Archives: October 2011

Told Ya So! – GDP ‘grows’ at 2.5% SAAR

Editor’s Note: We told you this would happen when the debt deal was passed in early August. Q3 and perhaps 4 would show a nice pop from the added borrowing and this would be parlayed into some type of real economic strength, which of course doesn’t really exist in any substantial manner. The games are so obvious.

US economic growth increased at its fastest in a year in the third quarter as consumers and businesses set aside fears about the recovery and stepped up spending, creating momentum that could carry into the final three months of the year.

At the same time, slightly fewer people sought unemployment benefits last week, though level remains elevated above 400,000.

Though part of the increase came from the reversal of temporary factors that had restrained growth, the expansion was a welcome relief for an economy that looked on the brink of recession just weeks ago.

U.S. gross domestic product expanded at a 2.5 percent annual rate in the third quarter, the Commerce Department said in its first estimate on Thursday. That was a big acceleration from the 1.3 percent pace in the April-June quarter and matched economists’ expectations.

“The probability of a double-dip has diminished quite a bit,” said Sung Won Sohn, an economics professor at California State University in the Channel Islands. He made the comments before the release of the report.

Consumer spending in the last quarter was the strongest since the fourth quarter of 2010, while business investment spending was the fastest in more than a year. Even though consumer spending was stronger, businesses were slow in stocking up their warehouses.

The peppier spending and a slower pace of inventory accumulation by businesses will lay a base for a solid fourth quarter, but a slowdown in Europe and the exhaustion of pent-up U.S. demand could leave a weak spot early in 2012.

And the recovery’s pace is still too weak to lower a jobless rate that has been stuck above 9 percent for five straight months.

Fearless Spending

A jump in gasoline prices had weighed on consumer spending earlier in the year, and supply disruptions from Japan’s earthquake had curbed auto production. Motor vehicle output has surged as those supply constraints have eased.

 

In addition, car sales, which were held back by the lack of popular models, have also shown renewed strength.

As a result, consumer spending, which accounts for about 70 percent of U.S. economic activity, grew at a 2.4 percent rate after slowing to a 0.7 percent pace in the second quarter.

The relative vigor comes even though consumer confidence has hit levels last seen during the worst of the 2007-09 recession.

Similarly, while some business surveys have pointed to a contraction in factory output, there is little sign corporate America is cutting back spending. Indeed, recent data has suggested business spending is picking up. Business spending rose at a 16.3 percent pace as companies splurged on equipment and software, and invested in nonresidential structures.

Inventories rose only $5.4 billion in the third quarter, the smallest gain since the fourth quarter of 2009, after increasing $39.1 billion in the second quarter. Inventories subtracted 1.08 percentage points from GDP growth. Excluding the drag from inventories, the economy grew at a 3.6 percent pace – pointing to underlying strength in domestic demand — after expanding 1.6 percent in the April-June period.

Apart from consumer and business spending, growth in the third quarter was also supported by a smaller U.S. trade deficit, and the careful management of business inventories bodes well for fourth-quarter production.

Spending on residential construction rose at a modest 2.4 percent pace after growing at a 4.2 percent rate in the second quarter. Government spending was flat, reflecting continued budget cuts by state and local governments. However, the pace of decline in state and local government spending is moderating.

The GDP report also showed a moderation in inflation pressures, with the personal consumption price index (PCE) rising at a 2.4 percent rate in the third quarter, slowing from the April-June quarter’s 3.3 percent pace. Core PCE, which excludes food and energy, rose at a 2.1 percent rate after increasing 2.3 percent in the second quarter.

Jobless Claims Still High

The number of people seeking unemployment benefits dipped slightly last week, though not by enough to suggest that hiring is picking up.

The Labor Department says weekly applications for unemployment benefits declined 2,000 to a seasonally adjusted 402,000. That’s the fourth drop in six weeks.

Still, the four-week average, a less volatile measure, rose to 405,500. The average had fallen to a six-month low two weeks ago.

Despite the recent declines, applications are stuck above 400,000, where they have been for all but two weeks since March.

Applications need to fall consistently below 375,000 to signal sustainable job growth. They haven’t been below that level since February.

Meanwhile, the number of laid-off workers receiving benefits dropped to 3.65 million, the lowest level in three years.

EuroBank Failures to Crash Wall St. – Paul Farrell

SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. (MarketWatch) — Worst-case scenario’s closing fast: Occupy Wall Street growing. But no political power or allies yet. Feared yes, attacked by GOP proxy tea party. Soon the Occupation will explode into a new American Revolution.

When? A string of European bank collapses is dead ahead. And like the Arab Spring, they will trigger an economic disaster for American banks.
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The big picture for global banks

Andrew Milligan, head of Global Strategy at Standard Life Investments, discusses the implications for banks as European officials try to hammer out a solution to the sovereign debt crisis.

Yes, coming soon says Martin Weiss in his “7 Major Advance Warnings,” which is “bound to have a life-changing impact on nearly all investors in the U.S. and around the globe.” His new Weiss Ratings warnings are the “most important” in a 40-year career. The stress on Wall Street banks will force them back to Congress for more bailouts.

Warning eight: No new bailouts. That will push the economy into a deep recession.

Then what? New Glass-Steagall? Not enough. Tax the rich? Not enough. Perp walks? Not enough. Presidential commission? Useless promises. Occupy Wall Street will fail without a fundamental constitutional change. No compromise. Or Wall Street wins, again. We go back to the same free market, deregulated, too-greedy to-fail, conservative Reaganomics policies that have been destroying democracy for a generation.

All this was so obvious, so predictable. America is at a crossroads. Occupy Wall Street buildup has emerged as America’s last great hope to restore democracy. Last week when USA Today called the Occupiers a “ragtag assortment of college kids, labor unionists, conspiracy theorists and others” hinting they’re a flash-in-the-pan “devoid of remedies,” I smiled, reminded of that famous painting of George Washington crossing the Delaware on Christmas 1776, leading what historians also called a “ragtag” Continental Army, surprising the British, and winning the Battle of Trenton.
America’s collective conscience wants true democracy restored

Yes, USA Today sees a “ragtag” army: No mission, no goals, no organization, no agenda, no leaders, and no staying power. Wrong. Look deeper: The Occupiers are the voice of America’s collective conscience demanding a return to our 1776 roots, to a “government of the people, by the people, for the people.”

Our collective inner voice knows America’s moral compass is broken. We’ve become a government “of, by and for” special interests, the wealthiest 1%, Wall Street insiders, CEOs and Forbes-400 billionaires. It happened fast: In one generation the Super Rich grabbed “absolute power,” killing the middle class American dream.

Wall Street banks are already dismissing the Occupiers … planning bigger bonuses this year… lifting limits on their license to gamble Main Street deposits in the $600 trillion global derivatives casino … they already spend hundreds of millions lobbying every year … they’re convinced they can defeat the Occupiers with campaign donations in the back rooms of Congress … writing off the fight as another business expense … ultimately expecting the Occupiers will vanish into the cold winter months.
One citizen. One dollar. One vote. Anything less is failure

Warning: Don’t be fooled. Occupy Wall Street knows exactly want it wants. The tea party, GOP’s proxy, isn’t fooled. They feel threatened, counter-attacking, worried their role will be lost in the 2012 elections, fearful they’ll lose sway over Republicans, so they’ve got a smear campaign against Occupy Wall Street. Won’t work:

Amid all the noise surrounding Occupy Wall Street we hear their “one simple demand.” Missed by most outsiders, that demand echoes down through American history, first heard in 1776 in the Declaration of Independence. Earlier the Occupiers voiced their one simple demand:

“We demand that integrity be restored to our elections. One citizen. One dollar. One vote. Only citizens should make campaign contributions. Campaign contributions by citizens should not exceed $1 to any political candidate or party. Help us reclaim democracy.”

Yes, one simple demand: “Stop the monied corruption at the heart of our democracy.” That one simple demand echoed over and over. And no compromise when dealing with so fundamental a principle of democracy. Compromises the last generation surrendered America to Wall Street and the Super Rich. Compromise this principle again, and we all lose, destroy America. No compromise. Period.
Phase 2: EU bank collapse gives Occupiers new political power

The Occupiers Revolution enters a new phase soon: First Arab Spring rippled into American Fall. Next, EU bank collapses will ripple through Wall Street. For a long time we’ve been warning the 2008 meltdown never ran its course, foiled by mega-bailouts … bankers never shared the sacrifice … fought all reforms … are back to business-as-usual … learned no lessons … now even more delusional, expecting bigger bonuses … trapped in denial for three years … cannot see what’s ahead … a perfect setup for a bigger crash.

That’s why my eye locked on Martin Weiss’ “7 Major Advance Warnings.” Weiss has been a champion of the little guy for 40 years, author of “The Ultimate Money Guide for Bubbles, Busts, Recession and Depression.” Weiss Ratings of domestic and foreign debt markets downgraded U.S. debt before the S&P.

Both of us were warning well in advance of the 2008 crash. It was so predictable: Weiss warned of “failure of Bear Stearns Lehman, Washington Mutual, near-failure of Citigroup and the demise of Fannie Mae years before it collapsed.”

Read More: http://www.marketwatch.com/story/eu-bank-failures-will-crash-wall-street-again-2011-10-18

Derivatives – A $600T Time Bomb

Do you want to know the real reason banks aren’t lending and the PIIGS have control of the barnyard in Europe?

It’s because risk in the $600 trillion derivatives market isn’t evening out. To the contrary, it’s growing increasingly concentrated among a select few banks, especially here in the United States.

In 2009, five banks held 80% of derivatives in America. Now, just four banks hold a staggering 95.9% of U.S. derivatives, according to a recent report from the Office of the Currency Comptroller.

The four banks in question are JPMorgan Chase (NYSE:JPM), Citigroup (NYSE:C), Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) and Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS).

Derivatives played a crucial role in bringing down the global economy, so you would think that the world’s top policymakers would have reined these things in by now — but they haven’t.

Instead of attacking the problem, regulators have let it spiral out of control, and the result is a $600 trillion time bomb called the derivatives market.

Think I’m exaggerating?

The notional value of the world’s derivatives is actually estimated at over $600 trillion. Notional value, of course, is the total value of a leveraged position’s assets. This distinction is necessary because, when you’re talking about leveraged assets like options and derivatives, a little bit of money can control a disproportionately large position that may be as much as 5, 10, 30 or, in extreme cases, 100 times greater than investments that could only be funded in cash instruments.

The world’s gross domestic product (GDP) is only about $65 trillion, or roughly 10.83% of the worldwide value of the global derivatives market, according to The Economist. So there is literally not enough money on the planet to backstop the banks trading these things if they run into trouble.

Compounding the problem is the fact that nobody even knows if the $600 trillion figure is accurate, because specialized derivatives vehicles like the credit default swaps that are now roiling Europe remain largely unregulated and unaccounted for.
Tick…Tick…Tick

To be fair, the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) estimated the net notional value of uncollateralized derivatives risks is between $2 trillion and $8 trillion, which is still a staggering amount of money and well beyond the billions being talked about in Europe.

Imagine the fallout from a $600 trillion explosion if several banks went down at once. It would eclipse the collapse of Lehman Brothers in no uncertain terms.

Read More: http://www.investorplace.com/2011/10/derivatives-the-600-trillion-time-bomb-set-to-explode/

BofA Analyst – Second US Downgrade ‘Imminent’

In an analyst note, Bofa/ML Ethan S. Harris drops a bit of a bombshell prediction:

We expect a moderate slowdown in the beginning of next year, as two small policy shocks—another debt downgrade and fiscal tightening—hit the economy. The “not-so-super” Deficit Commission is very unlikely to come up with a credible deficit-reduction plan. The committee is more divided than the overall Congress. Since the fall-back plan is sharp cuts in discretionary spending, the whole point of the Committee is to put taxes and entitlements on the table. However, all the Republican members have signed the Norquist “no taxes” pledge and with taxes off the table it is hard to imagine the liberal Democrats on the Committee agreeing to significant entitlement cuts. The credit rating agencies have strongly suggested that further rating cuts are likely if Congress does not come up with a credible long-run plan. Hence, we expect at least one credit downgrade in late November or early December when the super Committee crashes.

This is quite a stunning prediction, mainly because nobody is talking about this. And though the experts were 100% wrong in thinking that a downgrade would increase borrowing costs, it did cause a major market jolt when it happened, leading to a major blow to confidence in August and September.

Another round of that would certainly not be helpful.

Hense Harris’ note is titled “Enjoy It While It Lasts.” We have a nice little upswing in economic data, but next year could be rough again, when these confidence shocks hit.

As for the immediate term, Harris sees 2.7% GDP for Q3 (the advance estimate for which will be released this coming Thursday) and 2.3% GDP for Q4.

Revisionist History and the Great Depression – Andy Sutton

Over the past several years, the term ‘Great Depression’ has made a grand re-entry into the American mainstream and has as a consequence become perhaps one of the most misunderstood terms. We are told it was everything that it wasn’t and that it wasn’t everything that it was. Like many important historical events, there is a good bit of revisionist history at work with regards to those dark 12 years in American history when it seemed as though there was nothing but despair and governments tripping over themselves to fix something they didn’t have the tools or the business monkeying with in the first place. Think of it like a butcher going to work on the engine of a ’57 Chevy with baseball bat. The results are predictable.

Unfortunately for us here the United States, there are so few people alive who actually experienced the Depression at a time in their lives when they could remember and understand what was going on. We’ve lost our perspective, and our experience from the patriarchs of the day, and that is a dangerous combination. It means we’ll be pitched to and fro in the breeze and will buy almost anything that comes in a newscast, daily paper, or monthly magazine. It is really time for a thorough, while brief, reset on what the Great Depression was – and wasn’t.

The first really big misunderstanding about the Great Depression is that it happened because the stock market crashed. You can go into a bookstore and pick up countless history and economic texts and nearly all of them promulgate the absolute lie that the stock market crash of 1929 was responsible for the Depression. I don’t think, however, that it is enough to just call this out as a lie. WHY wasn’t the crash responsible for the Depression in and of itself?

Contributory Factors vs. Causes

Many people often confuse contributory factors for causes. It is certainly true that a crashing stock market erodes confidence. This is mostly true because so many people subscribe to another fairy tale – that the stock market is the economy when it has devolved into little more than a momentum casino for banks and hedge funds to shave pennies from each other. Another contributory factor is the idea that a crashing stock market makes people poorer, and thus gives them less discretionary funds with which to spend. Consider this – during the past several years, people have gotten hit with two hammers – a housing crash and a market crash. Yet the spending continues for the most part. People didn’t stop spending so much because of the stock market, but rather because they lost their jobs – an important distinction.

So the ‘official story’ of the Great Depression is that capitalism (in the form of the stock market) collapsed of its own weight and that Hoover, a laissez-faire believer, failed to use the full power of the government to manage the crisis. Later, FDR came in and, in similar fashion to today, wielded the power of government to ‘manage’ the crisis. And where power didn’t exist, it was created – in many cases outside the Constitution. The obvious takeaway here is that capitalism is a failure and only naked socialism can save us from the evils of economic torment. Don’t laugh folks – there are a lot of people who believe this nonsense. And many of them hold important roles in our government.

Multiple Depressions vs. a Single Event?

A reasonable assessment of the facts surrounding the Great Depression points to the fact that there were at least three, and possibly four, actual depression-like events rather than the single event depicted in the ‘official story’.  For the purposes of this paper, I am going to focus on three of these events: a low in the business cycle, global involvement in the US collapse, and the New Deal.

I – The Business Cycle – Monetary Implications

One of the biggest facts left out of the official story of the Depression was that it wasn’t the first. In fact, it takes quite a bit of digging in the history books to find any mention of previous tragic deflagrations of the business cycle. I am not going to outline each of them here in the interests of time, however, I am going to list them: 1819, 1836-37, 1857, 1873, 1893-95, and 1921. I have omitted banking panics such as 1907 since we’re discussing the business cycle. The very interesting fact about all of these sharp downturns of the business cycle is that ALL of them coincided with a complete and utter failure of the management of the money supply by the government. However, as can easily be inferred by the dates of these crises and by closer study of the crises themselves, these were all short-lived events. Most lasted two years with a couple of them lasting 4, but that was the most. The Great one was three times that long. Was this just because of monetary errors? Of course not. It was monetary errors compounded by policy missteps and ill-advised interventions on the part of government. In short, it wasn’t a failure of capitalism that caused the Depression, it was the failure to adhere to the free market that caused it – and then compounded it.

Let’s look at the causality of how monetary policy impacts, and as some would argue, even creates the business cycle. The cycle begins with a bolus of fresh money into the system. This oversupply of money drives down interest rates in the market place and causes businesses to undertake capital spending projects. Many businesses improperly interpret the bolus of fresh money and its effects as an increase in aggregate demand. Thus many of these capital spending projects are foolish in nature. I am sure it won’t take much intellectual gymnastics to figure out what some of today’s foolish endeavors happen to be.  As this move continues, business costs begin to rise due to the oversupply of money. This is further proof that inflation is a monetary event not an economic one. As cost increases persist, the monetary authorities begin to worry about inflation. Remember, their job is to manage inflationary expectations within a fiat system. So they turn off the pump, or even reverse it. As a result the ‘boom’, which was never real to begin with, comes crashing down once the supports are knocked out from under it. The business cycle bottoms and it starts all over again. This sequence of events was precisely played out during the latter part of the 1920’s. Austrian economist Murray Rothbard estimated that the money supply ballooned by around 60% between 1921 and 1929. There is a good deal of evidence that suggests the main reason the USFed kept the heel to the steel so long on monetary expansion in the 1920s was to enable the Bank of England to maintain low post WWI interest rates. Remember the fact that our USFed is beholden to the British by virtue of its owners.

The roaring 20s were just that – roaring. And nobody was paying any attention either. One of the biggest problems with advancements in technology – even then – is that they assist in masking the effects of monetary inflation. As such the 1920s saw a period of relatively stable prices for goods. The inflation made it into rampant asset speculation. Sound familiar??  As has been the case in so many subsequent boom cycles, the USFed has telegraphed its actions with regard to taking the punch bowl out the back door. By 1928, interest rates on the short end had begun to increase. Between January 1928 and August 1929, the discount rate was increased 4 times from 3.5% to 6%. It gets better. For the next three years into the depths of the first leg of the crisis in 1932, the USFed allowed the money supply to shrink by 30%.

Let’s keep score here. In the 1920s the Fed allowed the money supply to rise by over 60%, then allowed it to crash by 30% in the three years following August 1929.

Looking back in history, this has been the pattern of every boom-bust. Overissuance followed by contraction. The sad thing is that ending the USFed probably wouldn’t make too much of a difference – if only in this regard. Our government has shown complete ineptitude and an inclination to corruption as well when it comes to regulating the money supply. The one thing that would result in an ending of the USFed, at least in theory, is greater accountability. As an interesting aside, the St. Louis Fed in its most recent bimonthly ‘Review’ features an article that argues what a great creation the central bank is, and how it is directly accountable to the people. It is so biased as to be almost entertaining.

Friedman and Schwartz argued a ‘seismic incompetence’ by the USFed. It is my humble opinion, however, that these events constitute a self-inflicted wound. Why say such a thing? Look at the results; they are undeniable. A massive consolidation as the elite snapped up paper assets at fire sale prices and the unmistakable intrusion of government into the social and economic fabric of this nation, and a calling in of a fiat money’s only competition are three salient examples. Now take a look at the crisis of 2008 and ask yourself the same questions. Look at what has happened since. Government has gotten larger, and more intertwined with banks and in the regulation of everyone’s business. These are the events and facts. Draw your own conclusions.

II – Global Involvement and Resultant Disintegration

Unlike today, where collapses can happen across the globe in mere hours, the initial shocks of the Great Depression were limited to the United States. Ironically, had policy mistakes not been made at numerous times, the Great Depression would never have been great at all. It would have been just a footnote, like the aforementioned periods of economic duress. I mentioned previously that it is my opinion, based on the preponderance of the evidence, that the USFed precipitated the economic crash intentionally. However, what is certainly open to much speculation is the influence the central bank had on subsequent policy decisions. I am not going to go there since politics is not my field. What I will say in post-mortem fashion is that there were gross gaffes made that took a pinhole in the proverbial dyke and ran a train through it.

First lets look at unemployment. Granted, the methodologies were much different in the 1930s than they are today, but I am quite certain the numbers were much less maligned in those days. 1929 unemployment averaged a mere 3.2%, a figure that rose to a recessionary 8.9% in 1930. Oddly enough, calling 8.9% unemployment  ‘recessionary’ was not my label, but the labeling of the economists of the day. Contrast that with today’s metrics and the outright refusal to admit the continuing contraction in today’s economy.

Unemployment would peak at the now-famous 25% level in 1933. Much of this increase was blamed on the free market and its advocate, Herbert Hoover. However, a more in-depth and complete study of the policies Hoover endorsed and championed demonstrated that he wasn’t the free-market advocate he claimed to be. In fact, Roosevelt’s running mate John Nance Garner asserted that Hoover was ‘leading the country down the path towards socialism!’ Franklin Roosevelt of all people also rang the bell of Hoover’s socialist tendencies – and both were absolutely right. The true irony here is that FDR ended up being the one who would lead America perhaps the furthest down the path to socialism with the myriad programs enacted during his tenure, almost all of which put the destinies of the people in the hands of central planners.

In my opinion, Hoover’s biggest mistake was his enactment of the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act. This one is actually in the history books, but it is always portrayed positively, when in fact it was almost singlehandedly responsible for passing the banner from the first phase of the crisis – that of America – to the rest of the world.

Smoot-Hawley was piggybacked right on top of Fordney-McCumber; another tariff act passed in 1922 that had devastated US agriculture. Smooth-Hawley was a protectionist bill at the time when it was least needed and it ended up triggering an international trade war. It essentially closed the border to foreign goods. Tariffs on agricultural goods were raised from an average of 20% to 34% and from 50% to 60% on wool and wool products. 887 tariffs were increased as a result of Smoot-Hawley and the list of dutiable goods increased to over 3,000. The biggest gaffe of Smooth-Hawley is that many of the tariffs were stated as an absolute amount as opposed to being a percentage of the price. As prices cratered as the USFed’s consolidative deflation kicked in, the flow of foreign products nearly stopped, as it no longer made sense for foreigners to export goods to America. Thousands went home jobless from the steel, paint, and clothing industries alone.

It was evident that the thinking behind Smoot-Hawley was to force Americans to buy products made at home, which would stimulate aggregate demand, thereby solving the unemployment problems. Unfortunately, the trade dynamics at the time dictated the other half of that equation. Foreigners with no place to export to won’t have the disposable income to purchase our exports. In a world where countries produce based on competitive and comparative advantages, a healthy trade environment is essential to the success of everyone. Societies that have not designed themselves to be self-sufficient can’t suddenly become so with the stroke of a politician’s pen. And that is what Smooth-Hawley tried to do – and it helped to take an American problem and make it a global one. Put another way, Smoot-Hawley was to the 1930s what the repeal of Glass-Steagall has been to the first part of this new century. Foreigners reacted in predictable fashion; they cut off the United States from the trade picture, refusing to purchase American goods. With trade sufficiently disrupted, the surpluses and shortages of goods around the globe worsened, and the economic calamity that had hit the US became a global problem.

The US agriculture industry in particular was devastated, losing around one-third of its market almost overnight. Food prices collapsed and the dominoes starting falling. 9,000 bank failures, mostly ones that held farm loans, rocked the financial sector between 1930 and 1933. Here is another point where facts diverge from populist historical opinion. The banks failures are today blamed on the stock market crash, and in effect, the failure of capitalism, when it was government intervention that was directly responsible for those failures. The stock market, which at that time was a better reflector of policy and the economy, peaked at DOW 381 in 1929, crashed to 198 in 1930, then rallied up to 294 by April 1930. The DOW would begin to fail again as Smoot-Hawley made its way through the legislative process. The bill would be signed, the bank failures would begin, the economy would tank due to a collapse in aggregate demand (which was exacerbated by a deflationary stance by the USFed), and the DOW would crater at 41 – a 90% loss two years later. As a side note, it would take 25 years for the DOW to reach 381 again. Feeling good about DOW 14,000 again anytime soon?

Many historians accurately point out that it was likely the trade war that started with the signing of Smoot-Hawley that eventually precipitated WWII. I’ll cite the old economic axiom: When goods don’t flow freely across borders, armies will. If you are feeling shivers up and down your spine right now – you should be. The environment in place today is eerily similar to that of the late 1920s and I am not even talking about the stock market. We’re hearing about potential trade wars over currency valuations, we are seeing foolish legislation fly through Congress on a regular basis, and we are seeing the USFed, in the middle of it all, as usual, rigging the system for its owners. Just like 1929, little has changed. Sure, the names, faces, and places have changed, but the song remains the same. Truly, there is nothing new under the sun.

III. The New Deal

Franklin Roosevelt rode into Washington on a political white horse in 1933, capitalizing in a huge way on the mistakes of his predecessor. He rode into town on the platform of reducing government spending by 25%, a balanced Federal budget, and a gold currency that would be defended at all costs. That was the platform. Also on the platform was the removal of the Federal government from all issues that would be better handled by private enterprises and the ending of the disastrous and terribly inefficient Hoover farm subsidies. You can do the research for yourself; this is what FDR promised when he ran for President. It all sounded very good. We got none of it and the mistakes and fiscal folly continued.

FDR’s first act, which would strike fear in the hearts of every American with a dollar to his name, came before his seat in the oval office was warm. On March 6, 1933, FDR declared a bank holiday that would last 9 days. Friedman and Schwartz also argued that the bank holiday was essentially a waste of time since it did nothing to correct the mischief of the USFed or reverse Smoot-Hawley. All the banking holiday did was deprive depositors of their funds and sow the seeds of further distrust – now directed at the new administration. 5,000 of the banks that closed their doors on March 6, 1933 did not re-open nine days later and of those 5,000, 40% of them never opened their doors again. Can you say consolidation?

Later that same year, Congress gave FDR the power to seize private gold and then fix the value thereof. The US was now well on its way to divorcing itself of the gold standard. This is where I must call into question the influence of the USFed and international bankers on US policy. Cui bono is clear in this case: the moneychangers. The Fed should have been abolished for its malfeasance in 1929, yet, essentially, it was handed more power when the private gold was called in. Sure, the USA would not totally leave the gold standard until 1971, but the die was cast – under a President who ran on the platform that such an event would never happen on his watch. This is not intended to be a hit piece of FDR; I am just stating the facts and events that took place. Senator Carter Glass summed it up in early 1933: “It’s dishonor, sir. This great government, strong in gold, is breaking its promises to pay gold to widows and orphans to whom it has sold government bonds with a pledge to pay gold coin of the present standard of value. It is breaking its promise to redeem its paper money in gold coin of the present standard of value. It’s dishonor, sir.”

The hits continued to roll throughout the 1930s. In the first year of the New Deal, the proposed budget was $10 billion, on revenues of just $3 billion. So much for the cut in government spending. Between 1933 and 1936, government expenditures increased 83%, with government debt increasing by an amazing 73%. Seriously, does ANY of this sound familiar?

In 1935, we got Social Security, and it now hangs around the neck of America like a millstone. Three years later we would get the minimum wage law, which would ensure that more Americans would remain unemployed. Remember, absent Fed mischief and felonious behavior, your dollar would be a stable store of wealth and we would not need minimum wage laws, and increases of the same, to ‘keep up’.

Mainstream economists will be quick to extoll the virtues of both Social Security and minimum wage laws. In reality, the former told Americans that they could let up their guard – the government had their backs covered, while the latter ensured that many of them had no back to cover. The minimum wage law priced (and continues to) out the members of society at the bottom of the experience scales. Namely, teens, young entrants into the workforce, and the uneducated.  It does this by saying that a firm must pay a wage that is above equilibrium in order to have the privilege of that person’s time. Simply put, if a worker can’t produce the value of the cost of his employment, then that job will not be filled. By artificially raising the bar constantly (primarily due to the above-captioned inflationary shenanigans of the USFed), more of these people are never hired, and instead rely on government assistance to survive.

The AAA (Agricultural Adjustment Act) put a tax on food processors and the revenue from that program was used to destroy crops and cattle. See, there was a surplus as a result of Smoot-Hawley, so instead of solving the problem by abolishing the miscarriage of economics that was the law, the government taxed another area, then used the tax revenue to pay farmers to pour milk down the drain. It is kind of similar to the example of corn-based ethanol where the government taxes gasoline, then uses some of that revenue to burn up the food supply while corn prices hit record highs. I know it isn’t a perfect example, but it requires the same amount of insanity to justify.

Had enough yet? I’ve got just one more – the National Recovery Administration (NRA), brought into existence by the National Industrial Recovery Act, passed in July of 1933. Again, and I don’t care if I sound like a broken record – does ANY of this sound familiar? Under this law, many industrial businesses were forced into what might easily be considered cartels. The NRA was funded by taxes on the industries it regulated and it in many ways nearly dictated how they went about doing business. Here’s the kicker; in the months leading up to the passage of NIRA, there were signs that the economy might be finally on the verge of recovery. Factory employment had increased by 23% since its bottom, and payrolls were also on the rise. The NIRA was passed and work hours were cut, wages capriciously increased or decreased, and the full regulatory burdens of this new overlord of American industry were placed squarely on companies that were just starting to get a steady footing. The results were predicable and it would be absolutely obtuse of anyone to even suggest otherwise. Six months after the law was passed, industrial production had already dropped 25%. In fact, during the NRA’s entire existence, industrial production NEVER got as high as it had in the months before the passage of that bill in July of 1933.

I could spend another 5 pages and 5,000 words detailing the rest of the New Deal, the various agencies, Acts, and actions that put a boot on the throat of the American economy. But I think you get the point. In 1933, British ‘economist’ John Maynard Keynes would strut into the history books with what is really nothing more than a bunch of gobbledygook that would justify the preposterous and underhanded actions of Hoover, Roosevelt, and the USFed. His ‘work’ was called ‘The Means to Prosperity’, which when compared with the content, was an oxymoron of dictionary example quality.

As a footnote, many of the New Deal programs like the NRA and AAA, among others, were stomped by the Supreme Court in 1935 and 1936 as being unconstitutional. The economy would undergo some recovery from late 1935 through early 1937 before crashing again as the supports were blown out from under it by the Court. Oddly enough, revisionist historians blame the Supreme Court for the final leg of the Great Depression, when again it was government interference that set the stage for that portion of the collapse as well. Unfortunately, the government still wasn’t finished perpetuating the Depression and the Wagner Act (better known as the Labor Relations Act) was passed in 1935 after the voidance of the NIRA. This essentially resulted in organized labor kicking off an orgy of organizing activity from strikes to boycotts, to seizures of plants and violence. Just what the fledgling economic recovery needed. I am not against organized labor in principle, but again, the consequences of the mere timing of this action couldn’t have been that hard to fathom.

Conclusions

I am hopeful that I have established beyond reasonable doubt in this paper that monetary policy, and more importantly, the execution and timing of monetary policy, have a direct effect on the business cycle. The 21st century tendency towards booms and busts is a direct result of the mismanagement of both the currency and the supply thereof. As a corollary, mismanagement of the business environment by government can have consequences that are just as tragic as I discussed with regard to Smoot-Hawley, NIRA, AAA, and eventually the Wagner Act. We had two leaders and complicit Congresses in the 1930s that acted like proverbial bulls in the china shop. We had a central bank that was managing things for the benefit of those who own it, and what was even worse – we had a country that was very literally demanding all of the above. And I will say it one more time for posterity – does any of this sound familiar?

Wikipedia: hoover definition: Herbert Clark 1874–1964 31st president of the United States (1929–33).

Andy Sutton On Liberty Talk Radio – 10/19/2011

Good Housekeeing? – An Op-Ed

Published on: 10/17/2011
Categories: Uncategorized
Comments: No Comments

I am writing this article not as an economic or financial analyst, which is my normal mode of operation. This article has nothing to do with economic, financial markets, or any related topics. What it has to do with is the undeniable reality that we as a nation are failing miserably in one of the most basic precepts of civilization and that is to leave things better than we found them. When you think about it that is how true advancement takes place. If every civilization had done as we have, it is more than likely that 99% of you would never be able to read this article. Sure the technology might be there, but you wouldn’t be able to afford it. Or be literate enough to read the piece. So I am writing this week as just a regular old vanilla American – one that is very concerned about the future – and how we leave things. In my opinion, there are two major areas where we are failing that are well beyond the auspices of economics in their origins, but certainly have economic implications.

Technology – A Knife that Cuts Both Ways

One of the biggest misdirections we have witnessed in the past 20 years or so, and the last decade in particular, is that because we can come up with new and better technologies that somehow we are advancing society and/or civilization. It has been quite remarkable to watch the development of computers that fit in the palm of your hand. They can make phone calls, take pictures, play music and do a raft of other useful functions. But have they truly advanced society? I would argue that they have actually caused society to regress. People have become more compartmentalized. Despite the ‘social media’, people are less sociable, preferring to send computerized messages into the ether, rather than shaking hands, sitting down over a cup of coffee and actually having a real discussion. There is certainly a fine line between advancement and decay, and it is truly in the eye of the beholder.

From a purely economic perspective, such developments have made us more ‘productive’ in our work – at least that is the assertion. But have they? Not a month goes by where there isn’t some study performed that shows people are wasting more and more time at work on the Internet, social media sites, and texting with their cell phones. The losses to firms are estimated in the billions if not hundreds of billions of dollars a year. Companies are spending more resources than ever trying to combat this decay on productivity, so to call technology a drag on productivity is likely an understatement of epic proportions. Technology has truly demonstrated itself to be a knife that cuts both ways.

From the standpoint of pure innovation, this generation has certainly made more breakthroughs than the last. This process goes almost uninterrupted back to the Dark Ages. However, we must now address the aggregate effects of this technology on society as a whole. And the quantifying of these effects is going to be very subjective in nature. Permit me a brief example. When I was a kid growing up in the mid 1970s, we didn’t have many of the developments we have today (obviously). The first Ataris were still several years away and most homes still had the old style rotary phones. Microwave ovens were a ‘new’ development. I spent a lot of time outdoors, and as an only child, my imagination bloomed as I discovered new and improved ways to occupy myself. When other kids were around, it was all about interaction, conversation, and normal, healthy development. Contrast that with today. Many kids stay inside most of the time, either on their computers or playing video games. They don’t talk, they text. There is a massive obesity problem among children in this country. There are many reasons for this, but one of this for sure is the sedentary lifestyle most of us lead – enabled by technology. Understand I am not bashing innovation, but merely pointing out that it doesn’t always make the contributions to the advancement of society that we might think.

And as a society, are we better off merely because we’ve seen an era of unprecedented technological innovation? Have we left things better than we found them simply because we’ve innovated? I’d argue not necessarily. The dystopian novel ’1984′ also featured a clearly superior technological landscape surrounding a societal fabric that was in a state of ruin. Sure, ’1984′ was a work of fiction, but many fictions parallel reality in one way or another and certainly ’1984′ is no exception. On the continuum between the unattainable ‘perfect’ society, and that portrayed in ’1984′, I would contend we are much closer to the latter than the former.

A Loss of National Identity

This is the obvious second pillar of where we are failing and I will warn you up front, this is going to be a very hard pill to swallow for some. It is going to challenge your way of thinking and leave you with the distinct sense that you’ve been played like a two-dollar fiddle. Why? Because you have. Let me start by asking you how you’d define ‘America’. Most people would probably cite a quote from one of the founders or perhaps a refrain from one of our ‘patriotic’ songs. Many folks really struggled with the concept as well.

In recent years, there have been many ‘movements’ in this country. The stated intention of nearly all of them has been to restore America to her proper position. Perhaps to ‘restore freedom’, or some other nebulous concept. The outside impression given is that these movements are spontaneous and organic, meaning they originated much in the way a vacuum is filled. There was a perceived need or void, and the movement came into existence to fill that void. However, most of these movements have not been organic, but rather have served to act as lightning rods for growing outrage and discontent. We clearly have a void of leadership and have had one for decades now. I would not even try to determine when we last had effective leadership across the board, but it has been a LONG time.

We have had the current structure of leadership – the two party system – for nearly as long as we have had a nation. Opposing forces, battling over how the country should be run. Interestingly, all 50 states ratified a Constitution that was supposed to do exactly that. What we have today is two groups fighting for the most part about how best to go about subverting that Constitution. That document is our national identity. It says who we are, what we are about, and how we are to do things. It is for our country, what the Bible is for the Christian. It is the instruction manual for how to run a country. Surely it was not perfect, and the framers recognized that, providing a process for changing it. The process itself was designed so that change couldn’t happen reflexively, but would take time. Clearly the intent here was that during that time, reflection and contemplation would take place.

The identity of America has been lost. School kids don’t know their Constitution, most adults couldn’t even tell you when the first state (Delaware) ratified it (1787), and our leaders pay lip service to it out of one side of their mouth while supporting legislation that mocks or debases it out of the other.

The two political parties, working towards the common good of the banking elite around the world have turned our political process into a WWF production. The election has become like the Super Bowl. Better be on the side of the winning team. The left condemns the right and vice versa, yet the problems continue to worsen – for generations. Getting back to my original thesis, have we left things better than we’ve found them in this regard? Most of you will likely agree with me on that one, but when some pollster puts you up against the wall, you’ll sigh, and pick one of the establishment candidates as your ‘choice’ to lead us. Perhaps you’ll quietly utter the phrase that he/she is the ‘lesser of two evils’. Insanity is defined as repeating the same thing over and over while expecting a different result. Enough said.

The media is more than willing to help you maintain your sense of learned helplessness too. The media is perhaps the biggest reason why the people of this country haven’t thrown off the shackles of convoluted political ideologies, dependence on government, and moral equivalence. And think of these ‘organic’ movements referenced earlier. Each of them have in some way been initiated by members of the media, then immediately co-opted by one side or the other of the establishment. The paradigm must continue at all costs. All protest must be quickly controlled and the fury directed in the establishment’s preferred direction, but never at the establishment itself. Get people outside on a Saturday afternoon, they wave their signs and yell slogans for a couple of hours, then get on a bus, go home and go right back to what they were doing before. Their anger is spent, their desire to be a dissident quenched. Then the next election comes and the media plays up one candidate or another as the one who can save us from the evils of the other half of the establishment – and the charade goes on. Think that won’t happen next year? I certainly hope not, but based on our history and our lack of awareness, it would seem a near certainty.

We have clearly lost our national identity. It has resulted in a great deal of economic, political, and moral dissonance. Perhaps the only thing worse than 15 trillion in debt have been the nearly 50 million voices snuffed out in a country where life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness are supposedly the cornerstones of who we are as a nation.

Another Bald-Face Lie About ‘Free Trade’ Deals

Editor’s Note: Funny, we heard the same thing back in the 1990s. Was going to create lots of jobs for Americans. We’re still waiting for all those jobs. Now this pack of establishment liars (yes, both sides) is selling more free trade deals with the promise of more new jobs. What an absolute and pathetic joke.

(AP:WASHINGTON) Congress was set to approve on Wednesday free trade agreements with South Korea, Colombia and Panama that have the potential to spur economic activity and put Americans back to work. President Barack Obama and Republicans said the expected action showed that they can cooperate to revive the struggling economy.

The deals are “an area of common ground where we have worked together,” said House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio.

The three House votes, to be followed by three in the Senate, were coming a day after Senate Republicans united to reject Obama’s jobs creation initiative. Despite the expected strong votes for the trade deals, political resentments lingered.

Republicans criticized Obama for taking several years to send the agreements, all signed in the George W. Bush administration, to Congress for final approval. Many among Obama’s core supporters, including organized labor and Democrats from areas hit hard by foreign competition, were unhappy that the White House was espousing the benefits of free trade.

Democratic opposition was particularly strong against the agreement with Colombia, where labor leaders long have faced the threat of violence.

“I find it deeply disturbing that the United States Congress is even considering a free trade agreement with a country that holds the world record for assassinations of trade unionists,” said Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif.

To address such dissatisfaction, the White House demanded linking the trade bills to extension of a Kennedy-era program that helps workers displaced by foreign competition with retraining and financial aid. The Senate went along; the House planned a vote Wednesday.

But with the focus in both the White House and Congress on jobs, the trade agreements enjoyed wide bipartisan support.

The administration says the three deals will boost U.S. exports by $13 billion a year and that just the agreement with South Korea, America’s seventh largest trading partner, will support 70,000 American jobs.

Groups that oppose the pacts, including the AFL-CIO, point to past cases where free trade agreements were linked to factories moving overseas and they dispute the job growth figures.

Supporters argue that the three trading partners already enjoy almost duty-free access to U.S. markets and the agreements will lower tariffs on U.S. goods, making them significantly more competitive.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce notes that U.S. farm products sold to South Korea face 54 percent tariffs, compared with 9 percent for Korean agricultural goods in the United States, and that U.S. automakers are hit with a 35 percent tariff in Colombia, compared with 2 percent for any vehicles coming from Colombia.

The administration says the trade deal with South Korea could increase exports by $10 billion, enough to eliminate the current $10 billion surplus Seoul has with the United States. It would make 95 percent of American consumer and industrial goods duty free within five years.

That agreement, the White House said in a statement, will give American businesses, farmers, workers, ranchers, manufacturers, investors and service providers “unprecedented access to Korea’s nearly $1 trillion economy.”

Supporters say that the Colombia deal, in addition to opening up markets that have been restricted because of high tariffs, would provide a gesture of political support for President Juan Manual Santos, a strong U.S. ally.

Republicans welcomed the prospect of increased exports but said those benefits could have come sooner if Obama had acted more quickly. They said American businesses have paid $3.8 billion in tariffs to Colombia since the trade agreement was signed, and that Americans are losing markets in South Korea because of a Korea-European Union free trade agreement that went into effect in July.

“There’s no reason we should have had to wait nearly three years for this president to send them up to Congress for a vote, but they’re a good start nonetheless,” Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky said.

Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah, top Republican on the Senate Finance Committee, said there had been “nothing but passive indifference” from the Obama administration.

Finalizing the three deals has been difficult: Democratic majorities in the last year of the Bush administration opposed them and Obama demanded renegotiation of certain sections of each deal.

In the past year the administration has succeeded in winning concessions from South Korea to open up its markets further to U.S. vehicles and concluded an agreement to bring transparency to banking practices in Panama, known as a tax haven.

It has prodded Colombia into putting together a plan designed to protect labor rights and crack down on violence against labor leaders.

The congressional votes come a little more than a week after Obama submitted the agreements to Congress. The quick turnaround reflects the importance with which House GOP leaders regard them as economic aids.

The goal was to finish the voting by Wednesday, a day before South Korean President Lee Myung-bak is scheduled to address a joint meeting of Congress.

The United States has free trade relations with 17 nations. The last free trade agreement was completed in 2007 with Peru. It could still take several months to work out the final formalities before the current agreements go into force. The South Korean parliament is expected to sign off on its agreement this month.

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Guest Post – Fred Carach – Getting Rich on the House?? Game Over

Editor’s Note: Another Must-Read Guest Contribution..

Much has been heard in the press lately about the end of the great American dream of homeownership but what the press has missed is that what has really died in the crash is a perversion of the American dream. The perversion of getting rich exclusively through homeownership. That perversion really started in the 1970s and died in the great real estate crash that began in 2007.

Prior to the 1970s homeownership was regarded as a key asset in the accumulation of wealth but it was never considered the only asset. Real estate values rose too slowly to accomplish that mission. In fact it is surprising how little real estate values have risen over the long term. According to the economist Robert J. Shiller, the recognized economic expert on this matter from 1890 when accurate records began to the crash year of 2007 residential real estate rose only 3.44% a year. Far less than most people would assume. Then the rise in inflation rates changed everything.
In the decade of the 1970s inflation turbocharged real estate and values rose a blistering 8.12% a year, the greatest rise in history and in the 1980s values rose an additional handsome 5.86% a year. These two decades convinced millions of American homeowners that they could now get rich solely through homeownership.

Their home they were now convinced was the truth, the light and the way to getting rich.

People adore owning real estate. They lust for the stability and permanence of the land. They can roll around in the stuff and as the saying goes they are not making any more of it. What’s more everyone knows or rather knew that you can’t lose money in real estate. People have always had an exaggerated notion of how profitable an investment real estate has historically been. This opinion is based to a great extent on the enormous leverage that is common in homeownership. If your down payment is 5% you are employing leverage of 20:1. Wall street speculators would kill for this kind of leverage.

But there was more to it than that. By the 1970s the American people had changed. They were for the most part no longer willing to make the sacrifices that their parents and grandparents had made.

Scrimping and saving and living below your means was too tough for them. Instant self-gratification was in. What was attractive to them was blowing every dime they had on a big-beautiful home and get rich while they were wallowing in their big-beautiful home like a pig wallows in slop. Saving and sacrificing was for dummies. As for the stock market it was way, way to risky. They were far too smart for that crazy gamble. Risk taking was for dummies. Their home was the perfect investment it required zero risk and zero sacrifice. Which was just what they were looking for.

An interesting component of this belief was an amazing lack of interest in any real estate other than their home. When there was enough equity in their home to support an investment in any real estate other than their home for the most part they turned it down flat. After all any investment outside their home would require a sacrifice on their part. We couldn’t have that happening now could we? Instant self-gratification always comes first. The smart career move from their point of view was to shoot for the Mcmansion. Boy could they pig wallow in that baby.

In 2007 their big-beautiful homes imploded on their heads. It is hard to overstate the financial devastation that the housing crash has had on the American middle class. The unemployment rate that everyone is whining about is almost a side show. For millions of middle class, home owning Americans their home was their only financial asset. In a matter of months millions of home owning Americans went “upside down.” They went from having $100,000 to $250,000 or more in equity in their homes and often much more. To being that much or more underwater.

For those who have twenty years or more before they retire recovery is possible but for the millions who are approaching retirement there is very little hope. The statistics are so grim that many of them are hard to believe. According to the famous Case-Shiller Housing Index home values hit rock bottom in the depression year of 1933 with a decline of -30.5% from the 1920s peak boom period. As hard as it is to believe according to the latest Case-Shiller findings we have just broken that record in the 2nd quarter of 2011 with a decline of -32.7% from the 2006 market peak.

About one-third of all the homes in America are paid off and have no mortgage. The remaining two-thirds of all homes have mortgages. An amazing 25% of homes with mortgages are underwater. The outstanding mortgages exceed the value of these homes.

Then there is the seldom reported vacant housing crisis. There are 126 million housing units in this country or about one housing unit for every 2.38 Americans. That is an awful lot of housing for each American. The classic 3/2 American home is overkill if there is only 2.38 people rattling around in it.
The census figures tell the tale. When I first read these numbers they were so bad that I could not believe that they were true. The 1990 census reported that there were a staggering 10.3 million vacant homes in this country. It gets worse, in the 2000 census that figure had risen to 15 million vacant homes and in the 2010 census that figure had risen to 19 million vacant homes. About 15% of all the housing stock in America is vacant. You could level 19 million homes and there would still be housing for every American. This is not good! What were we thinking? We were thinking that you can’t lose money in real estate. Every new home is money in the bank.

The chickens have come home to roost. There will be no quick recovery. We are not only broke but we have a mountain of inventory hanging over our heads. It will take us years to work our way out of this mess.

Guest Post – They Want US Dead – Red Level Alert

Published on: 10/05/2011
Categories: 'Best of Web'
Comments: No Comments

Editor’s Note: Don’t often pass things along as people might be ‘skeptical’. However, I cut and pasted all of these links and the truth is right there – often right in the mainstream. Highly recommended reading.

THEY WANT US DEAD! A Red Level Alert

B.J .Arvin

Shocking?  I don’t want to believe it either, but I find it quite difficult to come to any other conclusion, when I look at all these issues in total.  It is also quite apparent who runs our country and our lives.  It certainly can’t be red-blooded Americans.  These are not things that are discussed or debated at any length on mainstream media, so if you have not heard of them, it’s time do some research.  You also need to understand the term ‘soft kill’ weapon. 

There are no headlines or “BREAKING NEWS” when legislation is passed, treaties are signed, or executive orders are created that slowly and incrementally destroy our constitution, our personal rights and freedoms, or the very country we loved.  Yes, I use that word in the past tense because I no longer feel comfortable, safe or free here, and I’ve watched the American dream slip through the fingers of my children, and their children.

Most people know by now that our financial security is in doubt, that our manufacturing base is long gone, and that the police are in a whole new posture.  We have become numb to aggressive wars started in our name, being frisked                          

and X-rayed at airports, and that we Americans are all suspected terrorists now.        

The newest assault on our bodily privacy will be at NFL games.  What’s next?

But now, the threats I feel to my very health and life, which are being dictated and controlled by hidden hands, have put my survival instinct into high gear.  I’m

afraid that what started out as greed by the leaders of this country, has turned into a monster that not even they can control or stop at this point.  Someone else is running the government, the ‘regulating’ agencies, and even the decisions of who lives and dies.  Here I will list things that pertain to our health (or lack thereof), although there are countless other travesties happening in America that are irreversible and destructive beyond all logic and comprehension.

 

*GMO (genetically modified organisms) in 95% of the food chain.

  None of these new technologies have been tested for long term consequences, but independent testing is already signaling grave dangers to human health and  farming soil biology.

 www.responsibletechnology.org/

 

*High Fructose GMO corn syrup that substitutes for cane sugar in 

  thousands of food products.  Public awareness has prompted a name change to

  Corn Sugar

  http://www.princeton.edu/main/news/archive/S26/91/22K07/

                              

*Ever increasing pesticide and herbicide use on foods to compensate for weed and    

  pest resistance.  (If it doesn’t work, use more, right?)

  http://truefoodnow.org/2009/11/17/new-report-reveals-dramatic-rise-in-pesticide-use-on-genetically-engineered-ge-crops-due-to-the-spread-of-resistant-weeds/

 

*Poisonous food additives-Aspartame, BPA, and MSG, just to name a few.

  http://aspartame.mercola.com/

  http://freedocumentaries.org/film.php?id=244 “Sweet Misery”

  http://www.ewg.org/chemindex/chemicals/bisphenolA

  www..org/truthinlabeling

 

*Uninspected food imports (99%) from around the world.

  http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17349427/ns/health-infectious_diseases/t/risks-tainted-food-rise-inspections-drop/

 

*Fluoridation, prescription drugs, fracking fluid, and radioactive   

  isotopes have been found in our drinking water.

  http://environment.about.com/od/waterpollution/a/tap_water_probe.htm

  http://cleanairpurewater.com/blog/2011/04/08/removing-radioisotopes-and-  fallout-from-drinking-water/

  http://www.earthworksaction.org/FracingDetails.cfm

  http://water.epa.gov/action/advisories/drinking/fluoride_index.cfm

 

*Dangerous, often deadly, prescription drugs that got fast track approval, 

  then when found to be unsafe, not removed from the market in a timely manner.

  http://www.drugs.com/

  http://www.naturalnews.com/033639_prescription_drugs_deaths.html

 

*Questionably effective, virtually untested, unregulated, and dangerous vaccines.

  http://search.mercola.com/search/Pages/results.aspx?k=vaccines

 

*Government bureaucrats are ongoing in their efforts to make vaccines

  mandatory, while the manufacturers are exempt from liability.

  http://www.nvic.org/

  http://coto2.wordpress.com/2011/09/15/california-to-vaccinate-kids-without-  parental-consent-tell-gov-brown-to-veto/

 

*Government black-out of information about U.S. exposure or risk from

  Japan’s nuclear plant reactors melting down, and the burning of

  radioactive waste debris from the tsunami.  Not a single word from Big Brother  

  about ‘the worst environmental disaster in history’, and it’s still getting worse. 

  http://www.huffingtonpost.com/vivian-norris-de-montaigu/deadly-silence-on- 

  fukushi_b_859241.html

  http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=25369

 

*Building of nuclear plants in U.S. on known earthquake fault lines.

 http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704396504576204672681780248.html

 

*Building of nuclear plants without sufficient plans or solutions in the

  event of a major accident or nuclear melt down.

  http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/world/japanearthquake/2011-  03/14/content_12168574.htm

 

*Loose and irresponsible regulation and re-licensure of America’s

  aging nuclear plants.

  http://www.gazettenet.com/2011/04/19/entergy-sues-keep-vermont-yankee-nuclear-plant-open

 

*The government allowed a private corporation to spray lethal chemicals

  on an oil accident after demanding they stop.  An entire food source and       

  industry was destroyed, if not by oil, then by Corexit 9500.

  http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2010/07/31/bp-coast-guard-dispersants/

 

*The government created draconian legislation that will regulate  

  small farms, ranches, and farmers markets right out of business.

  http://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgi-bin/getdoc.cgi?dbname=111_cong_bills&docid=f:s510rs.txt.pdf

 

*Growing a home garden now requires a license and the government is

  hiring 10,000 new agents to make sure you get one.

  http://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgi-bin/getdoc.cgi?dbname=111_cong_bills&docid=f:s510rs.txt.pdf

 

*The FDA has drafted new regulations that will wipe out most vitamin  

  supplement companies. Bills introduced in the senate are doing same.

  http://naturalnews.com/032912_FDA_dietary_supplements.html

  http://naturalnews.com/032911_dietary_supplement_labeling_act_FDA.html

 

*Government agents are conducting swat team raids on Amish organic

  milk farmers and food co-ops, destroying food, and confiscating

  money.  Consuming chemicals is much healthier apparently.

  http://www.gaia-health.com/articles201/000241-fda-persecutes-raw-milk-dairies-raids-amish-farm.shtml

 *The FDA claimed in court that “people have no historical or inherent right to

  choose what foods they eat or feed their children”.  Rights are now bestowed

  upon you by the FDA.

  http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2010/05/29/fda-says-you-have-no-right-to-real-food-unless-they-give-you-permission-first.aspx

 

*When ObamaCare kicks in, adding 10-20 million people to the system,

  60% of doctors surveyed say they will quit the profession.  It also dictates

  that if you are not up to date on your vaccines, you will not get health care.

  http://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgi-bin/getdoc.cgi?dbname=111_cong_bills&docid=f:h3200ih.pdf

 

*Government programs allow aerosol spraying of unknown  

  chemical and biological elements into the air and upper atmosphere.

  http://codes.lp.findlaw.com/uscode/50/32

                                                 

*A five year plan for the US Navy to conduct war exercises off all our coasts

  is currently underway.  They’ll be using every imaginable kind of bomb,

  every imaginable kind of toxic chemical, sonar, and bio warfare elements

  including depleted uranium.   They admit they could possibly “take”

  (read that-kill) up to 11 million marine mammals.  (No doubt indirectly,

  some humans too)   

  www.agriculturedefensecoalition.org/?q=us-navy

   

*The government awarded stimulus funds to states to install the Smart Grid,

  and so-called ‘Smart Meters’ on your home, in many cases without your

  prior knowledge.  Testing by the public is showing they are putting off

  hundreds of times more electromagnetic frequency (EMF) than stated

  by the proponents of this dangerous boondoggle.  They never mention 

  the health risks, unless it is to deny them.  If you live in multi-family  

  housing or in a congested neighborhood, it could be thousands of times 

  stronger than a cell phone.  After decades of the same kind of denial,

  the World Health Organization  has finally classified  the radio 

  frequency electromagnetic fields  from cell phones as Class 2b, a  

  ‘possible’ human carcinogen.  You can be sure they never would have

  announced this if proof hadn’t been shown.  The Smart Grid is coming on like   

  a steamroller at lightning speed, under the guise of saving you money and  

  saving the environment.  Maybe it will, if it doesn’t fry you first.  They    

  don’t care!  They want us dead, and we’ll be paying for our own demise.

  http://www.reuters.com/article/2009/09/18/us-utilities-grid-stimulus-analysis-idUSTRE58H4PU20090918

  http://www.cnn.com/2011/HEALTH/05/31/who.cell.phones/index.html

  http://stopsmartmeters.org/2011/03/11/cpuc-admits-to-smart-meter-health-crisis-opt-out-plan-falls-short/            

 

Feeling threatened yet?  I am.

 

B.J. Arvin was a hairstylist and business owner for 32 years.

She has been a political activist since Sept. 11, 2001.

 

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