Every other surge made it into high or very high range, but not this one.
That's good news.
COVID CASES SPIKING... AGAIN...
Every other surge made it into high or very high range, but not this one.
That's good news.
COVID CASES SPIKING... AGAIN...
Ukrainian civilian ship blown up by 'unidentified explosive device' in Black Sea
... talk is commonplace of how these cheap drones are revolutionizing current wars and will be the critical tools of a so-called second civil war ...
... Multiple sources told the Guardian that the FBI has major concerns about the accelerationist neo-Nazi sect on the far right – one calling for an insurgency against the US government – and other ultra-violent actors in the same ideological space, eyeing the use of FPV drones for domestic attacks. ...
... evidence has emerged of military-trained neo-Nazis with relevant skillsets having pinpointed the drones as a potential tool ...
... [Joshua] Fisher-Birch first spotted the Substack and vouched for its credibility. According to him, the writer’s alleged background is not only “significant” but “violent white supremacist groups would find his drone experience to be useful”. ...
Appeals Court Rules Against Some Tariffs But Leaves Them in Place takes you to Most Trump tariffs are not legal, US appeals court rules lol.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/most-trump-tariffs-are-not-legal-us-appeals-court-rules/ar-AA1LvGU7
https://www.reuters.com/legal/government/most-trump-tariffs-are-not-legal-us-appeals-court-rules-2025-08-30/
Most Trump tariffs ruled illegal by appeals court, dealing major blow to trade policy
A federal appeals court ruled Friday that most of President Donald Trump’s global tariffs are illegal, striking a massive blow to the core of his aggressive trade policy.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit held in a 7-4 ruling that the law Trump invoked when he granted his most expansive tariffs — including his “reciprocal” tariffs — does not actually grant him the power to impose those levies.
“The core Congressional power to impose taxes such as tariffs is vested exclusively in the legislative branch by the Constitution,” the court said. “Tariffs are a core Congressional power.”
The appellate court paused its ruling from taking effect until Oct. 14, in order to give the Trump administration time to ask the Supreme Court to reverse the decision. ...
In Friday’s ruling, the court found that the challenged tariffs exceeded Trump’s authority under IEEPA.
“Both the Trafficking Tariffs and the Reciprocal Tariffs are unbounded in scope, amount, and duration,” the majority ruled.
“These tariffs apply to nearly all articles imported into the United States (and, in the case of the Reciprocal Tariffs, apply to almost all countries), impose high rates which are ever-changing and exceed those set out in the [U.S. tariff system], and are not limited in duration.” ...
$SPX since August 2000 through July 2025: 5.24% real, average per annum, dividends fully reinvested.
And the 24 years, 11 months before that to August 2000?
10.90%.
108% better.
IYKYK.
The S&P 500 averaged 6,029.95 in June 2025.
Nominal GDP in 2Q2025 from the second estimate yesterday was $30.3539 trillion.
The first divided by the second yields 198.65, 145.25% elevated above the long-term median of 81.
Off the chart.
Where angels fear to tread.
They want a rate cut so bad, everything points to one, including what doesn't.
Gold on track for best month in four as inflation data bolsters rate cut bets
... Spot gold was up 0.5% at $3,433.99 per ounce. Bullion has gained 4.4% in August so far. U.S. gold futures for December delivery rose 0.7% to $3,497.30. ...
Spot silver added 0.2% to $39.14 per ounce and gained for the fourth straight month. ...
PM Update:
... Spot gold was up 0.9% at $3,447.09 per ounce. ... Spot silver added 2.1% to $39.89 per ounce ...
The Elon Musk-DOGE spending cut affair was pure theatre.
When I said we spend $20 billion a day I wasn't kidding.
OK, it's only $19.869794 billion a day.
Meanwhile revenues are expected to fall short by $4.842671 billion PER DAY in 2025.
The July 2025 yoy rate of core pce inflation, the Fed's key measure, rose to 2.877%, the third increase in the rate since April.
The average rate 2009-2020 was 1.5%.
Averaging 2.77% for the last year and a half is not progress.
The real GDP report is out and it looks better than a month ago: +3.3% seasonally-adjusted annual rate for the second estimate for 2Q2025, instead of +3.0% in the first estimate.
But the big picture changes only microscopically.
From the second quarter of 2017, the year when Trump's tax reform became law on December 22nd, until now real GDP has grown at a compound annual rate of 2.466%, instead of 2.456% last month. For the seventy years before that, the compound annual rate of growth was 3.182%.
Trump's so-called pro-growth tax reform falls short of the previous seventy years this month by 22.5% vs. by 22.8% last month.
Now made permanent as of the Fourth of July, or so they say, the Trump tax reform is likely to continue to, shall we say, weigh on things.
The problem remains the lingering after effects of the Great Recession, the Great Financial Crisis, the Housing Bubble, whatever you want to call it.
The Trump tax reform of 2017 didn't do anything to address that meaningfully, just as Obama never addressed it meaningfully, nor Biden.
The rupture with the past occasioned by 2008 is the elephant in the living room, and the Uniparty just pretends it isn't there.
From 2Q2008 to 2Q2025, the compound annual rate of real GDP growth has been 1.995% vs. 1.990% last month, vs. 3.421% for the sixty-one years prior to that, starting in 2Q1947.
America is still 41.68% behind that this month vs. 41.8% behind that last month.
It's . . . depressing.
Trump's firing of Lisa Cook is the actual power grab we only feared from Joe Biden.
How Trump could give the Fed a MAGA makeover:
... Fed watchers say a Trump-appointed majority on the Fed Board could then exert greater influence over future decisions on interest rates by using a little-known process.
While it’s typically a routine event that gets little attention, every five years the Fed Board must approve the new terms of regional Fed presidents, who vote on a rotational basis on interest rates.
That event is coming up soon, with the terms of all 12 regional Fed presidents scheduled to expire – simultaneously – at the end of February.
That means, in theory, a Trump-nominated Fed Board could reject regional presidents, for whatever reason they wish, or no reason at all.
“The President could push his majority to reject reserve bank presidents unless they agree to back lower rates and are comfortable with more White House influence over monetary policy,” Jaret Seiberg, financial services policy analyst at TD Cowen Washington Research Group, wrote in a note to clients this week. “That would give Trump a more cooperative FOMC,” he wrote, referring to the Fed’s rate-setting committee.
While the Fed chair gets all the attention, decisions on interest rates are voted on by all 12 members of the Federal Open Market Committee. The committee consists of the seven members of the Fed Board, as well as five regional Fed presidents: the New York Fed president and four rotating regional presidents. ...
On Monday, Pirro’s office told a judge in a separate criminal case that “an Indictment has not been returned” after “a third grand jury returned a no true bill.” ...
Pattern development.
No amount of revolution is ever enough for the odious Uniparty.
Trump's women are the craziest women, the bosom pals of tyrants since at least Aristotle.
I bought six heads of romaine lettuce yesterday like I usually do at Sam's Club every couple of weeks, for $4.46.
Such a deal, right?
Well, this has never happened before in years of shopping at Sam's: the cores were rotten. I barely salvaged half of it.
I also bought a five pound bag of organic carrots, for $3.62. That's always a great deal at Sam's, except this time all the carrots in the bin were THIN, THIN, THIN, and LIMP.
Summer weather is hard on such produce in any case, but I've been buying this stuff year round at Sam's for years and have never experienced this.
I should have taken the stuff back, but I do live in the country and I have compost piles.
Worms gotta eat, same as buzzards.