was told never to discuss her salary with anyone. And, for almost 20 years, she never heard anyone at the plant discuss their pay.
Although she suspected she might have been making less than her male co-workers, it wasn't until someone left her an anonymous note that Ledbetter knew for sure. The note listed four people's names and their salaries, and showed that she was earning up to 40 percent less than her male colleagues with the same job. "I was initially humiliated," Ledbetter said. "I felt degraded. I felt like I wanted to hide and I did. I went into the ladies' lounge and sort of regrouped and got my composure."
Soon after her discovery in 1998, Ledbetter sued Goodyear, which denied discriminating and told ABC News it has no policy prohibiting employees from sharing information about their salaries.
In a case that went all the way to the Supreme Court, Ledbetter lost, on a technicality. In order to have standing to sue, she would have had to bring her case within 180 days of the decision to pay her less than the men, although it wasn't until years later that she received the note revealing her coworkers' salaries.
Ledbetter's case led to the The Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, a bill has been re-introduced to Cogress after initially failing to pass in 2007. If the bill is passed, the act would change the law to start a new 180-day statute of limitations with each paycheck.
To Tell or Not to Tell
Orman says there are millions of Ledbetters in the United States "because employers can't afford to let people know what other people are making. If everybody got a pay raise, if everybody wanted more, because they deserve more, what would happen to earnings? What would happen to the bottom line?"
Orman says employees could protect and empower each other by sharing salary information and confronting a boss if there are major discrepancies.
But in the "to tell or not to tell" debate, others say there are downsides to being so open.
Human resources consultant Michael Carroll, who is the author of two books about surviving in the modern workplace, "Awake at Work" and "The Mindful Leader," said employers should be open about how they determine pay but cautioned that sharing salaries at work can have negative repercussions. Many of the things that really distinguish excellent performance are not easily quantified, he says, and people tend not to take into account other perks like benefits and bonuses when they're comparing salaries.
"I have almost invariably seen that when people talk about their salaries in business settings, it almost invariably creates problems and misperceptions and antagonism," he said.
There were some unexpected repercussions a few months ago, for instance, when the boss at a small company in Madison, Wis., decided to put all her employees' salaries on display.
An Overpaid Worker
The young staffers at Penelope Trunk's The Brazen Careerist, a Web service that advises companies how to recruit and retain younger workers, say they have none of the older generation's hang-ups about revealing what they're paid.
"Don't come to work for us if you don't want everyone to know what you're making," said the company's youngest employee, Dan Healy.
Earlier this year, Trunk called everyone into a conference room where she jotted down all of their names and salaries on a board.
But, for all eight employees to see, it turned out there was a discrepancy.
"A lot of people brought up that one person was overpaid and everyone kind of agreed on it," Brazen Careerist co-founder Ryan Healy said.
Soon afterward, Trunk lowered that employee's yearly salary from $120,000 to $85,000.
"Everybody makes mistakes with how much they pay people," Trunk said. "But if everyone keeps it a secret, you can't really see where the mistakes are and no one has to fix them."
Too Much Information
Trunk says it's true that, in essence, she used peer pressure to convince the employee to go along with the pay cut.
"But that's really what all of corporate America is," she said. "It's all about the market telling them where they deserve to be and them being slapped in the face a lot. ... That's how life is."
The employee in question, who has since been laid off, declined to comment.
Opponents say making salaries transparent is a recipe for mayhem in the office. But financial expert Orman disagrees.
"Don't you think you should know what it's really worth at the place that you're working, what other people are getting paid for the job that they're doing, so that when you go in to talk to your boss, you have true material to say, 'I deserve more money'?"
In a tell-all world where talking about salaries could be the last taboo, you might want to ask yourself a question.
Are you curious enough about a colleague's salary to gladly share your own?

I Wonder What That Levin FuckHead says About This!


Bailed-Out Firms Have Tax Havens, GAO Finds
By Carol D. LeonnigWashington Post Staff WriterSaturday, January 17, 2009; D01
Most of America's largest publicly traded corporations -- including several that are receiving billions of dollars from U.S. taxpayers to finance their recovery -- have set up offshore operations that could help them avoid paying U.S. taxes on their profits, a government study released yesterday found.
American International Group, Bank of America, Citigroup and Morgan Stanley are among the companies that are getting bailed out by U.S. taxpayers while having subsidiaries in locations where they can avoid paying U.S. taxes, according to the Government Accountability Office.
Of the 100 largest public companies, 83 do business in tax-haven hotspots like the Cayman Islands, Bermuda and the British Virgin Islands, where they can move their income into tax-free accounts.
It is all legal, but it could come to an end, given the dire condition of the U.S. economy and President-elect Barack Obama's campaign pledge to close this popular business tax loophole. The Treasury estimates that it loses $100 billion a year in tax revenue as a result of companies shipping their income off shore, and congressional leaders are vowing to introduce legislation forcing big companies to pay full freight.
The GAO did not independently review company transactions to see if the companies purposely created tax-haven businesses to avoid U.S. taxes. But it said that historically, offshore subsidiaries are used for reducing tax costs and shielding transactions from public view.
Several of the companies are household names, including Pepsi, Exxon, Dell and Dow Chemical. In the list of 100 companies that GAO studied were 63 with major federal contracts, including Caterpillar, BearingPoint, Boeing, Merck & Co. and Kraft Foods.
Legislators gave particular attention to the 14 companies on the list that received bailout money from the Treasury in the recent financial meltdown. Sens. Byron L. Dorgan (D-N.D.) and Carl M. Levin (D.-Mich.) requested the GAO study as a launching pad for their effort to curtail what they call "tax-dodgers."
The bailout recipients on the list include Bank of America, which received $45 billion; Citigroup, $45 billion; American Express, $3.4 billion; and Goldman Sachs, $10 billion, according to the Taxpayers for Common Sense watchdog group.
"This is kind of like economic patriotism," Dorgan said. "Americans were told you have to pony up some money to help these companies. And it's rather infuriating for them to find out now that those companies, when they were profitable, didn't want to pay taxes and found clever ways to hide their money overseas."
Several companies said they are engaged in legitimate business operations around the world, and rejected the premise that they are trying to avoid paying their share of U.S. taxes.
Representatives from two companies reported in interviews that they couldn't say whether their foreign operations ultimately reduced their total tax bill.
"We do business around the globe," AIG spokesman Nick Ashooh said. "It's absurd that we're being accused of using these as tax havens. Now what the net tax impact is, that's extremely complicated."
The GAO found 17 companies with no business in tax-haven locales, including Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, United Parcel Service, Verizon, Lockheed Martin and Northrup Grumman.
Obama pledged during his campaign to shut down the ability of U.S. corporations to avoid paying taxes by shipping their income to offshore havens. As a senator in 2007, he joined Levin in proposing similar legislation to curb abuse of offshore tax operations and force companies to be more transparent about their overseas operations in those jurisdictions.
Some critics of the loophole argue that the secrecy in tax-haven countries may hide shady accounting at some businesses. Members of Congress say that investigators at the Internal Revenue Service are outgunned in trying to track down who is crossing the line and who is not.
"This is a basic issue of fairness and integrity," Obama said in introducing the 2007 bill. "We need to crack down on individuals and businesses that abuse our tax laws so that those who work hard and play by the rules aren't disadvantaged."
Tax experts said that such legislation has been a perennial in years past, but is "very likely" to gain steam this time around because of growing unpopularity of tax havens.
"The number one thing, however, is we need revenue," said Jack Blum, a tax-haven expert and Washington lawyer who has testified before Congress about shutting down the loophole. "This business of letting people get away with bloody murder by taking their money offshore is inconsistent with trying to fund our government. That is going to put terrific pressure to close down obvious and ridiculous loopholes."
Levin noted that not all companies use such havens and some use far fewer than others. The report found that Citigroup has set up 427 subsidiaries in tax-haven countries, including 91 in Luxembourg, 90 in the Cayman Islands and 35 in the British Virgin Islands.
Levin said other havens where Citigroup has subsidiaries include Switzerland, Hong Kong, Panama and Mauritius. Morgan Stanley has 273 subsidiaries in tax-haven countries, 158 of them in the Caymans, according to the GAO.
"Pepsi has 70 tax-haven subsidiaries, while Coca Cola has eight," Levin said. "Morgan Stanley has 273, while Fannie Mae has zero, and Caterpillar has 49, while Deere has three.''
Morgan Stanley declined to comment on the report.
Citigroup said in a statement: "Citi has more than 4,000 subsidiaries throughout the world which enables us to serve hundreds of millions of individuals and institutions in more than 100 countries."
Sound Of cannons isn't against these firms having offshore money options. We're against all individuals of the United States not having the same option. This is proof that Carl "The Jackass" Levin and his ilk are gainst individual freedoms for US citizens.

Ruh roh! CNBC anchors get in another fight

I'm starting to love Gasparino, the guys got cajones!

TTC Not Dead


Texas Gov. Rick Perry is attempting to engage in a public relations effort designed to distance the Texas Department of Transportation, or TxDOT, from a massive network of toll roads known as the Trans-Texas Corridor, Jerome Corsi's Red Alert contends.
"The days of the Trans-Texas Corridor are over, it's finished up," Perry said speaking with U.S. reporters on a conference call during his visit to Iraq last week.

As WND has been reporting since 2006, the Trans-Texas Corridor project includes a 4,000 mile network of four NAFTA Superhighway truck-train pipelines that TxDOT plans to build over a 50-year period.
"Still," Corsi says, "close examination shows Perry's declaration from Iraq involves yet more public relations efforts by the governor and TxDOT to defuse criticism from voters and reposition a hugely unpopular initiative by dropping the designation 'Trans-Texas Corridor,' or 'TTC,' while still allowing TxDOT to proceed with the components of the original TTC plan that had been scheduled for implementation now."
TxDOT Executive Director Amadeo Saenz said major corridor projects will be scaled back to comprise several small projects closer to 600-feet wide than the originally planned 1,200 foot-wide TTC design. Perry has also confirmed that a new corridor parallel to Interstate-35, previously known as TTC-35, and projects like Interstate 69 will continue.
"In making the announcement, Perry attempted to place blame for the failure of the TTC project to gain public acceptance on farmers and rural interests afraid to lose their land to the project through TxDOT's exercise of eminent domain powers," Corsi writes.
The public relations effort reaffirms the pressure put on TxDOT by Corsi's WND book, "The Late Great USA: The Coming Merger with Mexico and Canada," in which he exposed the TTC plan as part of the transportation component of an emerging North American Union that the Bush administration quietly pushed under the auspices of the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America.
As of today, the Trans-Texas Corridor section of the TxDOT website remains active.
Detailed discussions of TTC-35 and I-69/TTC can also be found on the TxDOT website, indicating that it continues to pursue both projects as originally described, despite Perry's efforts last week with the press to distance himself and TxDOT from the name "Trans-Texas Corridor."
Now Red Alert's author, whose books "The Obama Nation" and "Unfit for Command" have topped the New York Times best-sellers list, assures readers Red Alert plans to follow closely TxDOT's implementation of TTC-35 and I-69/TTC projects. Corsi is convinced both will advance as originally planned despite Perry's recent pronouncements that "TTC is finished."

Metals Price Change At US Mint


In gold news, a story over at forbes.com says "The U.S. Mint said its gold and platinum numismatic coins will now be directly related to the average weekly London fix prices for the metals. The Mint said the pricing change was effective Jan. 12th."

Nicely Said.............

Our contemporary brand of socialism has one fatal flaw. It's too expensive. When you try to shower benefits on so many recipients, you eventually must resort to subterfuge. Foremost among those tricks is money and credit expansion. Inevitably, you debase your currency. - James Cook

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Peter Schiff January 8 2009 Fox Business

Seriously, should we be listening to anyone else but Peter Schiff? He's been dead right so far!!!

FBN's Eric Bolling Calls Out 60 Minutes

We all know that CBS is very anti-business and free market. Their latest hack piece blaming "speculators" on the oil price run-up is sheer hilarity; if it weren't for Joe Six-pack the Idiot thinking it's an unbiased report. Fortunately, a real investor has an answer to the 60 Minutes smear piece on free markets.

Depression ~ And We're Not Talking Xanax



Another Great Depression
I don’t like to start any new year on a gloomy note. I am by nature an optimist, but I am also a realist who readily faces facts. Right now those facts are not very pretty and suggest to me that the world has entered into another Great Depression. Here are some shockers about the US economy that are worth pondering.
The National Bureau of Economic Research reckons that the present recession began in December 2007. In only one month since then has the US economy not lost jobs, but worryingly, the job losses are occurring with increasing momentum suggesting that the economy is spiraling downward.
Last week the US government announced that the unemployment rate rose this past December to 7.2% from 6.8% the month before. The US economy lost 2.6 million jobs in 2008, of which 1.9 million were lost in the past four months. Of these, 524,000 were lost in December alone.
Importantly, there are clear indications that employment will drop further. Companies have been cutting back on hours worked, which reached a record low in December of 33.3 hours per week. This measure is a leading indicator because companies first cut back on hours worked before they cut jobs. Also, layoffs are growing. The Wall Street Journal reports: “The new year has brought no letup on layoffs, as employers have already announced more than 30,000 cuts.”
The monthly unemployment report is prepared by the Bureau of Labor Statistics <http://www.bls.gov/news.release/empsit.nr0.htm>. It reveals that the number of unemployed has climbed over the past year by 3.6 million to 11.1 million, but the real numbers are much worse when looking through the government sugar-coating in these reports. As The Wall Street Journal explains it: “While the official unemployment rate is 7.2%, a different figure that includes discouraged workers who have dropped out of the labor force and those working part-time because they can't find full-time work hit 13.5% in December. That was nearly a full percentage point higher than in the previous month and up from 8.7% at the end of 2007.”
While a 13.5% unemployment rate is shocking, the truth is even worse because the WSJ is still relying upon government reports. To get the unadorned picture, we need to turn to private economists, and I reply upon the work of John Williams of Shadow Government Statistics <http://www.shadowstats.com/>, who presents in his latest report the true picture of the dire unemployment situation: “During the Clinton Administration, ‘discouraged workers’ those had given up looking for a job because there were no jobs to be had were redefined so as to be counted only if they had been ‘discouraged’ for less than a year. This time qualification defined away the bulk of the discouraged workers. Adding them back into the total unemployed, actual unemployment, as estimated by the SGS-Alternate Unemployment Measure, rose to 17.5% in December from 16.6% in November.”
Unemployment is the key measure that signals whether or not a depression has begun, and by the SGS measures we are rapidly approaching the 25% unemployment rate usually mentioned as the most important signpost marking the depths of the Great Depression. That high rate of unemployment cut a wide-swath of misery through the American population.
Given the current 17.5% rate of unemployment, it would appear that I am not far off the mark to suggest that we have entered another Great Depression, and I am not alone in my thinking. Others who are more attuned to the economic situation see it the same way as I do.
For example, the following quote is from an OpEd piece by Nobel Laureate Paul Krugman that was published in The New York Times on January 5th: “The fact is that recent economic numbers have been terrifying, not just in the United States but around the world. Manufacturing, in particular, is plunging everywhere. Banks aren’t lending; businesses and consumers aren’t spending. Let’s not mince words: This looks an awful lot like the beginning of a second Great Depression.”
I agree, which is unusual because I don’t often agree with Mr. Krugman. But not only do I think his observation about another Great Depression is accurate, but I also agree with another key point of the analysis in his article.
Namely, Mr. Krugman observes: “In 2003, Robert Lucas of the University of Chicago, in his presidential address to the American Economic Association, declared that the central problem of depression-prevention has been solved, for all practical purposes, and has in fact been solved for many decades. Milton Friedman, in particular, persuaded many economists that the Federal Reserve could have stopped the Depression in its tracks simply by providing banks with more liquidity, which would have prevented a sharp fall in the money supply...It turns out, however, that preventing depressions isn’t that easy after all.”
Not only is it not “easy”, it is impossible, and the reason is simple. Ludwig von Mises explained this phenomenon in 1912 in his seminal work, “The Theory of Money and Credit”.
Basically, banks make too many loans creating a ‘boom’ that is built upon an unsustainable and shaky foundation of credit. Eventually, the bankers and their borrowers realize that these extensions of credit and the mountain of borrowing that resulted from it was imprudent, and they then seek to improve the dire state of their overleveraged balance sheets. The ‘bust’ occurs because the loans made during good times inevitably lead to bad investment decisions that appear sound only within the illusory prosperity of the boom.
In short, prosperity comes from hard work and savings, not borrowed money and consumption. Unfortunately, hard work and savings have been in short supply, and economies around the world are now feeling the consequences.
For decades the global economy in general and the US economy in particular have enjoyed the boom. They are now in the throws of the bust, and this where Mr. Krugman and I part company. He believes that this current bust can be avoided by more of the same – government spending.
He says: “Friedman’s claim that monetary policy could have prevented the Great Depression was an attempt to refute the analysis of John Maynard Keynes, who argued that monetary policy is ineffective under depression conditions and that fiscal policy – large-scale deficit spending by the government – is needed to fight mass unemployment. The failure of monetary policy in the current crisis shows that Keynes had it right the first time. And Keynesian thinking lies behind Mr. Obama’s plans to rescue the economy.”
This wrong-headed thinking is what put the US economy – and indeed, the global economy – in this mess in the first place. Therefore, the cure cannot possibly come from government spending, all of which is going to come from debt – some $2 trillion of it that is estimated the government will borrow this current fiscal year.
If Mr. Obama follows this advice – and he has clearly indicated that he will – the US government will have gone ‘to the well’ once too often. It is foolhardy to think that the federal government’s resources and borrowing capacity are unlimited. They are not, and more to the point, they have already been exceeded. It’s just that too few people today recognize this reality, which is what always happens in bubbles. People accept certain conventional wisdoms without question or even any cursory analysis. For example, consider the following.
Circa 2000 – It doesn’t matter that Internet stocks are trading at multiples of revenue because ‘these companies are going to change the way we do business’.
Circa 2005 – It doesn’t matter that people are borrowing 125% of the home purchase price because ‘the price of homes always goes up’.
Circa 2009 – US government ‘T-bills and T-bonds are risk free’, so the federal government can borrow unlimited amounts of money. This example of bubble-mentality thinking not only ignores the defaults by countless governments, it also ignores the history of US sovereign defaults (gold in 1933 and silver in 1967) as well as the continuing debasement of the sorry US dollar from inflation.
It is questionable whether Keynesian dogma ever worked, but regardless, one thing is clear. Increased borrowing and spending by an overleveraged government in an overleveraged country that is already the world’s largest debtor will not make the economy strong or lead to an economic revival. It will lead to a collapse of the currency, just like it has done in dozens of countries throughout the world. By pursuing defunct Keynesian dogma the new administration is ringing the bell that signals the death knell of the dollar.
In short, the biggest bubble of them all – that the US dollar is ‘money’ – is about to pop. The US dollar is on the path to the fiat currency graveyard, and will soon get there.
Not only does the US have problems, but like the 1930s, they are global. While it had been hoped that China would be the shock-absorber of the world, both its exports and imports are falling from year-ago levels as its manufacturing activity stalls. Germany is also faltering, as is much of Europe. There is another similarity to the 1930s.
Most people mark the beginning of the Great Depression with the stock market crash in October 1929. I think it actually began over a year later with the collapse of the Bank of the United States in December 1930, a commercial bank based in New York City. Its failure turned an economic downturn into a full-fledged panic that rocked the American banking system to its core, which in turn sent ripple effects throughout the world, just like the collapse of Lehman has done.
Is there some good news for 2009? There are two things that should bring some cheer.
First, the plummeting price of crude oil to $40 a barrel has put some $200 billion back into the pockets of Americans. That may help economic activity somewhat or at the very least, help repair household balance sheets.
Second, gold is likely to have another good year as the world increasingly wakes up to today’s realities. As they do, they will also come to understand that gold is money, which is a good thing to hold any time, but particularly during economic and monetary turmoil.

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

2009 Will Be A Doosy.......But You Knew That


The Credit Depression
Here they come. At the end of 2008, all the social and personal signs of a real depression were absent. They are making themselves present now. The suicides, the frauds, the job losses...they’re all on the front pages of the papers now. If 2008 was the year of the financial crisis, 2009 will be the year it got personal.
We will borrow a term from a reader on the message board which seems apt. It is the credit depression. This amounts to a depression in the belief that tomorrow will be better than today. More on what this means economically in just a moment. But first, to the dictionary!

In Latin, a creditum is a loan or thing entrusted to another. The Latin for “to entrust” or “to believe” is “credere.” The word “creed” also has similar origins, as you can see.
So a credit depression is a period when belief or trust in a set of ideas falls to new lows. The basic creed itself (for example, the idea of fiat money) might even be, ahem, discredited.
We’d suggest that 2009 will be the year when a lot of previously and thoughtless held beliefs are discredited. Just ask Ramalinga Raju, the previous head of Satyam Computer Services (NYSE: SAY). Satyam is India’s fourth-largest software export services firm.
Raju is the former head of Satyam because he quit last week after telling investors the company’s profits had been falsely inflated for years. The stock price fell by nearly 80% after the lie was disclosed. He said about $1 billion of the company’s so-called cash-or 94% of the total on the books-was a complete fabrication (from the Latin Fabricare, to fashion or to build).
Now we are finding out how much of modern commerce and economic activity has been built on a lie. That is why etymologies are so useful. The names of things and what we actually call them tell us something about their nature (if they are aptly named). In these days of 24/7 news and digital media, we drift away from the origin of things and have little time to question where they came from.
Thank goodness we can take time out to reckon daily!
In any event, the credit depression is upon us. Raju, Madoff, Adolf Merckle...these are just the poster boys for the crisis. The collapse in real asset values and real wealth is going to cost a lot of people a lot more. But then you’ve heard that before from us, so we won’t dwell on it.
In Australia you won’t find a lot of obvious signs that the credit depression is upon us. After all, the National Australia Bank used the Rudd government’s guarantee of bank debt to raise $3.5 billion from U.S. investors yesterday. ANZ has managed to borrow $3.7 billion as well. In fact, according to Eric Johnston in today’s Age, Aussie banks have used the guarantee to secure over $37 billion funding.
But what does this really mean? “Secure funding” is just another way of saying “borrow money.” To the extent that the money is raised overseas, it’s both good and bad. It’s good if you believe it shows that foreign lenders trust the Aussie government guarantee and loan the banks money.
It’s bad, however, in that Australia banks are importing capital from foreign lenders. Capital is an increasingly scarce resource these days. And though the banks have been able to borrow, it’s been at higher rates than this time last year. How much of the foreign-sourced capital is going to make it back to Australian borrowers (both business and household?) Hmm.
And what about the retail economy? November retail sales figures were better than expected. But according to Steve Scott in today’s Financial Review, once you strip out food sales from the figures, it was actually the worst November on record for retail sales. Ouch.
“How bad do you think it will get?” asked a friend in an e-mail yesterday. Our friend has a Master’s Degree in Classics (Latin and Greek). We know that when he starts wondering what’s going on in the economy there are probably a lot of other people starting to sit up and question their basic economic beliefs too. Here is what we told him…
“First, our long national love affair with debt is over. When you first fall in love, you’re happy to ignore all the little blemishes, faults, and habits that later drive you insane. The dependence on revolving credit, home equity lines of credit, and zero percent financing didn’t seem like a bad thing as long as people had steady incomes and could pay the interest.
“But now, asset values are falling...but the principal on the debt remains. People will shake themselves vigorously and wake up to the credit depression we live in. They will learn to live within, or even below, their means. Wherever that level is, it’s a lot lower than today. The upside is that it’s probably more natural and relaxing and less stressful. Stress kills the brain. So people may be poorer and hungrier. But some of them may actually be happier. Not all, mind you.

“Second, as people dial back their spending and consumption habits, it sends ripples throughout the economy. For example, tomorrow’s jobs figure in the U.S. will likely be the worst in sixty years. Over 700,000 Americans will have lost their jobs in December. This is on top of 400,000 in November.
“A million people axed in two months. Job losses result in fewer incomes, and incomes are the source of business profits. As jobs and incomes fall, so do business profits, and thus business hiring. A feedback loop.
“Plus, in these kinds of times, people save more and spend less. In an economy based on consumption (not production) lower levels of spending are bad for stocks and jobs. The government will try to fix this by giving people more money to spend. But the problem isn’t with people. It’s with the model. An economy structurally oriented to consumption is not one that produces real wealth or long-term capital assets. It just produces people who have debts they cannot pay, albeit in a house with a nice TV and great digital programming.
“As household and business consumption (spending) fall, the government, under the banner of Keynes, will take to the field en masse. The armies of Fed money will be deployed, street by street, to patrol the economy in little platoons of stimulation. The ammunition for these armies will come from either Japanese or Chinese savers (via bond purchases) or from nowhere (the Fed creating more money).
“Either way, the result seems unambiguously bad. If borrowed, the stimulus money must be repaid, and presumably at increasingly higher rates of interest the more rapidly America’s fiscal position erodes. Either way, with interest expense already nearly 10% of the Federal budget, you can expect it to rise when the U.S. government has to pay interest on a trillion dollars of new borrowing.
“To meet these interest payments, the government is going to have to raise taxes or cut spending. Of course that’s hard to do when you’re deliberately spending more to begin with. If spending is going to be cut, it’d have to be from Defense, or Social Security and Medicare/Medicaid benefits (raising the retirement age, means testing benefits).
“But even with more borrowing and higher taxes, it’s likely the Fed is going to have to simply print new money to conduct its unconventional monetary policy. Money supply will grow. And what does that really mean? Inflation. Much higher inflation. Rising prices for everyday goods like food and fuel and clothes.
“Inflation is also a huge tax on savers and those who live on a fixed income. You know, the prudent people who saved for their own retirement. Inflation accelerates the depletion rate of their accumulated savings by steadily reducing purchasing power. $10,000 saved in 1970 ain’t what it used to be. This should be good for gold, however.
“As inflation punishes those living on a fixed income, it will also push them closer to needing some sort of government aid. This in turn raises the percentage of federal spending going to Social Security and Medicare and Medicaid. It’s a transfer of old age and pension provisions from the private sector to the public sector.
“But can America really afford it? Clearly not, which more than sucks for people who’ve lived their whole adult lives believing they’d be able to retire comfortably through a combination of a diversified portfolio and a supplementary check from the Social Security Administration.
“It’s looking more and more like the entire project of spending a quarter of your adult productive life idle and living off the income generated from your assets (houses, stocks, savings) is...well...dead. It simply ain’t gonna happen for most people. And by most, we’re talking 99%. People will work longer, harder, and leave leaner and meaner than they ever thought they’d have to.
“The rest of the world will not be ready to continue funding America’s desire to live beyond its means. Why would Chinese and Japanese savers continue to invest in U.S. bonds and notes (effectively keeping U.S. interest rates low AND loaning Uncle Sam the money he needs to keep the promises he’s made)?
“In a world where investors are focused only on annual rates of return on their capital, you could argue that global savers would pour money into the U.S. govt bond market now and until the cows come home. It’s the safest bet in the world.
“But that’s not the world we live in anymore. In the world in which we live — the one with a credit depression — capital (accumulated savings...or surplus income from your hard work) is a scarce and jealously guarded asset. You have to reckon people will be more worried about the return OF their capital than the return ON their capital.

“All of which means America’s days of borrowing at low rates of interest from the rest of the world in order to build an economy based on buying things...are over. So you should find a job with a real skill that people are willing to pay for. Get your money out of stocks (though they’ll bounce in the next few months probably). Look for a home you can really live in and want to own (and aren’t trying to flip). But generally, your greatest assets will probably be your real skills that can be traded for goods or services (and not financial instruments you hold in a portfolio). It’ll be hard for people to live off income generated from financial assets...mostly because those assets are going to keep falling in real terms for quite a while.
So that’s how bad it could be

Is This Manufactured Financial Crisis Going To Bring In The NWO?



Chorus call for New World Order
In economic and financial desperation, leaders around the globe are openly calling for the creation of a "New World Order," including prominent "old guard" members of the Trilateral Commission. Is the baby about to be born?
The return of the Trilateral undead
It's not accidental that so many of the original members of the Trilateral Commission, all of whom are now well into their 80's, have returned to dance in the limelight once again.
TC Members like Henry Kissinger, Zbigniew Brzezinski, Paul Volker and Brent Scowcroft, for instance.
On January 5, 2009, Henry Kissinger was interviewed by CNBC on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. His voice still raspy and spoken with a thick accent, he responded to a question about President-elect Obama's first actions as President:
"he can give new impetus to American foreign policy ... I think that his task will be to develop an overall strategy for America in this period, when really a 'new world order' can be created. It's a great opportunity. It isn't such a crisis."
While the rest of the country slips into depression and financial collapse, to Kissinger "it isn't such a crisis."
And, of course it isn't -- for him.
Kissinger has been patiently waiting since at least 1973 for his New World Order egg to hatch.
And remember, in July 1971, Kissinger was the very first diplomat (under Nixon) to visit Communist China in order to open up trade relations with that brutal dictatorship. Oh, and that was an absolutely top-secret trip.
The Trilateral Commission was founded in 1973 to create a "New International Economic Order." George H.W. Bush, also a Trilateral, later spoke of inaugurating a "New World Order." Hence, in Trilateral literature, the two terms have been synonymous ever since. (see The Trilateral Commission: Usurping Sovereignty)
Kissinger earlier praised Obama's picks for economic recovery, and why not?
Obama picked Trilateral Commission wonder boy Timothy Geithner to be Secretary of the Treasury. The rest of the team are protégés of Robert Rubin, also a Trilateral and former Treasury Secretary under Clinton.
Obama's top foreign policy advisor has been Zbigniew Brzezinski, the co-founder of the Trilateral Commission with David Rockefeller.
In 1974, Brzezinski stated,
"We need to change the international system for a global system in which new, active and creative forces recently developed - should be integrated. This system needs to include Japan. Brazil, the oil producing countries, and even the USSR, to the extent which the Soviet Union is willing to participate in a global system... the reality of our times is that a modern society such as the U.S. needs a central coordinating and renovating organ which cannot be made up of six hundred people..”
For the uninitiated, "six hundred people" refers to Congress: Replace it with a Socialist/Communist central coordinating organ.
The call in Europe
Sarkozy (France), Merkel (Germany) and Blair (Great Britain) are all calling for a New World Order.
On January 7, French President Nicolas Sarkozy said that "In the 21st century, there it is no longer a single nation who can say what we should do or what we should think."
German Chancellor Angela Merkel said that the world "cannot continue as it is."
Both Tony Blair and the current British PM Gordon Brown have repeatedly called for a New World Order for many years, but their cries are intensified.
Interestingly, when President-elect Obama delivered a speech in 2008 to hundreds of thousands in Germany, he stated,
Tonight, I speak to you not as a candidate for President, but as a citizen — a proud citizen of the United States, and a fellow citizen of the world.”
The media hailed Obama for his vision of America and the New World Order.
Sampling of the global press
Indeed, the chorus for a New World Order is being heard around the world.
Africa: Time for a new world order
Australia: We need a new world health order
Canada: A new world order rising?
China: Hu urges revamp of finance system
India: Plotting India's route in the new world order
Japan: New financial order will emerge from crisis
Malaysia: Groups to call for new world order
Quatar: Islam to emerge as the new world order
A crisis made to order?
Dr. Robert A. Pastor, the principal visionary of the North American Union, stated in 2007,
"What I'm saying is that a crisis is an event which can force democratic governments to make difficult decisions like those that will be required to create a North American Community," he said. "It's not that I want another 9/11 crisis, but having a crisis would force decisions that otherwise might not get made."
So, now we have the mother of all crises and on a global scale at that: Financial, political, religious (remember Islam?).
And socialistic solutions are being railroaded through on a daily basis.
If the New World Order baby is about to be delivered, wouldn't you expect the fathers (Kissinger, Brzezinski, Scowcroft, Volker, Rockefeller, et al) to show up and pace the floor?
Everybody figures that these guys are just crusty and harmless old men, but I will guarantee that when the baby is finally born the screaming will begin.

Different Decade, Same Mistakes


Lords of Finance
Jan 8th 2009 The central bankers of the Great Depression were obsessed with a single idea, rather like their successors today

CENTRAL bankers were compelling figures in the 1920s, not least because they preferred to operate in secret. The cloak was peculiarly attractive to Sir Montagu Norman, governor of the Bank of England (pictured above, right), who adopted a false identity when he travelled, though this sometimes attracted attention rather than deflecting it. Asked for his reasons for promoting a policy, Norman replied: “I don’t have reasons. I have instincts.” Benjamin Strong, Norman’s principal collaborator, ran the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, which was responsible for America’s international financial relationships. In the mid-1920s, Strong decided the American economy was sufficiently prosperous that he could widen his brief to promote economic stability. Liaquat Ahamed suggests that Strong more than anyone else “invented the modern central banker”.
Norman and Strong were wedded to the gold standard. Emile Moreau, the less clubable governor of the Banque de France, was an obsessive hoarder of gold and tended to do his nation’s own thing. The arrogant Hjalmar Schacht (above left), a spiky German nationalist who headed the Reichsbank, had, by a remarkable sleight of hand, ended Germany’s hyperinflation in 1923, but he was unable to persuade his fellow central bankers to forget reparations, even though they all appreciated that heavy post-war payments were “bleeding Germany white”.
The quartet, united by a belief that they knew best, had persuaded the great powers to leave the fate of their economies to the antique workings of the gold standard—“a barbarous relic” in the view of John Maynard Keynes. They had the power, in a legendary phrase, to “crucify mankind upon a cross of gold”, and they did so. The problem was that there was not enough gold to finance world trade. Stocks were concentrated in America and France, and countries like Britain, where it was scarce, had to borrow heavily, and to adjust interest rates and government spending at the expense of employment in order to replenish gold reserves.
A loan organised by Strong enabled Norman to get Britain back onto the gold standard in 1926 (it had slipped off during the first world war). Norman’s advice helped persuade Strong to lower interest rates in 1927, which only increased irrational exuberance on Wall Street.
These early central bankers were an odd lot. Norman, who dabbled with spiritualism, apparently informed a colleague that he could walk through walls. He suffered regular nervous breakdowns, and was actually on sick leave when Britain left the gold standard again in 1931. Strong suffered from permanent ill health and was often affected by the generous use of morphine to control pain. He died in October 1928 before the Wall Street Crash and the Great Depression, but Mr Ahamed does not appear to believe that things would have turned out any differently had he lived: in a crushing conclusion, he writes that the Great Depression was “the direct result of a series of misjudgments by economic policymakers…by any measure the most dramatic series of collective blunders ever made by financial officials.” Looking back in 1948, Norman’s judgment was no less harsh. “We achieved absolutely nothing,” he said, “except that we collected a lot of money from a lot of poor devils and gave it to the four winds.”
Politicians were left to clear up the mess they left. One of them was Hitler, who readily instigated a series of measures to combat German unemployment which were similar to those Gordon Brown is adopting today. (Schacht later joined the anti-Hitler resistance.) Britain’s prospects brightened as soon as the gold standard was dropped. The French, less troubled, remained loyal to gold until 1936.
But the most original solution was that of President Franklin Roosevelt, soon after his inauguration in 1933. Mr Ahamed resurrects a 59-year-old agricultural economist from Cornell University by the name of George Warren, whose study of long-term trends in commodity prices led him to believe that, since falling prices were associated with depression, recovery ought to be encouraged by rising prices. The president liked the idea and decided to devalue the dollar—despite vigorous opposition from the gold bugs—simply by increasing the gold price. One of his own economic advisers lamented: “This is the end of Western civilisation.” For a number of weeks, the president would consult his advisers over boiled eggs at breakfast and randomly drive up the gold price, beginning at $31.36 an ounce until it settled at $35. By then a recovery was under way.
This absorbing study of the first collective of central bankers is provocative, not least because it is still relevant. Mr Ahamed, who was a World Bank economist and now manages investments in America, likens central bankers to Sisyphus. This was the man whom the gods condemned to roll a large stone up a steep hill only for it to roll down again when it reached the peak. These great central bankers were so wedded to a dogma that they were incapable of imagining its failure.
Perhaps this kind of single-mindedness is endemic to central bankers; since the early 1990s the idea of controlling inflation at all costs has been so compelling that central bankers have ignored such unintended consequences as bubbles in the housing and stock markets. But these were big enough, when they burst, to trigger a worldwide slump. Not lords of finance surely; more like high priests.

Nice Commentary From Forbes

Investigating Goldman Sachs' shorting its own mortgage-backed securities when Henry Paulson was CEO would be a good start in cleaning up the mess and restoring confidence. Prosecuting JPMorgan Chase's involvement in sucker-punching gold prices last August would be another step toward restoring confidence. - Curtis Hesler, Forbes.com, 12 January 2009

Monday, January 12, 2009

He Was A Liberal, But Thoreau Had A Lot Of Things Right

All men recognize the right of revolution; that is, the right to refuse allegiance to, and to resist, the government, when its tyranny or its inefficiency are great and unendurable. But almost all say that such is not the case now. But such was the case, they think, in the Revolution of ‘75. If one were to tell me that this was a bad government because it taxed certain foreign commodities brought to its ports, it is most probable that I should not make an ado about it, for I can do without them. All machines have their friction; and possibly this does enough good to counter-balance the evil. At any rate, it is a great evil to make a stir about it. But when the friction comes to have its machine, and oppression and robbery are organized, I say, let us not have such a machine any longer. In other words, when a sixth of the population of a nation which has undertaken to be the refuge of liberty are slaves, and a whole country is unjustly overrun and conquered by a foreign army, and subjected to military law, I think that it is not too soon for honest men to rebel and revolutionize. What makes this duty the more urgent is that fact that the country so overrun is not our own, but ours is the invading army.— Henry David Thoreau

Very Nicely Said.........................


"Socialism proposes no adequate substitute for the motive of enlightened selfishness that today is at the basis of all human labor and effort, enterprise and new activity." -William Howard Taft

Nicely Said.........................

"Politics is taking money away from people who don't support you to give to people who do." -Alfred Regnery, Jr. {like Detroit Auto Workers}

Tax Shelters Under Seige


Obama To Declare War on Cayman Islands, Bermuda
By Bob Bauman
O.K., so the headline isn’t exactly accurate, but it did catch your eye. And if one David Cay Johnston has his perverse way, it would be a statement of fact.
Indeed, Johnston seriously calls for a U.S. declaration of war not only on the Cayman Islands, but also Bermuda and other offshore tax havens. His lengthy radical views are set out in an article ("Fiscal Therapy") in the Jan-Feb 2009 issue of the left-leaning magazine Mother Jones, known for investigative reporting with a decidedly radical slant.
Ordinarily a nutty proposal such as Johnston's could be laughed off as evidence of a sick sense of humor or an advanced mental problem, but Johnston is not your run of the mill left-wing nut.
Prize Winning Radical
In 2001 Johnston won a Pulitzer Prize "for his penetrating and enterprising reporting that exposed loopholes and inequities in the U.S. tax code."
At the time he was the tax reporter for The New York Times, and now is a columnist for the trade journal, Tax Notes. In 2008 he left The Times after 14 years and has since been hawking books he authored with titles such as his current tome, Perfectly Legal: The Covert Campaign to Rig Our Tax System to Benefit the Super Rich – and Cheat Everybody Else and the scintillating Free Lunch: How the Wealthiest Americans Enrich Themselves at Government Expense (and Stick You With the Bill).
The Liberal Conspiracy
I've never held much stock in conspiracy theories, especially as they apply to the American news media and what one might call the “U.S. leftist elite.”
These condescending liberals are always certain they know better than the common man. They don't need to conspire among themselves. Knee-jerk liberals know automatically what the leftist party line is at any given moment: big government, more regulation and control, higher taxes, and welfare state economics are all second nature to them. Mention an issue and they always parrot the left-wing party line.
Johnston's Bilge
In 2001, I wrote the following: "In many ways a classic example of this is The New York Times. More particularly, its highly biased 'reporter,' David Cay Johnston. I've been reading his 'reporting' bilge for years and he never misses a chance to dump on people of wealth, U.S. corporations or, his special ‘bete noir’, tax havens and the offshore financial world in general."
At that time in 2001, Johnson was engaged in a multi-article smear against American corporations that legally moved offshore to reduce high U.S. taxes and to increase shareholder equity value and dividends. He twisted facts to claim the true reason for these offshore moves was fattening corporate salaries.
Unfortunately this sort of class warfare is good for sensational, if false, headlines that stir up controversy. Democrats in the U.S. Congress, such as Michigan Senator Carl Levin, have used the manufactured issue of offshore tax havens to claim Republicans favor "big business" at the expense of that mythical "little man." Johnston's slanted reporting at The Times was a precursor to Senator Barack Obama's "Stop Tax Haven Abuse Act" S. 681, first introduced in 2007.
I'm not going to bore you again with the economics or the facts about tax havens, but we should all recognize: 1) the Big Lie for what it is, and; 2) those charlatans who habitually seek to hoodwink the American people into surrendering our financial freedoms.
Johnston’s War
But I'll let Johnston speak for his radical self. The following is a direct quote from his Mother Jones article - and, based on his past statements, I don't think he is kidding:
Invade the Caymans!
In 1983 just 10% of America's corporate profits were funneled through places that charge little or no corporate income tax; today more than 25% of profits go through tax havens. The Obama administration could tell the Caymans – now fifth in the world in bank deposits – to repeal its bank secrecy laws or be invaded; since the island nation's total armed forces consists of about 300 police officers, it shouldn't be hard for technicians and auditors, accompanied by a few Marines, to fly in and seize all the records. Bermuda, which relies on the Royal Navy for its military, could be next, and so on. Long before we get to Switzerland and Luxembourg, their governments should have gotten the message.
Barring gunboat diplomacy (tempting as it is), there is no reason we cannot pass laws to block financial transactions with tax havens or even, Cuba-style, make it a crime for Americans to visit or do business with them without special permission. Congress could declare the hiding of funds a threat to national security and require that anyone with offshore assets disclose them to the IRS within 30 days and pay taxes, interest, and penalties within 180 days. For the holdouts, temporary special teams in the IRS and Justice Department could speedily pursue civil or criminal charges.

Where Do All Those Tax Millions Go?


Compounding Error: Your Tax Dollars at Work
As we hunker down in the Sound Of Cannons Towers and await the hyperinflationary doom that is bound to come, we have to marvel at the reasons for and manner of our nation’s destruction. As a group currently numbering somewhere around 300 million souls, we’ve sold out our security, freedom and future for what? Unpayable debt on tract housing pods, car dependence and cheap doodads from the Far East? It’s almost funny.
And what has been the means by which hundreds of millions of people have turned themselves into a race of clowns bound for extinction? Why, faith in the voting booth… Misplaced trust in the state...The usual stuff.

Government is simply the means of compounding mistakes, of bundling them up and paying them forward. Instead of the agility of the market, you get the lead foot and heavy hand of centralized planning. Mistakes that individuals would make and learn from — in the form of individual bankruptcies and failures — are necessary to keep a society on a healthy and sustainable path. That multitude of tiny failures throughout society is a required corrective feedback…but people — given the chance — come by and by to prefer the state’s interference to this natural process of failure and correction. The state impedes processes that are unpleasant in the short term, but healthy and essential for the long term.
Acceleratory hyper-growth is only possible with the streamlined efficiency of the state, but that efficiency and that growth come at the cost of inevitable overshoot. The actual slow and steady growth of a market-driven world is replaced by the state’s breakneck “efficiency,” but the mistakes that characterize the creative destruction of the market don’t magically disappear…they get stored up and unleashed all at once later.
Our tendency toward bad decisions manifests as massive governance itself. Government is simply humanity’s way of ignoring reality’s warnings…at least for a while… People cherish the roads, the trade, the complexity and comfort that come to fill their lives: Highways, globalism, social security, the peace of empire, systems too big and wonderful to go without and too big to fail…until they do.
The mobs always favor lending the state more power and the state is only too happy to keep the goodies coming by the usual scams: currency debasement, easy credit, foreign resource grabs. The market would probably never have brought us many of the supposed “goodies” to which we’ve become so accustomed and certainly not at the scales only possible with larger government. And we most likely would have been better off.
The state is essentially pretence to a wealth that doesn’t really exist. The state’s essence is welfare and warfare. It’s public works, make-work, misappropriation and misallocation.
Want more of something, but can’t afford it? Want roads, highways, more trade, or war when trade doesn’t work to your liking? No problem!
Guaranteed income in old age? Nationalized compulsory education (and indoctrination), nationalized health care, government guarantee against all failure? Just ask.
Why merely allow an economy to grow at that a glacial but natural rate? Just stimulate! Lower interest rates below what the stodgy market would have. When in need, print money and goose the system with pretend wealth.
And if all the above result in an infrastructure and lifestyle that require deals with the devil to prop up…? Well, a state can always resort to war.

Were an individual to commit pre-emptive murder (“my neighbors kept looking at me funny…”), take things that didn’t belong to him or pass bad checks, he’d be locked up before too long. If a smallish group of unelected individuals were to do this, we’d call them gangsters. But grand larceny, gangsterism and mass murder become things to celebrate in the hands of the state. In fact these things are the true raison d’etre of governments. Things that the sane and law-abiding individual would never dream of doing on his own become entirely reasonable when he is in the midst of a mob. That’s the appeal of government. The formation of the state is the manifestation of the uniquely human tendency to overreach. The state is the culmination of the wish to ignore limits: of ecology, of civility and of good sense. It specializes in fostering the unsustainable — spending, habits, infrastructure and population—through activities normally regarded as sin when done by any individual.
Right now the market seems to be telling us one thing, but the feds would like us to believe another. They want us to believe that we can and should keep zooming back and forth over massive distances, getting goods cheaply from around the world, showing up dutifully every day to our cubicles…but according to the market it’s time to reform our ways and redirect our energies…time to create a built environment worth inhabiting and more in line with what will work amid reduced energy availability and to occupy ourselves with things worth doing, like producing the things we need to live closer to where we live.
The market — oft-ignored augur of reality — seems to be telling us to expect to stay closer to home, to start a garden, maybe even to get to work on an actual farm. It’s time to come in from the exurban expanse. It’s time for the auto industry to die — the commercial airlines, too. Heck, if it hadn’t been for the federal government’s vigorous intervention neither of those industries might ever have assumed the size and importance they did in the first place. The market would have gotten in the way of a lot of the things we take for granted today…but then we wouldn’t miss them. Now we get to bawl as our presumed entitlements of conquering distance, ease and plenty get ripped away from us.
The market is trying its best to start correcting those state-driven errors. Maybe it’s trying to pry coddled unionized workers from the cooling corpse grip of the auto industry so that labor can be (naturally) reallocated to local food production (farms). But the state will fight that by stealing a little bit from everyone in the form of inflation in order to prop up that which should fail. The same goes for every other “bailout.” The market says firmly “Time to stop this…and it was a dumb idea anyway,” but the state will resist... But that’s what states do. They try to defy the market by means of theft and force…and as a result bundle the mistakes and their consequences to be suffered all at once.

Please don’t misunderstand; I’m not calling for any edicts or proposed solutions from the state. That’s rather like asking the arsonist to help put out the fire. I don’t care much if climate change is manmade. I don’t care whether or not you believe Peak Oil is a hoax. I just know that somethin’s gotta’ give. We’ve gotten away with efficiently making collective stupid decisions for a long time. Now it’s time to get what we got coming…good and hard. What I expect to happen is for the mess to sort itself out with all the attendant consequences. Sometimes there’s no easy way out despite the wishing and the begging. Sometimes you can’t avoid the gnashing of teeth and the wailing that goes with it.

Nicely Said........................

"From cradle to grave only the higher law of nature should guide man's journey."-Anthony Wile

Pop Quiz Hotshot!


What do Fannie Mae, Social Security and the SEC have in common?
I mean, other than the fact that all three are obviously at the heart of our current economic woes. Sure, Fannie Mae used its implicit government backing to legitimize hundreds of billions in bad loans, the SEC provided an air of legitimacy to operations like Bernie Madoff’s, and some US$40 trillion in Social Security obligations hang over America’s head like some financial Sword of Damocles. But there’s something else they all share in common…
All three are creations of the original New Deal…you know, the one that helped us “get out of the Great Depression.” So with just a few days left before Obama takes office and begins a whirlwind of tax-fueled stimulus projects, perhaps we should look back and ask that taboo question; did the New Deal really work?
It’s taboo because of Americans’ short memory. According to Salon.com’s David Sirota, it’s ‘common knowledge’ amongst any and all educated professionals that the New Deal worked swimmingly. According to Sirota, the argument is a cheap front used by Republicans and the right-leaning members of Congress to block Obama’s planned stimulus. He cites Newsweek’s Daniel Gross, “One would be very hard-pressed to find a serious professional historian who believes that the New Deal prolonged the Depression.”
Hmm…really, Daniel?
How about this one: “only about half of the economists and three quarters of the historians disagreed fully with the statement that the New Deal lengthened and deepened the Great Depression.” That’s from a 1998 survey of history textbooks. So with some obvious disagreement between real academics and the mainstream media, let’s dig in to either side and see whose arguments really hold water.
New Deal supporters offer a relatively simple argument for why the programs worked. With the economy in shambles, investors weren’t investing and industry was slowing to a crawl. So instead of waiting for the market to bring those dollars out into circulation, FDR ramped up vice taxes and started some aggressive deficit spending. He started outlandish projects – from the memorable Hoover Dam to the gladly forgettable Agricultural Adjustment Acts – and had the government step in to fill the void in the marketplace left behind by private investors and entrepenuers.
And in doing so, he saved us from something that could’ve been much worse. Or did he?
A public opinion poll conducted in 1939 showed that 65% of business executives believed that Roosevelt’s New Deal policies had so affected business confidence that recovery had been seriously delayed. Indeed, you can even count the legendary John Maynard Keynes into this camp, “Keynes repeatedly criticized FDR for discouraging private business investment with his taxes, regulations and overheated rhetoric.”
Why did they disagree with the New Deal? For various reasons, not the least of which being a disdain for government interference in private enterprise. Without the rigorous forces of competition and the careful assessment of risk & cost that you find in the marketplace, the government’s policies were notoriously disruptive and inherently wasteful.
The best example would be the aforementioned Agricultural Adjustment Act. With the goal of increasing food prices, the AAA laid waste to over 10 million acres of crops and slaughtered 6 million pigs. The result? Famine deepened and became even more widespread.
And with the government rampaging about like an elephant on roller skates, it can be very hard to feel safe in the marketplace. Amid the allegations that these policies were fascist or even communist in nature, one can’t deny that the market wasn’t a safe place for investors. After all, what’s the real difference between FDR’s gold confiscation and Venezuela’s confiscation of the oil industry? Sure, they may be different in scale and scope, but they communicate the same message to businesses and corporations; this place is not safe enough for my money.
But aside from how the investors felt back then…in the long-term, didn’t the New Deal end the Depression?
Again, that’s a pretty romantic take on it. The cynical observer would point to the fact that unemployment persisted throughout the whole of the 1930’s – averaging 17% on the decade. After that, we spent the first half of the 1940’s annihilating the rest of the world’s industrial base (Germany, Japan) and then we muscled the entire globe into using our currency as a reserve.
And perhaps most importantly, the New Deal “ended” the Great Depression with the help of a few major economic distortions…like Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Over the course of the last several decades, these and other programs have created a towering balance of malinvestment and a worldwide disruption of wealth that helped plant the seed for today’s economic carnage.
So before we dive headfirst into the biggest fiscal deficit in the history of governing people, perhaps we should question “common knowledge” and ask about the potential consequences of such lavish government spending. After all, we’ll already be passing along over US$50 trillion in national debt and Social Security obligations to the next generation. Perhaps that’s enough.

Slaves To Fiat Currency


Trade Deficit = Freedom Deficit
The trade deficit can be a difficult thing to grasp. Fortunately, Sound Of Cannons has a talent for making sense out of complicated economics...
"Consider what happens when individuals barter with each other," he said. "A baker trades a loaf of bread with the farmer for a dozen eggs. A tailor trades a suit of clothes for a cow. A migrant worker trades an afternoon's labor for a meal and a place to sleep. Is a ‘trade deficit' possible in any of these cases? Could there be a deficit if, say, a shirt maker in China trades 1,000 shirts for 100 barrels of oil from, say, some producer in Texas?"
"Obviously, no. A gives something to B in exchange for something else and both get what they bargained for. No deficit is possible."
"So how is it that when the farmer, or the migrant worker, or the Chinese shirt maker trade their goods and services for money, that suddenly the deficit problem pops up?"
"Because when individuals trade real goods, the exchange is complete. But when one half of an exchange is for money, the government enters the picture. Individuals create real goods and services with labor and capital, while governments create the money by "fiat" (i.e., by law), simply pushing computer keys and running printing presses. The newly created money, which cost next to zero to print, buys up real goods and services. And as the money percolates through the economy, it leaves a swath of destructive imbalances, including such things as inflation and trade deficits. Governments then step in with more laws and restrictions that purport to solve the economic problems that their fiat money policies spawned."
"Money creation is a form of theft (and, as my friend Richard Maybury once said, theft is just a nice word for taxation), albeit so subtle that the public never seems to catch on. In a world where individuals and not governments were sovereign, the marketplace couldn't have trade deficits or inflation, as the marketplace has feedback mechanisms to deal with anyone who creates irredeemable money. But when governments usurp the freedom of individuals by passing laws defining legal money as the money printed by the government, all manner of economic evils follow."
"What can a sovereign individual do? Forget futile efforts to influence the politicians, and assume everything they do to ‘solve' the trade deficit will reduce your freedoms even more. Go to the root of the problem, which is fiat money. Historically, gold and silver have been the free-market's choice for trade, and the ultimate refuge from fiat monies. You can regain some sovereignty in the monetary arena by holding and dealing in real money whenever possible. Gold and silver, whether held as assets to defend against depreciating currencies, or as mechanisms for trade through free-market exchanges like GoldMoney.com, or LibertyDollar.org, are real money. Hold and use real, free-market money whenever you can."

Nicely Said....................

"Guard with jealous attention the public liberty. Suspect everyone who approaches that jewel." -Patrick Henry

Silver Fundamentals In Review (In Case You're Frustrated)


Many people keep asking me to discuss the fundamentals of silver. Ok. But they don't change much.

Over 100 years ago, in the late 1880's, Germany stopped using silver as money, going to a pure gold standard. This started an 80 year long trend of silver no longer being used as money. India abandoned silver in the Great Depression, flooding the world with silver that was no longer being used in their coinage. This pushed silver prices down to that 25 cents per ounce level. It had nothing to do with deflation or the depression, it was demonetization. Reduced demand results in lower prices.Today, no nation on earth uses silver as money.Thus, monetary demand can only change in one direction. It can only go up, from a baseline, now, of zero. If it goes up, and people start using silver as money, the demand will increase, and prices will increase.There is another major silver trend, this one 60 years long. Back at the end of WWII, the age of electronics began, and per capita silver usage in the USA increased ten fold, to a level that was sustained even until today. Other nations followed as they industrialized.The age of silver consumption has consumed nearly 1/2 of all the silver ever mined in all of human history. Fortunately, that amount of silver has been mined in the last 60 years, too! These two tidal forces (one, monetary demand returning, when two, world silver is scarce due to past consumption) will collide, with many others, to drive silver prices way up. Since these two forces are such long term trends, it can be understandable that I was early, by a decade, in my predictions of massively higher silver prices. The fundamentals about silver are the fundamentals about money.Today, we are in the age of inflation. Not deflation. Deflation is not lower prices. Inflation is "more money". Today, there is more electronic and paper money due to $8 trillion in bail outs, a $1.2 trillion dollar U.S. deficit, and an additional $1 trillion stimulus plan. Hence, paper prices of things will continue to go up. We are only in the midst of a minor counter cyclical trend, a dead cat bounce, a normal fluctuation, a bit of volatility on the way down in the value of paper money. Today, there is less silver, hence, silver prices will go up. We are only in the midst of a temporary down-spike in the value of silver prices, as silver prices will certainly rebound, and go back up, and exceed all old highs.

Silver Manipulation Made Hilarious


Silly Canadian....Gold Isn't For Stupid Americans..............



Eric Sprott: Gold: The Go-To Asset in any Environment
-- Posted Friday, 9 January 2009 Source: GoldSeek.com
A 40-year, spectacularly successful veteran of the investment industry, Eric Sprott (the "Energy Guru") needs no introduction. Sprott's steady stream of strategic, entrepreneurial and global performance awards often end in the words: "of the year." Sprott's investment abilities and knack for seeing opportunities where others don't have earned him a spot among the most successful investors in the country. Managing $4.8 billion worth of hedge and mutual funds for Sprott Asset Management, the financial sage is also an esteemed art collector. Referring to his color-blindness in a recent interview, Eric Sprott said: "It's not the color that does it for me. It's probably the contrast in the colors." One might say the same of his investment strategy.
The Gold Report: Eric, what's your viewpoint on what’s happening in the stock market and, specifically, why is gold a good investment at this time because we’re looking at a deflationary (some would even call it a depressionary) market?
Eric Sprott: Since 2000, I’ve believed we are in a secular bear market. We had a modest cyclical bull from ’03 to ’07, which was brought on by the lending mania. That’s obviously over, despite the fact that we’re another leg down in the secular bear market.
We essentially remained bearish throughout that period. The concerns that we expressed back then and our reasons to own gold are the same now except that there has been greater play-out in the meantime. This would suggest that having owned gold, and continuing to own gold, looks even more propitious today than, perhaps, in 2000 when we first got involved in the gold area.
First of all, I think we’re in a depression today. All data points suggest we are. The fundamental problem of the world’s financial system is an over-leveraging of the banking system. The average bank is probably leveraged 25 or 30:1. As you look at these banks’ balance sheets, the liabilities never go down. They must be paid despite the corresponding volatility in assets. We have seen so many of the asset classes come under incredible evaluation adjustments. It is hard to imagine that, in a true mark-to-market, any banks would have any tangible capital left.
Consequently, they either have to raise capital (which a lot of them are quickly doing) or replenish their capital through earnings. This would imply the discontinuance of dividends, and they must then shed assets. It is very difficult to shed assets in a market where there are no asset buyers. However, we have this awful situation where everyone would like to be a seller in the banking business. The reality is that there are no buyers.
For a long time I have believed fundamentally that we never should have allowed the banks to get leveraged to this extent. I don’t know what the proper level of leverage should be. Even 10:1 scares me. Moreover, if you have to go from 25:1 to 10:1, that is going to take a long time to manifest itself. By implication, it means there will be no net new loans any year for a long time. The effect this will have on the economy, of course, is excruciatingly bad.
That is what we are seeing today. There is no credit available and all asset values are in collapse. The biggest fear is that weakness begets weakness, which is what we’re seeing here. We are going to continue in this negative vortex. So far, nothing that the authorities, governments or central banks have done seems to have made any difference. One might argue that the only difference is that when they started directly buying paper mortgages recently, yes, it did move the rates down, but there is a lot to buy and the system is too big to bail.
TGR: Eric, you said that you believe we’ve been in a secular bear market since 2000 with a little bull blip between ’03 and ’07. What were the fundamentals in 2000 that caused you to believe that (obviously, I’m sure they’ve exponentially increased with this financial crisis)?
ES: Of course, back in 2000 it was a different view in the sense that you saw how ridiculous people were becoming in valuing stocks. We had stocks that were trading at multiples of sales; you could see that there was a stock mania going on. When you have a stock mania, it has to come to an end; it did come to an end—we had the NASDAQ fall by 80%. It was only logical that we had to work through the problems of declining values at that time. But, really, the authorities didn’t want us to have to work through it, so they created this other mania—the lending mania. Now, of course, that’s an even bigger problem than we had back then, and it’s a bigger problem by many, many dimensions. So we have just gone from what was sort of a modest secular decline to what will now probably be a major secular decline and a market that acts more like the Great Depression than just having a long secular decline.
TGR: So do you see, as we’re looking at 2009, a continued financial market decline?
ES: Yes. That’s what we’re expecting.
TGR: For the entire year or will it bottom out, say, in Q2?
ES: I have no idea when it will bottom out. If you look at what we think the fundamental reasons are, you can foresee negative forces on the economy (i.e., no loans) happening for a long time. So I don’t see this as a one-month or one-half or one-year phenomenon. It will be much longer lasting than that.
TGR: You stated earlier you think that we’re already in a depression and that eventually the government will figure this out. Gold, typically, is an investment when you’re looking at an inflationary environment. How will it act in a depressionary environment?
ES: One of the beautiful things about gold is that it can show its relative value in both an inflationary and a deflationary environment. Some people argue that if they just keep printing, we’ll end up with some kind of hyperinflation anyway. However even in a deflationary environment, where people concern themselves with the banking system, lending and where they have assets, it is a very powerful force for people to own gold. We’ve seen that manifesting itself this year and it probably won’t take much more (particularly now that the interest rate is almost down to zero) for people see the wisdom of gold as an asset class.
It wasn’t too long ago that if you said people should have 5% gold in their portfolio, they thought you were a quack. Now people are certainly willing to go to 10% of their portfolio and they’re not seemingly crazy. In my portfolio I have 40% in gold and I think that’s the safest, and probably the most rewarding investment that I could have. If people come to that conclusion, even at 5%, the demand for gold would be outrageous and who knows where the price would go. I believe no matter what environment you’re in—deflation or inflation—people will run to gold. Gold is proving exactly what we all would have expected, that in almost any environment, it’s a go-to asset.
TGR: You mentioned that 40% of your portfolio is in gold. Is that physical gold or a combination of physical and equities?
ES: For the most part, I always own physical gold. When I say gold, I really mean gold and silver; and I am probably about equal in each. I always take delivery. I want to own the physical—I don’t want an owner’s certificate, I don’t want to own an ETF. I believe that it’s really the only security you have, and you don’t want any counter-party between you and your gold, so I take delivery. Forty percent is in bullion. Probably 10% of my assets would be in gold equities or precious metal equities.
TGR: Many are saying that the real leverage in gold right now is the equities because they got slammed initially by the gold price going down along with the market going down. So, leverage-wise, as you’re looking at any rebound as the price of gold goes up, the equities will have an even larger multiplier effect. What’s your viewpoint on that?
ES: For sure that’s true. However it depends on exactly what equity we’re dealing with and the status of, let’s say, some gold miner’s project, whether it’s in production, in the exploration stage, high-grade or low-grade, open pit, underground. There are many reasons to want one class over another; if gold goes up, the equities go up faster. And, as you know, since October 24th, from the bottom to the top, the HUI Index was almost up 100% in that short time period.
So, to get to your point, it’s obvious that there’s leverage in owning the securities rather than gold. However it cuts both ways. When we see gold go down, say, 2% or 3% today, we see the stocks go down a lot more. I guess people would say we’re being pretty defensive owning gold instead of the shares, but we’re happy to make a steady return per year. We don’t need to knock the ball out of the park and, in essence, take on some risk of owning a piece of paper that might not ultimately prove its value. We do own gold shares and we like gold shares, and I’m buying gold shares now. The most important thing is gold has got to go first, and then the gold shares will get going. We believe in both. It’s not going to bother me if gold under performs gold shares in the environment we’re in. We’re in such an ugly environment that any time you can make a gain, that’s a good thing.
TGR: Are you avoiding the exploration companies?
ES: It depends on where they are in exploration and the sort of quality of the ore body. I’m somewhat hesitant on low-grade big open pits because of the financing issues in the world. I’d much rather find a high-grade underground where the development is not nearly as expensive per ounce as a big low grade open pit. You certainly don’t want an ore body with a base metal component in it in the kind of situation we’re looking at. If somebody has a reasonable high-grade open pit, then obviously that would suit the bill, too.
TGR: Any areas of the world that you’re focusing on or avoiding?
ES: I can probably better answer that by what I might avoid rather than where I might focus because you’ve got to go wherever the ore body is. I do have some concerns in regards to some countries in Africa. Likewise, I do have some concerns about some Eastern European countries. So, really, North and South America seem like the more logical places to go. Australia would certainly be on our screen if there was something interesting down there, and we own some gold stocks in Australia. You want to find a country where things are relatively stable. We realize that even in our own country things are never entirely stable. You really want to try to minimize the political risk.
TGR: Eric, you’ve been espousing the value of gold since 2000; and, in 2008, you opened up Sprott Money, which is selling both gold and silver?
ES: Yes, about three years ago I was in the fortunate position where I happened to own a lot of gold. Somebody that owned a mint asked if I’d like to convert the bars to coins. I said I would, as they’re somewhat more fungible.
Then I thought, there’s a reasonable premium on coins. We’ll make our coins available for sale and, as people buy the coins, I’ll buy a bar and, ultimately, convert it back to coins again and just facilitate people owning gold. For the reason that if there is one thing I believe in—and I’m thinking as a Canadian here—it’s that I would love people in Canada to own gold as I think it’s the safest asset they can own.
So if you can make it a little bit easier for them by breaking it down to a smaller unit, then they have a chance to get in. For us, it’s a reasonably profitable business because the premiums are quite high, as you know.
TGR: It’s pretty hard to get gold coins right now. There’s a real shortage. What’s the source of your coins, and are you experiencing the same shortages?
ES: I converted a lot of bars to coins, so I have no shortage of coins. It would take some pretty big buyers to buy me out of the coins. Obviously, as we sell them, I do buy the 400-ounce bars and, somewhere along the line I’m going to have to go to some mint and say, okay, we need to punch out more Maple Leafs. Now maybe when I go there, their capacity will all be utilized. I may not even be able to get in the queue, but there will be a time when we will somewhere. I’d prefer to sell Maple Leafs, but maybe we’ll have to find some other source.
TGR: So you’re converting bullion bars into Canadian Maple Leafs?
ES: Yes.
TGR: I thought that was only done by the government.
ES: It is. It’s done at the Royal Canadian Mint.
TGR: So you are providing them with the gold to create the Canadian Maple Leaf?
ES: This happened about three years ago. So I did that—I converted a lot of bars over to coins and sat on the coins for a couple of years. Finally, it dawned on us that there’s a market for these. I can certainly go buy the 400-ounce bars and, ultimately, convert them back. We have lots of inventory; we’re not seeing any signs that we’re going to eat through our inventory of coins. But I always do worry that I’ve got to be able to buy the bars back, too. So we’ll see. If it happens that I can’t buy the bars back, I don’t think I’ll be selling the coins.
TGR: Can you compare for us how your Sprott Money site works for buying coins, compared to Kitco, which is also selling Maple Leafs, or other online sites?
ES: Gold coin premiums are generally between 7% and 9%. In this regard we are comparable with the other online sellers. Additionally, Sprott Money Ltd. is competitive on shipping and insurance. We ship worldwide, whereas other online retailers will only ship certain bullion products to certain destinations. Lastly, we do not sell inventory we do not have; we ship right away as soon as we receive payment.
TGR: You mentioned earlier that you are also investing in silver. Can you speak briefly on your viewpoints of silver? We hear that it’s a much more volatile industrial metal and, therefore, it’s more risky.
ES: We almost own as much dollars of silver as we own in gold. I personally did not convert silver bars into coins. Our supply of silver coins is somewhat limited and, of course, the supply of silver coins in the world is very limited; the premiums that we charge are much higher than those charged on gold coins. So, in that sense, a gold coin is a better value vís a vís the premium.
And, yes, silver has the quality of being considered an industrial metal, but I think what’s most interesting about silver is that there’s not a lot of above-ground silver in the world. It wouldn’t take many buyers for there to be no silver around. We’re talking a very small amount of money.
That’s one of the unique aspects of silver. If it really catches a bid here, it can move pretty fast and I happen to be in the Ted Butler camp that—when you look at the goings on and the commodity exchange, it just looks so perverted with the size of short positions that are going on—I think the quoted values, ultimately, will not prove to be relevant.
TGR: Eric, what do you see as a potential event to be a tipping point to get investors to begin migrating to gold? We’ve seen a gradual migration, but do we need a country to go bankrupt? Do we need the State of California to go bankrupt? Is there something you can envision that would be the tipping point?
ES: Needless to say, if we had another major bank failure, or if you had some failed government auctions in the developed world, people will realize that even the government can’t get the money that they want to get and that would be very disconcerting to the financial system. The other thing, which you already referred to, is if there was some currency mishap where some currency just plunged. We already had the Icelandic króna do what it did.
TGR: Brazil.
ES: We’ve had Brazil or Argentina and Hungary and a few others. The currencies are falling sharply. If we started to see a slight unraveling in the currency business of a few countries, then you might surmise it will spread to others; they always start going up the food chain. That would be a bit of a tipoff that the real rush might be on for gold.
TGR: What’s your view of the U.S. dollar? What do you see in ’09 for the dollar?
ES: The rally in the dollar, in my mind, was totally anomalous and totally had to do with repatriation. In fact, we can even see it in global offshore funds. These offshore hedge funds, which are owned by international financial institutions, have their own issues. So there have been redemption issues in hedge funds. I can tell you from experience, if we had X dollars of redemptions in November, we have one half of X in December, .1 of X in January, and none in February. In the business we’re in, the repatriation is done.
Anything we might have had to do—in other words, sell a Canadian resource stock, convert it to U.S. —it’s over. So the worst of that might be done. The dollar really, in my mind, shouldn’t have rallied; in fact, it should have done the reverse because the obligations that the U.S. government’s taken on here have been immense and I think beyond the scope of what they obviously can pay for, even though most people haven’t gone there yet. So I don’t hold out a lot of hope for further dollar strength.
TGR: But isn’t the dollar the best of the worst?
ES: You might have a point there. It might be the best of the worst and that’s a very challenging discussion. To know what is the best of the worst—and I don’t pretend to know exactly how strong the UK economy is or the EU or the Canadian (I guess the Canadian government I have some sense of)—but for me to analyze each one of those countries and decide who’s the worst? That’s a tough thing to do and it is sort of ironic that that would be the discussion. If that’s the discussion, just buy gold and forget it.
TGR: We've heard from other newsletter writers that they think we could have a big break in the Dow mid-second quarter or third quarter of ’09, where the Dow could go to 5,000 or 6,000. Any comment on that as to how low the Dow could go or how high gold could go?
ES: I easily believe the Dow can go to those levels and I think it can go lower, obviously, because of the situation we find ourselves in, which is a credit fiasco. Depending on how they attempt to resolve it, who knows where the price of gold is going. It could go to many thousands of dollars, as we would expect it would do. But I can’t tell you the number because it really depends on how irresponsible all the governments are and that’s a tough thing to measure at this point. It certainly seems like they’re quite irresponsible, so the more irresponsible they get, the higher you expect the price of gold to go. I don’t have a specific number that I think it’s going to.
Gold has been such an incredible investment for the last eight years, including this year—we’re finally up in the year. I think it’s up by at least 25% in the Canadian currency; so it’s done exactly what we wanted it to do. Here the markets of the world on average are down about 40% and gold up substantially or flat in every currency, so it’s been perfect.
TGR: Eric, this has been very insightful and informative. We appreciate your insights.

Holy Crap! AYN RAND Mentioned In The Popular Press!!! Is It A Sign Of Armageddon?????!!!! You Decide!


'Atlas Shrugged': From Fiction to Fact in 52 Years


By STEPHEN MOORE
Some years ago when I worked at the libertarian Cato Institute, we used to label any new hire who had not yet read "Atlas Shrugged" a "virgin." Being conversant in Ayn Rand's classic novel about the economic carnage caused by big government run amok was practically a job requirement. If only "Atlas" were required reading for every member of Congress and political appointee in the Obama administration. I'm confident that we'd get out of the current financial mess a lot faster.
Many of us who know Rand's work have noticed that with each passing week, and with each successive bailout plan and economic-stimulus scheme out of Washington, our current politicians are committing the very acts of economic lunacy that "Atlas Shrugged" parodied in 1957, when this 1,000-page novel was first published and became an instant hit.
Rand, who had come to America from Soviet Russia with striking insights into totalitarianism and the destructiveness of socialism, was already a celebrity. The left, naturally, hated her. But as recently as 1991, a survey by the Library of Congress and the Book of the Month Club found that readers rated "Atlas" as the second-most influential book in their lives, behind only the Bible.
For the uninitiated, the moral of the story is simply this: Politicians invariably respond to crises -- that in most cases they themselves created -- by spawning new government programs, laws and regulations. These, in turn, generate more havoc and poverty, which inspires the politicians to create more programs . . . and the downward spiral repeats itself until the productive sectors of the economy collapse under the collective weight of taxes and other burdens imposed in the name of fairness, equality and do-goodism.
In the book, these relentless wealth redistributionists and their programs are disparaged as "the looters and their laws." Every new act of government futility and stupidity carries with it a benevolent-sounding title. These include the "Anti-Greed Act" to redistribute income (sounds like Charlie Rangel's promises soak-the-rich tax bill) and the "Equalization of Opportunity Act" to prevent people from starting more than one business (to give other people a chance). My personal favorite, the "Anti Dog-Eat-Dog Act," aims to restrict cut-throat competition between firms and thus slow the wave of business bankruptcies. Why didn't Hank Paulson think of that?
These acts and edicts sound farcical, yes, but no more so than the actual events in Washington, circa 2008. We already have been served up the $700 billion "Emergency Economic Stabilization Act" and the "Auto Industry Financing and Restructuring Act." Now that Barack Obama is in town, he will soon sign into law with great urgency the "American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan." This latest Hail Mary pass will increase the federal budget (which has already expanded by $1.5 trillion in eight years under George Bush) by an additional $1 trillion -- in roughly his first 100 days in office.
The current economic strategy is right out of "Atlas Shrugged": The more incompetent you are in business, the more handouts the politicians will bestow on you. That's the justification for the $2 trillion of subsidies doled out already to keep afloat distressed insurance companies, banks, Wall Street investment houses, and auto companies -- while standing next in line for their share of the booty are real-estate developers, the steel industry, chemical companies, airlines, ethanol producers, construction firms and even catfish farmers. With each successive bailout to "calm the markets," another trillion of national wealth is subsequently lost. Yet, as "Atlas" grimly foretold, we now treat the incompetent who wreck their companies as victims, while those resourceful business owners who manage to make a profit are portrayed as recipients of illegitimate "windfalls."
When Rand was writing in the 1950s, one of the pillars of American industrial might was the railroads. In her novel the railroad owner, Dagny Taggart, an enterprising industrialist, has a FedEx-like vision for expansion and first-rate service by rail. But she is continuously badgered, cajoled, taxed, ruled and regulated -- always in the public interest -- into bankruptcy. Sound far-fetched? On the day I sat down to write this ode to "Atlas," a Wall Street Journal headline blared: "Rail Shippers Ask Congress to Regulate Freight Prices."
In one chapter of the book, an entrepreneur invents a new miracle metal -- stronger but lighter than steel. The government immediately appropriates the invention in "the public good." The politicians demand that the metal inventor come to Washington and sign over ownership of his invention or lose everything.
The scene is eerily similar to an event late last year when six bank presidents were summoned by Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson to Washington, and then shuttled into a conference room and told, in effect, that they could not leave until they collectively signed a document handing over percentages of their future profits to the government. The Treasury folks insisted that this shakedown, too, was all in "the public interest."
Ultimately, "Atlas Shrugged" is a celebration of the entrepreneur, the risk taker and the cultivator of wealth through human intellect. Critics dismissed the novel as simple-minded, and even some of Rand's political admirers complained that she lacked compassion. Yet one pertinent warning resounds throughout the book: When profits and wealth and creativity are denigrated in society, they start to disappear -- leaving everyone the poorer.
One memorable moment in "Atlas" occurs near the very end, when the economy has been rendered comatose by all the great economic minds in Washington. Finally, and out of desperation, the politicians come to the heroic businessman John Galt (who has resisted their assault on capitalism) and beg him to help them get the economy back on track. The discussion sounds much like what would happen today:
Galt: "You want me to be Economic Dictator?"
Mr. Thompson: "Yes!"
"And you'll obey any order I give?"
"Implicitly!"
"Then start by abolishing all income taxes."
"Oh no!" screamed Mr. Thompson, leaping to his feet. "We couldn't do that . . . How would we pay government employees?"
"Fire your government employees."
"Oh, no!"
Abolishing the income tax. Now that really would be a genuine economic stimulus. But Mr. Obama and the Democrats in Washington want to do the opposite: to raise the income tax "for purposes of fairness" as Barack Obama puts it.
David Kelley, the president of the Atlas Society, which is dedicated to promoting Rand's ideas, explains that "the older the book gets, the more timely its message." He tells me that there are plans to make "Atlas Shrugged" into a major motion picture -- it is the only classic novel of recent decades that was never made into a movie. "We don't need to make a movie out of the book," Mr. Kelley jokes. "We are living it right now."

Deflationists Silenced? We'll See.........


DEAD DOLLAR BOUNCE

Wednesday, January 07, 2009 - FreeMarketNews.com
The marquee line best describing the past two to three months has been that the Dollar Death Dance has been fueled by failure of US banks & corporations, along with sponsored assaults against speculative hedge funds. The climate has changed from liquidation and bankruptcies, obviously steered and exploited by the Powerz, toward more legitimate attempts to have a recovery initiative take root across the landscape, It is fast approaching a wasteland. The most vivid signal of market manipulation, intended to benefit the USGovt borrowing costs, and designed to promote the totally false notion of a Flight to Safety, has been the USTreasury bubble. It is not the last bubble. Next will be the gold & silver bubble in the next few years, as investors wake up to the reality that hyper-inflation is to take root in 2009. We have ridden the gold wave from the start. The precious metals will zoom in the middle months of 2009, as 2008 prices will be seen as the best bargains in a decade. The deflationists will be silent by the yearend.

Mogambo Says It All!


The U.S. Dollar: A Federal Reserve Thingy
"And this, together with the economic disaster that is already out there, only proves the utter, utter failure of the Federal Reserve to 'preserve the value of the dollar', which is their freaking mission in life. Morons!"
by The Mogambo Guru
The front of a recent issue of Barron's asks, "Are Treasury Bonds Safe?" which is actually a really stupid question since every doofus knows that Treasury bonds are perfectly safe because a fiat currency and a lapdog Federal Reserve means that they can print up all the money the Treasury needs with which to pay bondholders!
So… Safe? Hell yes they are safe! You'd think that Barron's would know that! Jeez! If I had been there at Barron's, I would have suggested using this week's cover for what I actually suggested for the cover of the employee newsletter.
At the meeting, I floated the idea of suggesting a splashy cover page with words in blazing red letters that read, "That Creepy Lowlife Mogambo (CLM), the same CLM that you plot against behind my back, was actually right! Hahaha! In fact, consumer price inflation is higher than interest rates - even the yield on the 30-year Treasury bond is less than 3 percent!"
In a second area on the cover, we put, "This means that anybody who is buying any debt - when the central banks of the world are creating more and more money and credit at such astronomical rates - is a real moron, or lunatic, or both, because bond prices will fall when interest rates rise in response to the inflation in prices, because that is the only response to the massive inflation in the money supply from all that excess money and credit being created Every Freaking Where (EFW) around the freaking globe!"
I interpreted their silence as thoughtful meditating on my terrific copy idea, and so I went on to further suggest that, in smaller letters, sort of in a power-packed subhead, "So buy gold now, you drooling morons, unless you think that you are So Freaking Special (SFS) that you, and America, will be totally unique in the last 4,500 years of various moronic governments creating excess money and credit to satisfy their gluttonous, insatiable appetites for spending, spending, spending, and then they all failed so miserably that their entire economies were, for centuries, sometimes forever, in decline, and everybody was ruined, and everybody was bankrupted, and Bad, Bad Things (BBT) happened for a long, long time!"
"Then," I said triumphantly, "we add the teaser hook! We say, 'How do you like them apples, morons?'"
Well, apparently their silence was not due to consideration and contemplation, but to communicate with each other telepathically to gang up on me as, instantly, almost in unison, it was moved, seconded and (against one lone dissenting "nay" vote) otherwise unanimously decided to throw me out the meeting and, if I understand the terms "And never come back!" correctly, ban me forever! How rude!
Well, Barron's was no more receptive to my editorial suggestions than my co-workers were, although Barron's then suggests, in smaller print, just like I had recommended earlier, that the real reason is exactly what I have been saying! They say, "Long-term Treasuries, now yielding less than 3%, could fall 25% in value as the recession ebbs and rates rise. If they're held to maturity, the principal is secure, but you'd be stuck with today's low rates for years."
At this, I laugh, because every doofus knows this, too! Hahaha! What every doofus does not understand, however, is that every day, of every week, of every month, of every year, every one of those dollars will, by virtue of the Federal Reserve continually creating so much excess money and credit so that Congress can continue to borrow it to fund its outrageous deficit-spending to Somehow Save America (SSA), be continually worth less and less in terms of buying power, just like the dollar has suffered at the hands of the idiotic Congress and the Federal Reserve since 1913, so that they dollar has now lost about 96% of its buying power since 1913, and about a quarter of its remaining buying power was lost in the last few years alone!
And this, together with the economic disaster that is already out there, only proves the utter, utter failure of the Federal Reserve to "preserve the value of the dollar", which is their freaking mission in life. Morons! Morons who should be in prison, along with the Congress-morons who let them get away with it! Vengeance! We want vengeance!
To illustrate this very point with a little comedy instead of seething hatred and homicidal revenge, Junior Mogambo Ranger (JMR) Rebecca H. sent a humorous image of the "new" $100,000 bill, which has the face of Ben Bernanke on it, and is called, right on the front so you know exactly what it is, a "Federal Reserve Thingy". Hahaha! Perfect!
Mark J. Lundeen, independent market analyst, apparently has no time for comedy, and traces the real problem back to "The problem 'monetary policy makers' were having from 1954 to 1981", which was that "their liquidity was flowing into CPI, consumer cost of living price inflation", which was running somewhere around, ummm, a terrifying 10% or so and everybody was all freaked out and angry.
As a result, Paul Volker, chairman of the Federal Reserve at the time, "raised Fed Funds to 21%," which is "6% higher than the US long bond yield" which, in 1981, meant that "the US Treasury was forced to offer a 15% coupon for its 20-year bond." Wow!
This was also, as explained in the Mogambo's Investing Made Easy (MIME) home study course, the exact time to switch from gold, which was setting a record of $850 an ounce at the time, into bonds, which were yielding a juicy 15%, and then make a fortune when those bonds zoomed in price as inflation in prices fell and thus interest rates fell to, today, less than 2%! Wow!
Unfortunately, Mr. Volcker wringing ruinous inflation from the economy at a terrible cost was not to last. Things soon went back to normal, the difference being that inflation in prices, he says, "stopped flowing into consumer prices", and started going into financial assets.
I think that this was hugely aided by Congress authorizing the Individual Retirement Account in 1982, along with many other tax-advantaged investment vehicles over the years, which accidentally touches one of my sore spots, which is that this whole stupid idea of "investing for the long-term" is a Load Of Hooey (LOH), and I am embarrassed for this country that we turn out so many diplomas conferred on graduates who are supposedly thus certified as literate in basic math, but yet they are all completely clueless that "investing for the long-term" is obviously a huge freaking scam since it is mathematically impossible for the majority of people to take more money out of something than they put into them! Hahahaha! But nobody saw this! Hahaha! What morons!
Mr. Lundeen obviously does not want to get into a discussion where we are calling people morons and laughing at them, making crude jokes about their parents for siring such a mental defective mutant, all the while ordering round after round of alcoholic beverages and putting them on his tab so that I can drink and insult people until I finally pass out in my own vomit, and instead says that the effect was less than stellar, as "The bull markets returns in financial assets from 1982 to 2007 were mostly inflation", which is, unfortunately true.
And inflation in the prices of something, or all things, will get worse and worse from here, as the Fed is on record as saying that they will not let deflation happen, and the European Central Bank is vowing to never let inflation fall below 2%, which is such terrible news that the fact that Germans are not rioting in the streets shows that they are now as stupid as the rest of us.
Which is one more reason to buy gold, as if one needed any more reasons to buy gold after already having hundreds of perfectly good reasons to buy gold already, and especially now that Obama and the Fed have pledged trillions and trillions of new reasons to buy gold! Whee! This investing stuff is easy!

Nicely Said.........................

"Those who control our politicians and our media ultimately have control over the stimulus that is used to shape and control the psychological desires of the masses, which they manipulate for the calculated purpose of effecting emotional mass reactions, which are the expected behavioral responses anticipated by those who wrote the script." -Anthony Wile

SWF's Running Scared?


Sovereign Wealth Funds Get Skittish
“Only 12 months ago pundits claimed most emerging markets would be immune from the credit crisis engulfing the United States and Europe,” says Investment Director Eric Roseman, “They were dead wrong. The emerging markets have plunged more than 65% from their all-time highs while rich oil producing nations, including the Gulf States, have crashed.”“On Thursday, the region’s first default occurred as Global Investment House, a top Kuwaiti investment bank, defaulted on most of its $3 billion dollar debt obligation. This follows the Kuwaiti government’s rescue of Gulf Bank, the country’s fourth largest bank in November after suffering massive losses tied to bad trades.”Most of the world’s largest Sovereign Wealth Funds are dependent on commodities like oil to keep their coffers growing. And after oil’s precipitous drop and the onset of domestic financial troubles, these SWFs are starting to invest closer to home…“At first, bulging oil surpluses were viewed as a White Knight by troubled Western banks. But now, with oil prices tanking, the region’s SWFs have stopped shopping overseas and have started to repatriate capital, as liquidity grows scarce at home. It’s the same story in Asia where SWFs have halted international investments as domestic capital markets swoon.”
“Nobody is immune from the greatest credit squeeze since the 1930s. Not Russia, not the Gulf States, not China and certainly not India.”Eric continues…“I suspect that hostile or non-Western friendly oil producing nations will begin to warm up to U.S. foreign policy if oil prices remain at these low levels. Venezuela, Bolivia and Russia come to mind as those nations that until recently have embraced a tough tone, calling the shots on local drilling projects and tossing out the Americans and Europeans following government nationalization of energy infrastructure.”

Congressional commission urges 50% increase in gasoline and diesel tax because people are driving less. Jesus Fucking Christ.......


Motorists' new habits spur call for gas tax increases to pay for construction, programs

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Motorists are driving less and buying less gasoline, which means fuel taxes aren't raising enough money to keep pace with the cost of road, bridge and transit programs.
A federal commission created by Congress to find a way to make up the growing revenue shortfall in the program that funds highway repairs and construction is talking about increasing federal gas and diesel taxes.
A roughly 50 percent increase in gasoline and diesel fuel taxes is being urged by the commission until the government devises another way for motorists to pay for using public roads.
The 15-member National Commission on Surface Transportation Infrastructure Financing is the second group in a year to call for increasing the current 18.4 cents a gallon federal tax on gasoline and the 24.4 cents a gallon tax on diesel. State fuel taxes vary from state to state.
In a report expected in late January, members of the infrastructure financing commission say they will urge Congress to raise the gas tax by 10 cents a gallon and the diesel tax by about 12 cents to 15 cents a gallon. At the same time, the commission will recommend tying the fuel tax rates to inflation.
The commission will also recommend that states raise their fuel taxes and make greater use of toll roads and fees for rush-hour driving.
Although the cost of gasoline has dropped dramatically in recent months, such tax increases could be politically treacherous for Democratic leaders in Congress. A gas tax hike was one of the reasons they lost control of the House and Senate in the 1994 elections. President-elect Barack Obama has expressed concern about raising fuel taxes in the current economic climate.
But commission members said the government must find more road and bridge building money somewhere.
"I'm not excited about a gas tax increase, but the reality is our current gas tax doesn't pay for upkeep of the system we have now," said Adrian Moore, vice president of the Reason Foundation, a libertarian think tank in Los Angeles, and a member of the highway revenue commission. "We can either let the roads go to hell or we can pay more."
The dilemma for Congress is that highway and transit programs are dependent for revenue on fuel taxes that are not sustainable. Many Americans are driving less and switching to more fuel-efficient cars and trucks, and a shift to new fuels and technologies like plug-in hybrid electric cars will further erode gasoline sales.
According to a draft of the financing commission's recommendations, the nation needs to move to a new system that taxes motorists according to how much they use roads. While details have not been worked out, such a system would mean equipping every car and truck with a device that uses global positioning satellites and transponders to record how many miles the vehicle has been driven, and perhaps the type of roads and time of day.
"Most if not all of the commissioners have a strong belief and commitment that we need a fundamental transformation of the current system," said commission chairman Robert Atkinson, president of the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation, a technology policy think tank in Washington.
A study by the Transportation Research Board of the National Academies estimated that the annual gap between revenues and the investment needed to improve highway and transit systems was about $105 billion in 2007, and will increase to $134 billion in 2017 under current trends.
Projected shortfalls in revenue led the National Surface Transportation Policy and Revenue Study Commission, in a report issued in January 2008, to call for an increase of as much as 40 cents a gallon in the gas tax, phased in over five years.
Charles Whittington, chairman of the American Trucking Associations, which supports a fuel tax increase as long as the money goes to highway projects, said Congress may decide to disguise a fuel tax hike as a surcharge to combat climate change.
Transportation is responsible for about a third of all U.S. carbon emissions created by burning fossil fuels. Traffic congestion wastes an estimated 2.9 billion gallons of fuel a year. Less congestion would reduce greenhouse gases and dependence on foreign oil.
"Instead of calling it a gas tax, call it a carbon tax," Whittington said.
Bottlenecks around the nation cost the trucking industry about 243 million lost truck hours and about $7.8 billion per year, according to the commission.

**DEC. Alert** US to be CUT OFF from World - Baltic Dry Index Falls 93%

Shipping contracts fall by 93%. Goods, raw materials, and food are no longer moving. That spells bad news for countries, such as the U.S., that heavily depend on imports, including food. Sound Of Cannons advice: Prepare NOW for serious shortages. You Tube 2009 Jan 3

Bailout of financial industry now running over $7 trillion. That's ten times the original amount stated - and is more than twice the cost of WWII.


Financial Crisis Balance Sheet

Amount Allocated in Millions of Dollars
Spent/Lent In Millions of Dollars
Federal Reserve:
(TAF) Term Auction Credit (allocated)
900000
415302
Discount Window Lending
139256
Banks (other loans primary credit)
92645
Investment Banks (other loans Primary dealer and other broker-dealer credit)
46611
Loans to buy ABCP (other loans Asset-backed commercial paper money market mutual fund liquidity facility)
661923
AIG (allocated minus Treasury 40B)
112500
87397
Bear Stearns (initial loan to JPMorgan)
29500
26919
(TSLF) Term Securities Lending Facility
225000
200524
Swap Lines (other federal reserve assets)
601963
(MMIFF) Money Market Investor Funding Facility (allocated)
540000
(CPFF) Commercial Paper Funding Facility *upper limit from Reuters
1800000
270879
(TALF) Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility
200000
200000
GSE MBS NO NAME Program
600000
600000
Treasury:
(TARP) Treasury Asset Relief Program
700000
330000
Exchange Stabilization Fund to guarantee principal in money market mutual funds
50000
Treasury direct purchases of MBS since Sept.
26570
Citigroup (Treasury+FDIC guarantees)
238500
FDIC:
Guarantees for Banks
1900000
Other:
Automakers
25000
(FHA) Federal Housing Administration
300000
Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac
350000
TOTAL
7361917
Note: Figures as of Nov. 28, 2008

NAFTA SuperHighway Getting Cut Down Into Smaller Projects: But It's Still In The Works!


Texas Dept of Transportation says Trans Texas Corridor is dead; then explains that it has been divided into multiple projects to calm public opposition. In other words, it is not dead at all.
Trans Texas Corridor is not dead, TxDOT says
10:47 PM CST on Tuesday, January 6, 2009
By MICHAEL A. LINDENBERGER / The Dallas Morning Newsmlindenberger@dallasnews.com
AUSTIN – After six years of bold plans, big talk and fierce pushback, the Texas Department of Transportation announced Tuesday that the Trans-Texas Corridor is dead, burying with it Gov. Rick Perry's visionary but controversial idea to string the state together with some 4,000 miles of highways, toll roads and rail lines.
"Make no mistake: The Trans-Texas Corridor as we have known it no longer exists," TxDOT executive director Amadeo Saenz said in a speech at an annual transportation conference. In its place will be a smaller, more deliberate plan that assesses individually each of the scores of projects once lumped together as part of the TTC.
Also Online
09/29/03: Corridor plan on road to reality
The impact on Dallas-area projects should be minimal, TxDOT officials said. Local leaders had hoped that private firms selected to build the Trans-Texas Corridor would have eventually taken on two large projects in North Texas, including the Loop 9 toll road in southern Dallas and, much later, a 240-mile outer loop that planners have long envisioned for North Texas.
Neither of those projects has been awarded any state funding and will need to be built as toll roads, said Tim Nesbitt, Loop 9 project manager for TxDOT. But private firms have already expressed interest in Loop 9 and could well develop it as a standalone project even though the Trans-Texas Corridor is dead.
"I guess you could say Loop 9 is a desirable project in the eyes of the Cintra Zachry team," Nesbitt said, referring to one of two consortia previously selected to develop the early stages of the TTC. The project is still under environmental review and probably couldn't begin until 2012 under any circumstances, he noted.
But while the demise of the Trans-Texas Corridor won't stop road building in North Texas, its death serves as a milestone in the debate over the role that private toll roads, and tolls in general, should play in Texas – a debate that has raged since Perry unveiled his grand idea in 2002.
The Trans-Texas Corridor had always seemed more of a concept than an actual road plan. But at its core, the plan called for $175 billion in spending over the next 50 years to run highways, rail lines and data lines from Oklahoma to Mexico, and from east to west in southern Texas. It was routinely billed as the biggest transportation project since President Dwight Eisenhower persuaded Congress to launch the interstate highway system in the 1950s.

DMN File
But beyond its huge scope, the most radical feature of the plan, and the part most cherished by Perry, was the proposal to let private companies foot huge portions of the bill. In return, they would earn the right to collect ever-increasing tolls from Texas drivers for decades to come.
Lawmakers initially went along with the idea, and in 2003 approved sweeping changes to Texas law to get the project started. But the idea, especially the way it would be financed, never gathered broad support.
And when TxDOT announced the TTC could take 1,200 feet of right-of-way through the length of Texas, rural landowners rebelled too, making the project one of the most controversial in modern Texas history. The issue dogged Perry throughout his 2006 re-election campaign and helped unite increasingly furious lawmakers, who in 2007 attempted to slow, but not kill, the project.
TxDOT, by its own admission, at first turned a deaf ear to the criticism. But in the past 18 months, it has spent hundreds of hours at dozens of public hearings trying to appease its critics. The crowds remained almost universally hostile.
The same lawmakers who were so angry in 2007 return to Austin next week for the 2009 session, and Tuesday's announcement by TxDOT chief Saenz showed that neither his agency nor the governor – whose staff was involved in the decision to kill the TTC – want to wage the same fight all over again.
"The Legislature has been clear; they want transformation," Saenz said. "That handwriting is on the wall, in big bold letters."
Perry sought to play down the significance of Saenz's announcement Tuesday. Talking to reporters from Iraq, where he was visiting soldiers, the governor said, "The fact of the matter is that we really don't care what name they attach to building infrastructure in the state of Texas. The key is that we have to go forward and build the infrastructure so that the state of Texas and our economy can continue to grow."
He noted, for instance, that the most important part of the plan to him, its reliance on private capital to help finance toll roads, remains a key priority and an approach he expects will be continued.
"We'll continue to use all the tools available to build the infrastructure," Perry said. "That's one of the reasons the Legislature agreed with us back through the previous legislative sessions that we needed to have more tools in our tool box, if you will, to build the needed infrastructure."
Whether lawmakers will go along with those plans is unclear. Faced with billions of dollars in unmet annual transportation needs, the state may embrace private toll roads as a last resort, but many lawmakers remain upset over what they see as Perry's high-handedness in pushing the TTC.
Sen. Robert Nichols, a former TxDOT commissioner, said lawmakers will be looking closely at Tuesday's change in plans. "If it is just a name change, and nothing more, I don't think that is going to do much to appease lawmakers," said Nichols, R-Jacksonville.
Leaders of the grassroots groups that have opposed the project from its beginning celebrated the news. They said the announcement went well beyond a simple name change. David Stall, co-founder of the advocacy group Corridor Watch, said Tuesday the will of the people had prevailed.
"It was a bad project pushed in the face of legislative and public opposition and now there is a price to pay," Stall said. "The result is a major victory. The overarching statewide Trans-Texas Corridor that was a reality is no longer."

Some Really Smart People Are Buying Gold Bars



Merrill Lynch says rich turning to gold bars for safety
Merrill Lynch has revealed that some of its richest clients are so alarmed by the state of the financial system and signs of political instability around the world that they are now insisting on the purchase of gold bars, shunning derivatives or "paper" proxies.

By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard

Rich investors are spurning gold exchange traded funds in favour of krugerrands.
Gary Dugan, the chief investment officer for the US bank, said there has been a remarkable change in sentiment. "People are genuinely worried about what the world is going to look like in 2009. It is amazing how many clients want physical gold, not ETFs," he said, referring to exchange trade funds listed in London, New York, and other bourses.
"They are so worried they want a portable asset in their house. I never thought I would be getting calls from clients saying they want a box of krugerrands," he said.
Merrill predicted that gold would soon blast through its all time-high of $1,030 an ounce, and would hit $1,150 by June.
The metal should do well whatever happens. If deflation sets in and rocks the economic system it will serve as a safe-haven, but if massive monetary stimulus gains traction and sets off inflation once again it will also come into its own as a store of value. "It's win-win either way," said Mr Dugan.
He added that deflation may prove the greater risk in coming months. "It's very difficult to get the deflation psychology out of the human brain once prices start falling. People stop buying things because they think it will be cheaper if they wait."
Merrill expects global inflation to hover near zero, with rates of minus 1pc in the industrial economies. This means that yields on AAA sovereign bonds now at 3pc will offer a real return of 4pc a year, which is stellar in this grim climate. "Don't start selling your government bonds," Mr Dugan said, dismissing talk of a bond bubble as misguided.
He warned that the eurozone was likely to come under strain this year as slump deepens. "There is going to be friction as governments in the south start talking politically about coming out of the euro. I don't see the tensions in Greece as a one-off. It is a sign of social strain in countries that have lost competitiveness."

Bill Gross Said What.......????!!!!!!


Friday, Jan 9, 2008
Bill Gross is managing director of the world’s largest bond fund, Pimco, which manages some $790 Billion Dollars in assets. Pimco also is managing the commercial-paper assets for the Federal Reserve as part of the government’s Commercial Paper Funding Facility program. As such, Pimco is in many ways an insider.
In his January 2009 Investment Outlook, Gross writes that it is not only Madoff who ran a Ponzi scheme, but the entire U.S. economy is a Ponzi-like scheme. He calls it “our Ponzi-style economy”.

This may be obvious to many of us. But the fact that Gross said it is news.

Swiss Banks Throw Clients Under The Bus

Under pressure from U.S., giant Swiss bank closes 19,000 "offshore" accounts held by Americans, forcing them to transfer to other banks which report all transactions to U.S. government. Swiss bank independence is over.
UBS closing U.S. clients' offshore accounts -NYT
Fri Jan 9, 2009 2:26am EST
ZURICH, Jan 9 (Reuters) - Under pressure from the U.S. tax authorities, Swiss wealth management giant UBS (UBSN.VX: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) (UBS.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) is closing all the offshore accounts of its rich U.S. clients, the New York Times said on Friday.
UBS, which the U.S. authorities says helped wealthy Americans hide cash in offshore bank accounts, will shut about 19,000 offshore accounts, the paper said, quoting unnamed U.S. clients.
A UBS spokesman in Switzerland was not immediately available to comment on the report.
The Swiss bank, one of the hardest-hit in the credit crisis, decided in July last year to stop offering offshore accounts to U.S. citizens after it was targeted by the U.S. tax investigation which challenges Switzerland's famous banking secrecy laws.
As part of the investigation, U.S. authorities indicted UBS's wealth management chief last year.
"UBS is progressing with the closing in an orderly fashion," UBS spokeswoman Karina Byrne was quoted as saying in the U.S. paper.
U.S. prosecutors have alleged that UBS helped clients hide $18 billion of untaxed American money in undeclared accounts. This amounts to around $300 million of annual unpaid taxes, the newspaper said. UBS will transfer the U.S. clients' assets to other banks or other divisions within UBS, or will mail checks directly to the account holders, creating paper trails for U.S. federal prosecutors who are checking whether UBS clients used such accounts to evade taxes.
"You can either transfer the money to new banks, or deposit somewhere and get busted," a UBS client was quoted as saying in the newspaper report.
The transfer of more than $10,000 to a new bank is something that clients are expected to report to the Treasury Department, the paper said.
In a separate article, the Wall Street Journal said on Friday that many U.S. clients of UBS had started to voluntarily turn themselves in to the U.S. Internal Revenue Service. The clients have so far avoided serious punishment, the paper said.

Thursday, January 8, 2009

"Synchronized" as in "Well Planned"


Citigroup sees synchronized global recession in 2009
Thu Jan 8, 2009 6:00am EST
(Reuters) - Citigroup forecast a synchronized global recession in 2009 and said developed economies may "flirt" with deflation while emerging market economies will slow sharply, adding that global corporate earnings were only a quarter of the way through an expected 50 percent drop.
Citigroup, in its global equity strategy note titled "Battling The Bear," said it now sees global real gross domestic product growth at 0.5 percent for 2009, down from the 2.4 percent forecast it made three months ago.
"The fundamental outlook for 2009 looks dire," Citigroup global equity strategists warned, but added that global equities looked cheap in absolute terms and very cheap against defensive assets.
"This battle between dire fundamentals and cheap valuations will be the defining theme of 2009," they said.
"We think that neither will win out over the year, but it will be a volatile ride."
They favor cheaper European equities over "underweight-" rated Asia where the potential for earnings disappointments remain considerable, and are "neutral" on the United States given that the region is further into the earnings downturn.
The worsening global recession has already driven MSCI's all-country world stock index corporate earnings down by 13 percent from its 2007-end high, the strategists said and added that they do not expect this profits cycle to bottom until 2010.
The strategists upgraded the global financials and utilities sector to "neutral," and downgraded the materials sector to "underweight" and energy to "neutral."
The MSCI all-country world index, which lost more than 43 percent in 2008, was down 1.2 percent by 1054 GMT Thursday.
The following table lists Citigroup's global preferred names:
Ambev
AstraZeneca Plc
Bank of America Corp
Bharti Airtel Ltd
BHP Billiton Plc
FirstEnergy Corp
Gazprom
Hutchison Whampoa Ltd
Intel Corp
Itau Unibanco
Merck AG
Mitsui OSK Lines Ltd
Nestle SA
NIKE Inc
Orascom Telecom Holding
Seven & I Holdings Co Ltd
Sonic Healthcare Ltd
Vivendi SA
Vodafone Group Plc
Zurich Financial Services AG

Nicely Said....................


"No free man shall ever be debarred the use of arms." -Thomas Jefferson

States Ramp Up Tax Schemes


The State versus the Internet: Kentucky Starts a Trade War
There's a war simmering right now, that you may not have heard about. The object of the war is control of the Internet.
In some ways, this war is similar to the deceitful "harmful tax competition" campaign that industrialized nations have been conducting against offshore jurisdictions for more than a decade. It involves the same protagonists: industrialized nations versus developing countries. And one of the opening salvos of this war is occurring, of all places, in a Kentucky courtroom.
Kentucky is trying to force 141 Internet gaming sites, none of them based in the United States (much less Kentucky) to block access to Kentucky users, or to relinquish control of their domain names. The state alleges, among other things, that online gaming drains money from horse racing, a key source of tax dollars. Following a hearing last September, a state judge ordered the domain names to be transferred to the state. That decision is now under appeal.
Many of the sites have already been transferred to the state or are barred from being transferred to another owner. Other sites have informed users based in Kentucky they will no longer be able to use the site.
Internet gambling is no doubt controversial, but that's not the point. Kentucky has fired the opening shot in a trade war against the Internet. It's been able to seize the property of dozens of non-U.S., non-Kentucky companies because many of the domain names are registered in the United States.
What's more, there's no reason to think that this trade war will be limited to Internet gambling. The Internet is the fastest growing segment of the global economy. In just the past four years, global Internet sales have exploded from US$87.5 billion (2004) to an estimated US$204 billion (2008).
Given this track record, it should come as no surprise that governments want to shut down competition to local bricks-and-mortar businesses. That's particularly true given the state of the global economy. In the United States alone, more than 75,000 major retail locations are expected to shut down in 2009. Many will never reopen - the businesses that operated there will increasingly exist only in cyberspace.
If you're an Internet entrepreneur, you've chosen to be involved with what may be the only fundamentally healthy aspect of the global economy. But if you offer a product or service that can be construed to compete with a bricks-and-mortar company in an industrialized country, expect to be attacked.
To deal with these attacks:
~Register your domain name outside any major industrialized country.
~Set up backup servers outside major industrialized countries.
~Be prepared for court challenges from governments, such as that of Kentucky, to steal your intellectual property (IP).
~Finally—if your Internet business is successful—you should take steps to transfer the ownership of your IP to a suitable offshore structure, if you haven't already done so.


That way, when the Kentucky's of the world come after your Web site, you'll no longer own the most valuable part of it. That may not make bureaucrats very happy, but it will help insure that you can continue operating online.

Monday, January 5, 2009

Britain Admits Bank Bailout Didn't Do No Good!


Banks bail out a 'failure ... and there's no plan B'
By James Cusick, Westminster Editor
GORDON BROWN'S "DECISIVE" strategy to recapitalise Britain's banks and get them lending again with a £37 billion bail-out, which he claimed has been copied all over the world, has not worked - and the Treasury has no plan B yet.
"The government's plan A has not worked, and there is, as yet, no firm plan B," a government source told the Sunday Herald. However, a senior adviser to chancellor Alistair Darling insisted that lending shouldn't be taken as the sole measure of success: "Plan A has not failed, because the banks are still standing."
But although UK banks are open for business, Britain is still facing a lending drought with banks and building societies continuing to reduce the amount of credit available to businesses and would-be homebuyers.
advertisement

This has left Darling with a dilemma: does he throw more money at the banks, effectively admitting that £37bn of taxpayers' money wasn't enough, or does he wait?
Having committed the government to "do whatever it takes", the chancellor and the prime minister will now be under renewed pressure from Labour MPs to deliver a solution that forces banks to end their post-crash caution and assist economic recovery, rather than remain over-concerned with their own balance sheets.
Without a plan B, both Darling and Brown will increasingly be looking to Washington and the scale of the fiscal stimulus likely to be engineered quickly after Barack Obama's inauguration as US president on January 20, which should then have a substantial knock-on effect in world markets.
Although Darling has said he is prepared to look at other measures to encourage banks to end their current over-cautious regimes and begin lending more freely, a Treasury spokesman said no decision on a second bail-out had been taken.
A second bail-out would be a public and political humiliation for Brown. The prime minister has based Labour's poll recovery on his experience and ability to lead Britain out of recession and towards recovery. More taxpayers' money being thrown at the banks, even if it came with new strings attached, would be seen as a damaging admission of a strategy that hadn't worked.
It will also be embarrassing for the government if they are forced to adopt the strategy supported by the Conservatives of large-scale, state-backed loans which could offer guarantees in private finance deals. So far the government has accused David Cameron's Tories of being the "do-nothing party".

Wait...............The Fed Had A Monetary Policy?


Fed has abandoned monetary policy, critic says
Sun Jan 4, 2009 2:58am GMT

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - The Federal Reserve has embarked on a campaign of unsupervised industrial policy to end the country's financial crisis, a move that could undermine its independence, a former top U.S. official said on Saturday.
John Taylor, who was under secretary of treasury for international affairs from 2001 to 2005, said the explosive growth of the Fed's balance sheet since September was "unbelievable."
"This doesn't really seem like quantitative easing in the sense of finding a growth rate in the money supply," he told a panel discussion during the annual meeting of the American Economics Association.
"What you are looking at now is really being determined by other considerations. How much should we buy of mortgage-backed securities? How much should we loan to foreign central banks? This is really more like an industrial policy," he said.
The Fed's balance sheet has more than doubled in size to over $1.2 trillion in recent months as it has tried to shield the U.S. economy from the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression by supporting key credit markets.
This has included direct purchases of mortgage-backed bonds by the Fed and support for top-rated non-financial borrowers in the crucial commercial paper market, as well as hundreds of billions of dollars lent to banks on the basis of collateral.
"If you have a situation where the Fed is borrowing to invest in all these sectors it seems to me you have a huge governance issue...that demands a lot of thought," Taylor said.
Taylor said the U.S. Congress has a legitimate right to demand a say in who the Fed lends money to. The outcome would be "radical reform" that would risk monetary policy independence, he said.
This concern was echoed somewhat by the president of the St Louis Federal Reserve Bank, James Bullard, who also took part in the panel discussion. He said the close collaboration between the Fed and U.S. Treasury in fighting the crisis could have unintended consequences.


"We are blurring the institutional arrangements a little," Bullard said. "I am concerned about independence. Fed independence is very important," he told reporters."We are blurring the institutional arrangements a little," Bullard said. "I am concerned about independence. Fed independence is very important," he told reporters.

Nicely Said............................


"I swear, by my life and my love of it, that I will never live for the sake of another man, nor ask another man to live for mine." -Ayn Rand

The Shadows Behind The Scenes


Who are the Architects of Economic Collapse
Michel ChossudovskyGlobal ResearchMonday, Nov 10, 2008
Most Serious Economic Crisis in Modern History
The October 2008 financial meltdown is not the result of a cyclical economic phenomenon. It is the deliberate result of US government policy instrumented through the Treasury and the US Federal Reserve Board.
This is the most serious economic crisis in World history.
The “bailout” proposed by the US Treasury does not constitute a “solution” to the crisis. In fact quite the opposite: it is the cause of further collapse. It triggers an unprecedented concentration of wealth, which in turn contributes to widening economic and social inequalities both within and between nations.
The levels of indebtedness have skyrocketed. Industrial corporations are driven into bankruptcy, taken over by the global financial institutions. Credit, namely the supply of loanable funds, which constitutes the lifeline of production and investment, is controlled by a handful of financial conglomerates.
With the “bailout”, the public debt has spiraled. America is the most indebted country on earth. Prior to the “bailout”, the US public debt was of the order of 10 trillion dollars. This US dollar denominated debt is composed of outstanding treasury bills and government bonds held by individuals, foreign governments, corporations and financial institutions.
“The Bailout”: The US Administration is Financing its Own Indebtedness<