Summary:
Home of the Brave?
BALTIMORE – It is a bright summer day outside. A dry breeze sweeps down Cathedral Street and blows away the hot, humid air.
It is hard for us to imagine that anything bad could happen today. But bad things do happen – even on nice days. The weather was fine when General Custer rode out to the Little Bighorn, too.
Over the weekend, we worked at putting up a board fence – with half-round treated posts and four 6-inch-by-5/4-inch boards. It was grim work. On a small farm, nothing works as it should. The augur got stuck on a root and sheared a bolt, and the tractor slipped on the greasy clay.
After a few minutes, our shirt was drenched. Ticks were already crawling up our legs. What’s worse, we barely made a dent in the job. In two days, we only got about 20 posts in place…with 130 to go. Progress was slow. But at least it was real.
We were thinking about cowardice – the kind of cowardice that runs rampant in the Home of the Brave. The voter, the patriot, the investor, the churchgoer – there are few Muhammad Alis among them.
“A fine day today, boys, innit? Let’s go and waste that Crazy Horse dude.” General Custer and his Indian scouts, shortly before everything goes decidedly pear-shaped. Photo via heise.de
Many readers are annoyed with us.
Topics:
Bill Bonner considers the following as important:
Cassius Clay,
Debt and the Fallacies of Paper Money,
Donald Trump,
Featured,
Federal Funds Rate,
Hillary Clinton,
Janet Yellen,
Larry Summers,
Muhammad Ali,
newsletter,
On Economy,
On Politics,
Quarterly annualized real GDP,
trump risk
This could be interesting, too:
Guillermo Alcala writes USD/CHF slides to test 0.8645 support with US inflation data on tap
Swissinfo writes Swiss central bank posts CHF62.5bn profit
Nachrichten Ticker - www.finanzen.ch writes Trump-Faktor und Marktbedingungen könnten für neuen Bitcoin-Rekord sorgen
Charles Hugh Smith writes Is Social Media Actually “Media,” Or Is It Something Else?
Home of the Brave?
BALTIMORE – It is a bright summer day outside. A dry breeze sweeps down Cathedral Street and blows away the hot, humid air.
It is hard for us to imagine that anything bad could happen today. But bad things do happen – even on nice days. The weather was fine when General Custer rode out to the Little Bighorn, too.
Over the weekend, we worked at putting up a board fence – with half-round treated posts and four 6-inch-by-5/4-inch boards. It was grim work. On a small farm, nothing works as it should. The augur got stuck on a root and sheared a bolt, and the tractor slipped on the greasy clay.
After a few minutes, our shirt was drenched. Ticks were already crawling up our legs. What’s worse, we barely made a dent in the job. In two days, we only got about 20 posts in place…with 130 to go. Progress was slow. But at least it was real.
We were thinking about cowardice – the kind of cowardice that runs rampant in the Home of the Brave. The voter, the patriot, the investor, the churchgoer – there are few Muhammad Alis among them. |
“A fine day today, boys, innit? Let’s go and waste that Crazy Horse dude.” General Custer and his Indian scouts, shortly before everything goes decidedly pear-shaped. Photo via heise.de |
Many readers are annoyed with us. Ali was one of the few real heroes of the Vietnam era, we said. How could we believe it? Ali challenged the system. He said what all of us must have thought: None of us had a real quarrel with the Viet Cong.
On June 20 1967, Muhammad Ali was fined $10,000 and sentenced to 5 years in jail for refusing to be drafted (the papers still referred to him as Cassius Clay). He remained free on bail while the sentence was on appeal. For years, the US government tried to buy him off behind the scenes by offering him all sorts of deals that would have allowed it to save face. Ali refused to back down though, very likely because he was afraid the Nation of Islam would make another Malcolm X out of him. In the end, the Supreme Court gave in and annulled the sentence – on purely political grounds as we know today (so much for the “law”).
But the typical man hides in solemn conceits and flattering fantasies. He would rather die than challenge the system. He believes that he is running the country… his sons and daughters, protecting it, are heroes… the Fed will make sure nothing goes too far wrong in the economy.
And as for God – he’s always on our side. |
|
Culp’s Hill
An expert tells us that the world’s climate is changing. He says he cares. It is not that we don’t believe him; we just don’t know what it means. Is it good? Is it bad? Will it spoil a picnic? Or increase grain harvests? Is it a fence or a fantasy? We don’t know. We know only that the sun is shining, right here, right now.
You put up Old Glory on Memorial Day; you remembered those who died in the service of their country. Yes, of course, you did. But who and why? Did you remember the soldiers who fought for the 1st Maryland Infantry, CSA? Or the Yankees who killed them?
On a hot summer day in 1863, in the fight over Culp’s Hill near Gettysburg, the Marylanders were ordered to attack. Their commander, Brigadier General Steuart (a distant relative) protested. It would be suicide, he said. Then, he put his head in hands and cried: “My poor boys!” More than half were killed.
Which side are you on… or is he on? What “country” do you serve? Manhattan? Death Valley? The rednecks of South Georgia? Or the home decorators of Marin County? Blue states or red states? Fundamentalist Christians or fundamentalist Muslims? |
Lettuce hope it keeps shining… |
Watch and Wait
There was not much forward momentum in the U.S. stock market yesterday, either. Still, stocks remain near an all-time high. Fed chief Janet Yellen reassured investors. If rates rise, and stocks tank, it won’t be her fault.
She’ll bide her time before hiking rates. And so, we remain in “watch and wait” mode. It is one of those things economist Herbert Stein must have had in mind. As he famously put it, “If something cannot go on forever, it will stop.”
The Fed cannot stay in a permanent state of emergency. It will have to come to an end sometime.
What is amazing is that it hasn’t come to an end already – and there’s no telling how much longer it will continue. In the meantime, the claptrap flows, like beer at an Orioles game.
|
Effective federal funds rate – the never-ending emergency… – click to enlarge. |
Trump Risk
One of the most prominent (among many) purveyors of myth and fraud is MIT wunderkind and former U.S. Treasury secretary Larry Summers. Writing in the Financial Times – a bastion of narrative delusion – he takes aim at the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, Donald Trump.
There are many good reasons to think Trump is a mountebank, but none of them seem to occur to Mr. Summers. Instead, he refers to the “Trump risk,” which he believes measures the damage that Trump would do to the U.S. economy if he were elected.
Economic quack and know-it-all Larry Summers, letting loose in the bastion of narrative delusion known as the Financial Times. We actually happen to think that few men are more dangerous to the economy than Summers himself (the economy is only truly safe when he sleeps). It is quite ironic that he is now warning us of the terrible economic danger other people allegedly represent. |
Photo vi salon.com |
“The economic consequences of a Trump win would be severe,” claims Mr. Summers in the headline. But he has no way of knowing what the consequences would be, let alone if they would be severe. Would they be worse than if Ms. Clinton were elected? No one knows.
“If he is elected, I would expect a protracted recession to begin within 18 months.”
Huh?
Look at the numbers. Over the past 12 months, U.S. GDP growth has been falling steadily, quarter after quarter. From 3.9%… to 2%… to 1.4%… to 0.8%. Within 18 months there should be a protracted recession no matter who is elected to the White House. |
Quarterly annualized real GDP growth…the recent trend doesn’t look very encouraging. It is doubtful that its future depends on which figurehead becomes president. Hillary would be great news for the war racket though… – click to enlarge. |
Convenient Lies
Mr. Summers also picks up Hillary’s theme: It would be unsafe to have Mr. Trump in charge.
“Who will rest secure with President Trump controlling the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Central Intelligence Agency?” he asks.
He’s got a point. But wait, no one should feel safe anyway – no matter who is in the White House. These agencies are plainly out of control… and have been for many years.
Remember, it was rogue elements of the CIA that launched the Bay of Pigs Invasion – apparently, without informing President Kennedy. And that was more than a half-century ago.
Kennedy vowed to “splinter” the organization into a thousand pieces and throw them “into the wind.” Instead, it was JFK who was splintered. Since then, the Deep State has grown as fast as the credit that supports it.
But that’s the difference between politics and putting up a fence. The bigger the scale, and the farther away, the less we really know what is going on. So, we resort to convenient lies to fill in the blanks – until the “poor boys” die.
Charts by St. Louis Federal Reserve Research
Chart and image captions by PT
The above article originally appeared at the Diary of a Rogue Economist, written for Bonner & Partners.
Previous post
Next post