Still lower than 2019 but pretty good given the circumstances.
Sunday, November 6, 2022
Friday, November 4, 2022
The people allied with those who wanted to put you in jail for vaccine skepticism now want fOrGiVeNeSs and AmNeStY
LET’S DECLARE A PANDEMIC AMNESTY
We have to put these fights aside and declare a pandemic amnesty. ... we need to learn from our mistakes and then let them go. We need to forgive the attacks . . ..
Get bent, lady economist from Brown University.
Despite FDA approval of mRNA COVID vaccines, you still can't sue the pharmaceutical companies, and the only government program adjudicating cases is hopelessly overwhelmed
This story is outrageous.
The bastards.
You are already completely out of luck if you received a jab more than one year ago and haven't filed a claim for an injury.
Some excerpts, but make sure to read the whole thing.
Reuters (June 16, 2022):
Part of the Health Resources and Services Administration, the CICP was designed to be “the payer of last resort” for people who suffered injuries from treatments or “countermeasures” related to “a declared pandemic, epidemic or security threat” like Ebola or anthrax. Payouts are limited to unreimbursed medical expenses and up to $50,000 a year in lost wages, with no provisions for pain and suffering or legal fees. A death benefit of $370,376 is also available.
The CICP is the only option under current law for people seeking damages for COVID-19 vaccine-related injuries.
Per a declaration under the Public Readiness and Emergency Preparedness Act, the federal government indemnified the vaccine makers, which are not party to CICP proceedings. A Pfizer spokesman declined comment. Media representatives from Moderna and Johnson & Johnson did not respond to requests for comment.
Until March 2020, the CICP attracted little attention, deciding fewer than 500 cases in its entire history. It’s now drowning in a 16-fold spike in claims, with more than 5,400 COVID-19 vaccine injury cases pending. Another 2,990 allege injuries or death from other COVID-19 countermeasures, such as being placed on a ventilator. ... At the current rate of adjudication – 18 cases a month, by my calculation – it will take 38 years to get through the backlog. That’s not much help for claimants who are unable to work or pay rent right now. ...
Without exception, the CICP requires claims to be filed within one year of vaccination.
Thursday, November 3, 2022
The Fed chair was looking for evidence of transitory inflation for twelve months while actual, raging inflation was staring him in the face the whole time and he did nothing about it
In his testimony yesterday, Jerome Powell said he uses a table of the last twelve months of 12-month readings of inflation. In other words, year-over-year readings.
It showed him no evidence of inflation coming down, in other words, of inflation being "transitory".
"We're exactly where we were a year ago." In other words, yep, inflation is raging. It's not transitory.
If you aren't appalled by that, I don't know what to say.
In April 2021 inflation year over year was already at the 2008-level of bad, and the Fed chair decided to wait and see if it became a "problem".
He waited a year, until Mar 2022, to begin raising the main interest rate.
I'm sure the reason is that in April 2021 he was focused on the pandemic as the number one problem. Vaccine uptake reached its crescendo that month, and Jay was praising the COVID stimulus orgy to restart the economy.
But the pandemic wasn't his job. Stable prices is his job, and he let it slide because of the extraordinary circumstances.
Now we're in a whole other big mess. Gutting the bond market is going to be life-changing for far longer than the pandemic will be.
Here's the video from yesterday with the key interchange.
This is Trump's boy, by the way.
Wednesday, November 2, 2022
Capitol Police do another bang-up job, so to speak
Capitol Police cameras caught break-in at Pelosi home, but no one was watching...
. . . hours after Pelosi left San Francisco last week and returned to D.C., much of the security left with her, and officers in Washington stopped continuously monitoring video feeds outside her house.
Tuesday, November 1, 2022
Democrats in Michigan incessantly advertise on YouTube against Republican John Gibbs in MI-3, featuring scarry pictures of a big, very black man with troglodyte views on women, abortion, and Medicare
Your Democrat choice in the race is a very white female, a progressive extremist who served in the Obama Injustice Department and who was defeated last time around by Peter Meijer.
My extremely stupid progressive neighbor had a sign out for the Democrat early in September until he figured out a couple of weeks later that our street had been re-districted out of MI-3.
The Democrat's campaign clothes her extremism in the glow of her Christian faith to make her more acceptable to the white, right of center, evangelical population around Grand Rapids.
On YouTube Gibbs seems to run one ad for every twenty the Democrats run.
Sunday, October 30, 2022
Saturday, October 29, 2022
We have to draw a straight line from Bernie Sanders to the Republican Congressional baseball shooting where progressive James T. Hodgkinson tried to kill 24 Republicans
Distressed debt reaches $271 billion after five straight weeks of growth
Growing Pile of Distressed Debt Signals Coming US Default Wave
Friday, October 28, 2022
Thursday, October 27, 2022
Fed Chair Ben Bernanke once famously said on 60 Minutes that if inflation ever got out of control they could raise interest rates in 15 minutes
The first Fed rate hike under Powell came in March when inflation was already way out of control, and Americans began loading up their charge cards at 18-28% interest to cope.
That's even more insane to me than the inflation.
The main Fed interest rate is still at 3.08% today, the rate available only to the banks, the same guys who pay you 0% interest, with inflation just cruising along up there above 8%.
It took the Fed over a year to move. A year. And then by just 0.75 points at a time, which the stock market parasites screamed bloody murder about.
Pretty amazing to me that ordinary folks aren't screaming, aren't mad as hell, and seem to be prepared to just swallow and take it some more.
I guess the fight has been bred out of the American people.
Sad!
Wednesday, October 26, 2022
The Treasury yield curve compresses narrowly into a thin thread before recessions, so it looks like one is imminent
Yield across the board right now is in the 4s except for one and two month money. The one year is the leader, roughly in the middle of the pack, around which the other rates have been organizing.
Interestingly enough, compound annual growth of nominal GDP since the year 2000 22 years ago has come in at 4.18% through 2Q on 2Q. The 30-yr tonight is yielding 4.19%. This looks like rate normalization to me because rates are compressing in that vicinity, finally commensurate with actual economic growth, after the pitiful all-time-low average annual 30-yr yield in 2020 at 1.56%. We haven't had a 4% average 30-yr yield since 2010.
Given the extraordinary interventions by the US Federal Reserve over the period to suppress interest rates, we may see them explode the other way given the length and depth of the distortions. Trillions upon trillions of US Dollar denominated debt was sold at those repressed prices. In 2020 alone we're talking about $2.9 trillion in 2-10yr Treasury notes, not counting the short end bills and the long end bonds, all yielding well under 1%. It could get really ugly.
Recession doesn't always happen right away, but the signal is pretty clear. It seemed to take forever in the late 1990s.
As always, click images to enlarge.
Recessions are in gray.
And as always, this is not investment advice.
daily view through 10/25/22 |
monthly view through Sep 2022 |
Tuesday, October 25, 2022
The entire US Treasury yield curve bows and worships at the feet of the 1-year Treasury for an eighth day now, and you know what that means
When the upstart 1-year tries to compete with the long end, you in for a heap a trouble boy.
Yippee-ki-yay.
Sunday, October 23, 2022
Sunday morning comedy from CNBC