Thursday, July 7, 2022
Wednesday, July 6, 2022
This is as good a day as any to remember that Ben Bernanke's Fed under Obama bailed out the banksters and hung 6.5 million homeowners out to dry
Bloomberg, August 21, 2011, here:
Legalize mental and mental will trickle down
Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker signed a bill into law in June 2019 legalizing the recreational use of cannabis by adults, including retail sales beginning on Jan. 1, 2020. The following article covers Illinois' current cannabis laws with summaries of provisions under these laws.
Tuesday, July 5, 2022
Damn fool Biden administration releases crude oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve to reduce fuel prices, 5 million barrels get exported abroad last month, including to China
More than 5 million barrels of oil that were part of a historic U.S. emergency reserves release to lower domestic fuel prices were exported to Europe and Asia last month . . ..
Inflation hits new record in Europe, Reuters begins to tell the truth about why
But they save it for the last paragraph, which probably no one reads.
At minus 0.5%, the ECB's deposit rate has been in negative territory since 2014.
The contemplated interest rate hikes are laughably small, and laughably timed for later.
"The house is on fire and we'll get around to sending out a crew next week".
Monday, July 4, 2022
All it took was Russia invading Ukraine for countries to junk the Paris climate agreement and begin a desperate frenzy for coal
Coal Makes Comeback as World Thirsts for Energy...
Saturday, July 2, 2022
Climate Update for KGRR: 2Q2022
Climate Update for KGRR: 2Q2022
Spring was just 1.2% warmer than the mean by average temperature, on the strength of slightly higher highs and higher lows, and only 3% wetter than usual.
Average Temperature: 58.1
Mean Average Temperature: 57.4
Rain: 10.68
Mean Rain: 10.37
Snow (official season end +6.6%): 71
Mean: 66.6
Heating Degree Days (official season end -6.2%): 6282
Mean: 6694
Cooling Degree Days through June: 250
Mean: 184
Maximum temperatures vs. mean in 2Q
Apr: 82/79
May: 87/86
Jun: 95/91
Minimum temperatures vs. mean in 2Q
Apr: 23/22
May: 36/32
Jun: 45/43
US COVID-19: The Big Picture through June 2022
Deaths per day in 2022 through June are now down to 1,050 as June has flatlined relative to May with 363 deaths per day vs. 373.
But contrast those admittedly welcome figures with influenza deaths per day 2010-2020 at about 93 on average and even at this much improved level COVID deaths are still ~4x higher.
Trying to learn anything from the case data is increasingly difficult due to increased self-testing at home, but it looks clear that cases are up again as Omicron sub variants mutate to be more spreadable.
Total cases monthly in 2022:
Jan 20.3 million
Feb 3.95m
Mar 1.07m
Apr 1.25m
May 2.89m
Jun 3.33m.
It makes sense that deaths are at their lowest in 2022 in May and June with cases at their lowest in March and April since deaths are a lagging indicator. The case increases in May and June portend higher death figures come July and August.
We averaged 1.68 million cases monthly in 2020, and 2.88 million monthly in 2021. Monthly cases in 1H2022 average 5.46 million.
Friday, July 1, 2022
A "political" Supreme Court which is "balanced" is wishy washy precisely because it is a function of an Executive branch hamstrung by the 22nd Amendment
This never occurs to Hugo for some reason.
A Court system which depends on the transient figure of the president for its existence can hardly be anything but political. That's where the fetish for political balance on the Court comes from. It is simply an extension of the overweening impulse to limit the Executive power. And it's not a coincidence that the loudest voices for it come from the Legislative. It's an expression of their tyranny over everything.
Of course the Supreme Court is a political institution.
It is appointed by an elected president, and confirmed by an elected Senate. But it is the two term limit which sharpens its tip, raising the stakes over every appointment.
The Court has become more political precisely because the political power of the Executive which appoints it has been limited. It's how the wronged Executive manages to live on, long after he has been forced from the scene. He routinely runs for office partly on the promise to partisans that he will make the right appointments to the bench.
If the Framers had intended the Executive to be hamstrung in this way while the other two branches were not, they would have said so.
The people have the right to elect whomever to the presidency as often as they wish, just as they have the right to return Nancy Pelosi to the US House year after year. They also have the right to get rid of the bum if they don't like his appointments. Anything less gives too much power to the likes of Nancy Pelosi, and to the judges he leaves behind.
The way to improve constancy of meaning on the Court and consistency in the rule of law is to improve both in the Executive.
We aren't going to be saved by a Court which has temporarily recovered its senses. They could just as well lose them again. And they'll also still be there, long after the president who appointed them is gone.
Who checks the Court?
Thursday, June 30, 2022
The New York Times says "places with higher vaccination rates have suffered many fewer Covid deaths", but those places are also much less densely populated
The New York Times, David "masks work and mandates often don't" Leonhardt, May 31, 2022, here:
The Fed has raised the Fed Funds interest rate to 1.58% and the celebrity investors are squealing like stuck pigs, too
Paul Volcker was Fed Chair from 1979 to 1987.
His peak average Fed Funds Rate was north of 16% in 1981.
Wednesday, June 29, 2022
Meanwhile, tonight's ratio of S&P 500 to GDP (latest figure released today) is still wildly high at 156.59, an unprecedented level simply unexampled from 1929 until lately
Michael Anton may be right that National Review's Reductio ad Hitlerum is relatively recent, but NR has been ostracizing right-wingers since it was founded
I stopped reading in 2008, after subscribing since about 1980, so I really don't know about the Nazi smears. I had a long paid-up subscription which I was relieved to have finally run-out, coincidentally when Buckley did.
At any rate, National Review is indeed the enemy in the Socratic sense.
Don't help them.