Tuesday, September 13, 2022
Monday, September 12, 2022
Dead Putin crony list, according to the US Sun
Ivan Pechorin, 39, fell off a boat
Ravil Maganov, 67, fell out a window
Igor Nosov, 43, stroke
Yevgeny Zinichev, 55, in the Arctic Ocean
Yuri Voronov, 61, in his swimming pool
Alexander Tyulakov, 61, noose around his neck
Leonid Shulman, 60, multiple stab wounds
Alexander Subbotin, 43, heart attack
Vladislav Avayev, 51, murder suicide
Sergey Protosenya, 55, hanged
Yevgeny Palant, 47, multiple knife wounds
Speaking of Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, she was the one responsible for backing down on Hong Kong, giving it back to China in 1984
She won in the Falklands, but folded on China.
Thatcher later recounted that Deng had told her directly "I could walk in and take the whole lot this afternoon," to which she replied, "There is nothing I could do to stop you, but the eyes of the world would now know what China is like."
More.
In old global warming news, it turns out that it was Margaret Thatcher of all people who first funded the warmists
As you can see, today's posts so far show a pattern: Elect women leaders at your peril.
Sunday, September 11, 2022
Saturday, September 10, 2022
World mourns death of queen Elizabeth II
That queen Elizabeth lived sixty-nine, and reigned forty-five years, means no more than that the duration of her existence was equal to sixty-nine, and the duration of her government to forty-five annual revolutions of the sun.
-- John Locke
Friday, September 9, 2022
Thursday, September 8, 2022
Trend for annual precipitation in Grand Rapids, Michigan 1903-2021
The mean annual has risen to 34.79 through 2021 from 31.45 through 1963 . . . an extra 3.34 inches annually, in keeping with a long term slightly cooling Oceanic Nino Index from 1951.
Through 2021 mean precipitation for the eight months Jan-Aug is 22.88, but for Jan-Aug 2022 we've got 27.61 inches.
Wet. Wet. Wet.
Meanwhile out West it's the reverse.
Dry. Dry. Dry.
LOL, climate change to hibernate, just like bears
Tune in next summer, when global warming returns for season 4,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 . . .
Wednesday, September 7, 2022
Tuesday, September 6, 2022
Last time I checked it wasn't Donald Trump who turned Washington, DC into an armed camp occupied by the National Guard for five months
There was no disruption to the peaceful transfer of power on January 6th. It occurred successfully by act of Congress, without the aid of the military whatsoever.
Whatsover.
It was a tyrannical new president who shut down DC, FOR FIVE MONTHS, by using the National Guard, not the old president.
The brazen military industrial complex is asserting today that the Judicial Branch is civilian Commander in Chief, not the Executive
These people are a threat to the constitution:
Former Secretaries of Defense
Dr. Ashton Baldwin Carter
William Sebastian Cohen
Dr. Mark Thomas Esper
Dr. Robert Michael Gates
Charles Timothy Hagel
James Norman Mattis
Leon Edward Panetta
Dr. William James Perry
Former Chairmen of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
Gen. (ret.) Martin Edward Dempsey
Gen. (ret.) Joseph Francis Dunford Jr.
Adm. (ret.) Michael Glenn Mullen
Gen. (ret.) Richard Bowman Myers
Gen. (ret.) Peter Pace
6. In certain cases or controversies, civilian control is exercised within the judicial branch through judicial review of policies, orders, and actions involving the military. In practice, the power to declare a policy/order/action illegal or unconstitutional is decisive because the military is obligated (by law and by professional ethics) to refuse to carry out an illegal or unconstitutional policy/order/action.
The letter also says that civilian control of the military can be exercised by the judicial branch when an administration’s decisions are challenged, and that a court ruling is decisive because military leaders are obligated by law and professional ethics to refuse to carry out illegal or unconstitutional orders.
Sunday, September 4, 2022
Money printing getting way ahead of output is the cause of the current inflation
US GDP last clocked in at $24.883 trillion in 2Q. The total public debt at the end of 2Q is $30.569 trillion.
That's now a mismatch of 123%, up from 105% in 2013, ten years ago, when the total public debt was $16.8 trillion and the GDP $16 trillion.
In other words, the debt has grown by 82% over the period while the GDP has grown by only 56%.
The debt represents spending money we do not have, and the increase in the debt represents the spending of more money we do not have. We simply create it out of thin air to facilitate the process. It doesn't matter what form it takes, whether in the form of Treasury securities or physical money.
Spending go whirr, Fed money machine go whirr, debt go whirr, and eventually inflation go whirr. Inflation is the payback for going into the debt for which we refused to pay at the time.
Debt draws forward prosperity . . .
But it should come as no surprise that the future we robbed has no prosperity in it, now that we have arrived there.
And people wonder where the inflation came from.
Inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon in the sense that it is and can be produced only by a more rapid increase in the quantity of money than in output.
Inflation trader squeals like a stuck pig, fears QT will soon lead to the sort of stock event you tell the grandchildren about
Well, we've heard that before, but this story about one of them perfectly describes how Fed money creation has ballooned, by design, to facilitate gains for those first in line for the money, the banksters, while the rest of us just get the inflation:
The Fed creates reserves as a special form of dollars that can only be held by banks and some similar firms, that they use to settle debts to each other. (The rest of us mostly use bank-created electronic money, plus physical dollars.) Since QE began, reserves have ballooned as the Fed created reserves to buy bonds from banks.
Unlike in 2017, large quantities of reserves have been returned to the central bank via money-market funds. These funds, which savers use as a liquid alternative to savings accounts, are allowed to deposit money at the Fed overnight using reverse repurchase agreements (RRPs), and have already sucked $2.2 trillion of reserves out of the system, up from zero at the start of last year.
For now, the loss of reserves isn’t a problem. Banks had too many deposits and reserves anyway, and they still have $3.3 trillion of reserves, more than they had ever held until last year.
More.
Inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon in the sense that it is and can be produced only by a more rapid increase in the quantity of money than in output.
Saturday, September 3, 2022
Brad DeLong's new book about the world achieving enough prosperity doesn't have enough words
DeLong
had begun working on this story in 1994. He had produced hundreds of
thousands of words, then hundreds of thousands more, updating the text
as academic economics and the world itself changed. He kept writing, for
years, for decades, for so long that he ended up writing for roughly 5
percent of the time capitalism itself has existed. The problem wasn’t
figuring out how the story started. The problem was knowing when it
ended. ...
His friends inquired about the drafts they had read years before. The
project ballooned in its complexity. “I have had editors who were saying
[they were] going to drop me if I couldn’t get it down to 150,000
words,” DeLong told me. (The book ended up at 180,000, plus online notes
and appendices.) ...
As for DeLong, he has a more immediate challenge: figuring out what to do with the hundreds of thousands of words he trimmed out of Slouching Towards Utopia. He thinks he might write a history of the economy, full stop. That story might start in 6,000 B.C.
More.
LOL, it's not "affordable": It costs $41k minimum, goes 270 miles, and takes 18 minutes to charge
A 2022 Honda Civic LX will cost you about $24k, go 446 miles, and take you just a few minutes to fill its 12.4 gallon tank.
Hanoi Jane's hubris is the hubris of us all, left, right, and in between
Old age is supposed to teach you a little humility, if life before that hasn't taught you any:
What we do or don’t do right now will determine what kind of future there will be.
Says the 85 year old who has been diagnosed with cancer.
Friday, September 2, 2022
Thursday, September 1, 2022
The legacy of unionized, government teachers who refused to show up because of COVID-19: Students in 2022 are performing at a level last seen two decades ago
In math, the average score for 9-year-old students fell 7 percentage points between 2020 and 2022, according to the study. The average reading score fell 5 points. . . . Although it marks a sharp drop since 2020, the average reading score was 7 points higher than it was in 1971, and the average math score was 15 points higher than in 1978, the study found.
More.
Now just in time for the election lying Democrats, but I repeat myself, want you to think that they and their allies opposed school closings when they were attacking Republicans for wanting them open.
US COVID-19 deaths per day in August 2022 are up 37% compared with the May-Jul average of 373
Deaths per day monthly in 2022:
Aug 2022: 511
Jul 2022: 383
Jun 2022: 363
May 2022: 373
Apr 2022: 426
Mar 2022: 980
Feb 2022: 2,247
Jan 2022: 1,987
Deaths
per day annually still fell through August, but not by much, from 953 through July:
2020: 1,131
2021: 1,310
2022 through 8/31: 896
As with electric cars, rooftop solar energy is great until it blows up and starts on fire: Now they tell us
Between April 2020 and June 2021, solar panels atop Amazon fulfillment
centers caught fire or experienced electrical explosions at least six
different times. ...
The documents, which have never been made public, indicate that between April 2020 and June 2021, Amazon experienced “critical fire or arc flash events” in at least six of its 47 North American sites with solar installations, effecting 12.7% of such facilities. Arc flashes are a kind of electrical explosion. ...
By June of last year, all of Amazon’s U.S. operations with solar had to be taken offline . . ..
More.
A series of Russian businessmen meets with sudden unexplained deaths
Ravil Maganov, the chairman of Russia’s second-largest oil producer Lukoil, died on Thursday after falling from a hospital window in Moscow
Gazprom executive, Alexander Tyulakov, was found dead in his garage near St Petersburg
Sergei Protosenya, a former top manager of Russia’s largest liquefied natural gas producer Novatek, was found dead with his wife and daughter at a villa in Spain
Former Lukoil manager, Alexander Subbotin, was found dead in the basement of a house outside Moscow
Vladislav Avayev, an ex-vice president of Gazprombank, was found dead in a Moscow apartment, also with the bodies of his wife and daughter