FREE SHIT ZOMBIE NATION

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Posted on 28th January 2013 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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Bill Bonner was one of the first guys I started reading back in 2004 who questioned everything. He was right then and he’s right now. We’ve passed the point of no return where the takers have outnumbered the makers. Math is hard. Running out of other people’s money is harder. 

 

Zombie Nation

By Bill Bonner | 01/07/13

Creating and sustaining a nation of zombies is expensive.

Large sections of the US population have been turned into zombies. Retirees. Medicare dependents. Food stamp recipients. Disabled people. They are not necessarily bad people. They are not necessarily dishonest or lazy. But rather than add to wealth, they consume it. And when you have too many of them, your society consumes more wealth than it produces and you are on the road to The Downside.

But the feds are not only creating individual zombies, they are also creating corporate zombies. An obvious example: “green” energy. Without subsidies, loan guarantees, tax benefits and direct giveaways, the industry as we know it would not exist. Nor would the ethanol industry in the Midwest. Nor the security industry in the Northern Virginia suburbs of Washington, DC.

The financial industry too, as we know it, would not exist either. Much of it would have been swept away in the financial storm of 2008-09. That story is well-known, but not well understood. Most people believe the authorities acted heroically, saving the nation from a depression. But what the authorities really did was to take the public’s money and give it to cronies on Wall Street in order to prevent them from suffering the losses they deserved. The government transferred nearly $2 trillion in various forms from the public purse to the pockets of the financial industry. With that kind of backing, most of the old investment firms survived. The new ones that might have replaced them never saw the light of day.

Industries need to be sustained by the government when they cannot sustain themselves. This is practically the definition of “malinvestment” — putting capital and energy into investments that don’t pay off. When an industry is only profitable with government backing it means that the industry uses resources — labor, energy, raw materials — and turns them into finished products that are worth less than the inputs required to make them. The more of these zombie industries the government supports, the poorer the society becomes.

“Rentier” is a French word that has leaked into English. It doesn’t mean zombie literally, but it describes people who have found a way to exploit the system for their own benefit — people who have legal entitlements to income streams. In other words, “rentier” describes a class of folks who contribute absolutely nothing to national prosperity — zombies.

Before the French Revolution, favored groups were able to secure special privileges and monopolies giving them the right to income. For example, the people from whom we bought our first house in France had a monopoly on the importation of tobacco from the New World. I don’t know who granted this monopoly, but typically it was the monarchy. And typically, such monopolies were given away either to appease a potential adversary or simply to raise cash for the crown by selling off a stream of future income.

The French crown was always short of funds. It found it could raise substantial sums by selling the right to earn a “rent.” It might sell the right to collect tolls on a highway or a river, for example. Or it might sell the right to collect taxes (thereby getting its own tax revenue up-front and letting the rentier deal with the hazards of collection).

Any official document needed an official stamp. Naturally, the crown sold off the right to stamp documents. If you wanted to make a business deal, buy or sell land, or get married, you had to pay the person with the stamp.

Over time, the rentier class grew larger and harder to support. More and more of the kingdom’s energy went to support what was essentially a group of parasites who produced nothing. This is part of the explanation for the French Revolution. The system became so inefficient and was made so fragile by waste that a relatively minor setback — a couple years of bad harvests — caused widespread hunger and revolt.

In modern, developed societies “rents” come in many forms. They are often granted to favored groups in exchange for political support. Old people vote, for example. Political parties seek their votes by promising ever-larger health and retirement benefits. Rich people make campaign contributions. Politicians typically grant them favors too.

By the close of 2012, there were zombies everywhere. Throw a cream pie from almost any street-corner and you were almost certain to hit one in the face. If the street-corner were in Washington, DC, you’d probably hit two or three of them.

A recent report in The Wall Street Journal confirmed that zombies don’t work very hard. The Bureau of Labor Statistics has been compiling detailed data on how people use their time. Researchers tracked how many hours people slept, ate, watched TV and worked. And guess what? They found that federal government employees put in 3.8 fewer 40-hour weeks than employees in the private sector. Here, the cost of zombification is clear: if the zombies were forced to work the same hours as people in the private sector, the government would save $130 billion a year.

Meanwhile, over in the pentagon, R. Jeffrey Smith had his eye on the zombies too:

Of the many facts that have come to light in the scandal involving former CIA director David H. Petraeus, among the most curious was that during his days as a four-star general, he was once escorted by 28 police motorcycles as he traveled from his Central Command headquarters in Tampa to socialite Jill Kelley’s mansion. Although most of his trips did not involve a presidential-size convoy, the scandal has prompted new scrutiny of the imperial trappings that come with a senior general’s lifestyle.

The commanders who lead the nation’s military services and those who oversee troops around the world enjoy an array of perquisites befitting a billionaire, including executive jets, palatial homes, drivers, security guards and aides to carry their bags, press their uniforms and track their schedules in 10-minute increments. Their food is prepared by gourmet chefs. If they want music with their dinner parties, their staff can summon a string quartet or a choir.

The elite regional commanders who preside over large swaths of the planet don’t have to settle for Gulfstream V jets. They each have a C-40, the military equivalent of a Boeing 737, some of which are configured with beds.

And then, even after they retire…the zombies keep feeding off the productive sector:

Updating a 2010 Boston Globe report that documented the practice, CREW found that over the last three years, 70 percent of the 108 three-and-four star generals and admirals who retired “took jobs with defense contractors or consultants.”

As Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., put it during a 2009 hearing on Obama’s nomination of former Raytheon executive William Lynn to become the deputy secretary of defense, “it’s an incestuous business, what’s going on in terms of the defense contractors and the Pentagon and the highest levels of our military.”

During the Presidential campaign, Mitt Romney mentioned that 47% of American households now receive some form of support from the government. In a better democracy, none of those people should vote. They all have a conflict of interest. They should admit that they find it difficult to separate their own personal interests from those of the nation and abstain from casting a ballot. Instead, they “vote their own pocketbooks” — usually coming down on the side of diverting more resources from the productive sector to their own personal consumption.

The zombies corrupt the system. The march to Stalingrad continues. And the Downside takes over.

Regards,

Bill Bonner
for The Daily Reckoning

Read more: Zombie Nation http://dailyreckoning.com/zombie-nation/#ixzz2JIQHGKzq

 

PRODUCERS TAKE NOTE

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Posted on 20th May 2012 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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If you have an idea for a new business, plan on starting a company, or have dreams of employing thousands of Americans, think twice. The Federal Government considers you an enemy. You are stepping on their toes. They want complete control of our economy. Entreprenuers and small business owners are the enemy. They will regulate and tax you to the point where it doesn’t make sense to even try. Chuckie Schumer and Bobbie Casey know how to run an economy. Stay out of their way. If you want to create something, move to Singapore.

Expatriation in the Wake of the Facebook  IPO

By Bill Bonner

05/19/12 Baltimore, Maryland –  The Maryland House of Delegates just voted to raise taxes. Should we move  to Florida…or Delaware?

If we move to Palm Beach, will we ever be able to visit our beloved Maryland  homeland again?

The Financial Times reports that thousands of wealthy French people  are now moving to London. Their motive? They want to escape the taxes proposed  by France’s new president, Francois Hollande.

Should the French impose an exit tax on these “ex-patriots”? Should it then  bar them from visiting France?

Of course not.

In England in 1215, the right to travel was enshrined in Article 42 of the Magna  Carta:

It shall be lawful to any person, for the future,  to go out of our kingdom, and to return, safely and securely, by land or by  water, saving his allegiance to us, unless it be in time of war, for some short  space, for the common good of the kingdom: excepting prisoners and outlaws,  according to the laws of the land, and of the people of the nation at war  against us, and Merchants who shall be treated as it is said above.

Here’s the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Article  13:

(1) Everyone has the right to freedom of movement  and residence within the borders of each State. (2) Everyone has the right to  leave any country, including his own, and to return to his country.

Article 12 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights  incorporates this right into treaty law:

(1) Everyone lawfully within the territory of a  State shall, within that territory, have the right to liberty of movement and  freedom to choose his residence. (2) Everyone shall be free to leave any  country, including his own. (3) The above-mentioned rights shall not be  subject to any restrictions except those provided by law, are necessary to  protect national security, public order (ordre public), public health or morals  or the rights and freedoms of others, and are consistent with the other rights  recognized in the present Covenant.

People should be able to move where they want, no? They should be able to  look for lower tax places to live, shouldn’t they? After all, we’re Americans,  aren’t we? Aren’t we all descendants of people who tried to improve their lives  by moving to a new place?

Apparently, a lot of Americans don’t think so. Facebook is going public. And  one of Facebook’s founders has moved to Singapore. He will save, by one  estimate, $67 million in taxes by giving up his US citizenship. He says that’s  not the reason he gave it up. But you can believe what you want.

And now the politicos are up in arms. Mr. Saverin has helped to give them an  asset worth about $100 billion. Are they grateful? Do they bend down and kiss  his derriere?

No! They want to tax him even more heavily…and prevent him from ever setting  foot in the US again.

Yes, dear reader, there is no thought so dumb…so short-sighted…so low…that it  won’t become the law of the land. Bloomberg reports:

Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., has a status update for  Facebook co-founder Eduardo Saverin: Stop attempting to dodge your taxes by  renouncing your US citizenship or never come to back to the US again.

In September 2011, Saverin relinquished his US  citizenship before the company announced its planned initial public offering of  stock, which will debut this week. The move was likely a financial one, as he  owns an estimated 4 percent of Facebook and stands to make $4 billion when the  company goes public. Saverin would reap the benefit of tax savings by becoming a  permanent resident of Singapore, which levies no capital gains taxes.

At a news conference this morning, Sens. Schumer  and Bob Casey, D-Pa., will unveil the “Ex-PATRIOT” — “Expatriation Prevention by  Abolishing Tax-Related Incentives for Offshore Tenancy” — Act to respond  directly to Saverin’s move, which they dub a “scheme” that would “help him duck  up to $67 million in taxes.”

The senators will call Saverin’s move an “outrage” and will outline their plan to re-impose taxes on expatriates like  Saverin even after they flee the United States and take up residence in a  foreign country. Their proposal would also impose a mandatory 30 percent tax on  the capital gains of anybody who renounces their US citizenship.

The plan would bar individuals like Saverin from  ever reentering the United States again.

If Chuck Schumer has his way, entrepreneurs like Eduardo Saverin will think  twice before setting up shop in America!

[Editor’s Note: After yesterday’s column, Run,  Saverin! Run!r, we were delighted to discover that a brave Fellow  Reckoner had actually linked to The Daily Reckoning...on Chuck  Schumer’s Facebook page. Ha! Feel free to “like” our bitty missive here and  to “share” it on Facebook. Call it non-violent protest. And of course, you can  always “be our friend” here.]

Down, down, down…day after day… Stocks down. Yields down.

But what’s this? Gold rose nearly $40 yesterday.

Our “Alert Flag” went up yesterday morning. The Dow fell 156 points during  the day. Not that there’s any connection. Most likely, after so many down days,  stocks will bounce today. But watch out…

We have a hunch.

Facebook is the biggest deal in the stock market…perhaps ever. It’s a company  that didn’t even exist 10 years ago. We know all about the company’s founding;  we saw the movie. Twice. Because our daughter has a role in the movie. She’s the  waitress in the scene where Zuckerberg means Sean Parker.

Not a bad flick. But from an investment standpoint, Facebook is probably one  of the worst moves you can make. Most likely, it will be gone 10 years from now.  $100 billion of market capitalization will disappear. Poof! It’s just a website,  after all. We looked at a Facebook page, once… We couldn’t figure out why anyone  would waste his time.

The trouble with new technology is that in a few years it’s old  technology.

Here’s our hunch: The Facebook IPO may mark a major peak…and the beginning of  a major bear market on Wall Street.

It happens every time. There’s a big, big deal. And then, it’s over. We’d  give you some examples, if we could think of them. But we can’t. You’ll just  have to trust us on this.

We don’t really have any evidence or logic to back this up. It’s just a  hunch.

But our intuition tells us that when investors finally get the full Facebook  treatment, they are going to be turned off by the stock market and Wall Street.  Not only will the company turn out to be not worth a fraction of the IPO  price…investors will also get a clearer picture of how Wall Street really  works.

About that IPO… The idea is to generate a lot of excitement…a frenzy…so that  people are eager to get the shares. And with all these Facebook users, who  like…like…Facebook…and think they can tell a good investment when they see  one…it ought to be easy to create a buying frenzy. Besides, everyone knows  shares are intentionally priced below what their backers believe they can get  for them. This causes the share-price to “pop” right after the IPO.

Of course, the distribution is tightly controlled. You have to be an insider  to get IPO shares. Say…you’ll get them at about $40…and then, you expect them to  go to $50 on the “pop.” If it works out as planned, you make $10 per share. This  is a lot of money. Easy money. So, the insiders all want a piece of the  action.

How do you get to be an “insider”? You have to be a friend of Morgan Stanley.  Which is to say, you help Morgan Stanley make money. How? For example, if you  are a pension fund or hedge fund you put through a lot of trades. Morgan Stanley  makes money on the churn. You make money on the churn, too. Customers don’t make  any money on the churn. They pay for every transaction. But who cares about  them?

Everyone is convinced that buying…selling…and trading investments makes  money. As long as the illusion lasts, Wall Street is happy. The customers are  happy too…more or less. They’re participating in the Great Illusion — all trying  to make money without actually doing anything.

So everyone churns. And the more you churn with Morgan Stanley the more  likely you are to get an allocation of IPO stock. There could be about 50  million shares handed to insiders in this manner. Let’s say they go up $10 in  the “pop.” That’s half a billion in gains …in only a few hours.

Dan Ariely explains:

Morgan Stanley and the rest of the investment  banks involved will … make sure that their favorite fund manager client “friends” are given lots of free money. Assuming that these “friends” are given  75% of the total number of IPO shares, or a total of 291 million shares, and  assuming that the stock does rise from $40 to $50, then these fund managers will  collectively, in one day, make $2.9 billion dollars in realized or unrealized  profits. That’s right, 2.9 BILLION DOLLARS.

…where and out of whose pocket does this money  come from?

Well, just think of it this way… Let’s assume you  own a very expensive piece of waterfront real estate, and you hire a broker to  sell it for you. After exploring the market and after getting indications of  interest, your broker advises you that $10 million would be a great price for  your home. You meet with the potential buyers and decide to sell it for $10  million. After the $1 million commission you have to pay your broker, your net  proceeds are $9 million. An hour later, you drive by the house and see your  broker in the driveway shaking hands with some different people. You pull over  to see what’s going on, and you find that the people you just sold the house to  for $10 million are very close friends of your broker. To your dismay, you also  find out that those friends just sold your (former) house to somebody else for  $15 million.

The same exact game is going on here… By the time  you drive around the block, these folks will have sold their shares at $50 per  share.

I am not sure about you, but I find all of this  very depressing.

Regards,

Bill Bonner, for The Daily Reckoning

Read more: Expatriation in the Wake of the Facebook IPO http://dailyreckoning.com/expatriation-in-the-wake-of-the-facebook-ipo/#ixzz1vPeXajq0

NOBODY GOES BROKE…UNTIL THEY ALL GO BROKE

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Posted on 22nd April 2012 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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Think about the fact that the Federal government has doled out $1 trillion of loans to students who are not able to get jobs because Boomers are so poor they can’t leave their jobs. How do you pay back $1 trillion of loans without a job? Obama’s solution is to give them more loans. This will surely work.

Subprime State of Mind

By Bill Bonner

 
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04/19/12 Baltimore, Maryland – Memories take time. Like history. Or wine. Or cement.

At first, they are loose, fluid…and watery. Then, over time, they dry up…and develop more body…more shape…more substance.

Our recollections from our trip to Argentina are still congealing…setting up like a stone wall. We’ll show it to you in the days ahead.

But today, let’s turn from the pampas to the developed world…to the world of money. That is, let us turn our attention from the vivid world of real things and real people…to the absurd blah blah world of economics.

What happened in the 2 months we were gone? Anything important? Not that we can tell from the papers. The headlines are almost the same as they were when we left.

The Great Correction, for example, hasn’t gone away. Instead, it seems to be intensifying.

In America, 11 million homeowners are still ‘underwater.’ Every one of these houses is a candidate for foreclosure…and every one puts downward pressure on the housing market, which has been falling for the last 5 years with hardly a let-up.

Yes, Dear Reader, this month marks the 5th anniversary of the Great Correction. It began in April ’07, when its weakest link — subprime mortgage debt — snapped. Since then housing has been losing value. And with 11 million houses still priced below the amount of their mortgages, this housing bear market could last for another 5 years before it finally comes to an end.

When housing goes down so do the balance sheets of America’s households. And without improving balance sheets it is very unlikely that households will substantially increase spending. This will leave the economy hobbling along about as it is now…with the lowest growth rate of any post-war ‘recovery’…and completely dependent on more loose change from the feds.

No, that hasn’t changed either. When we left the feds were still trying to sort out a debt crisis by adding more debt. Nothing has changed since. America’s feds keep lending money they don’t have to borrowers who can’t pay it back.

This time, students are the subprime borrowers. Can you imagine a more subprime group? Students don’t have jobs. They’ve never proven they can earn money. Their credit histories are as thin as their resumes. And yet the feds have extended $1 trillion to this group. How long will be before that blows up? Probably not too long.

Meanwhile, in Europe, subprime debt is concentrated at the government level. The subprime borrowers were the countries at the periphery of Europe — Ireland, Portugal, Greece and Spain — who would have a very hard time paying their bills when the lending stopped. When we left, Greece was struggling. Now, it’s Spain.

Seems Spain was able to borrow more money this weekend. But its costs rose; Spanish debt now yields over 6%.

At 6%, according to the experts, European nations can still keep going. If the debt rises to 7%, on the other hand, their goose is cooked…cuit…cocinado…

It’s amazing to us that Spanish debt isn’t already at 7% or more. These countries should have gone broke years ago. The only way they avoid it now is by promising to do things they can’t do. Cutbacks — austerity measures — are solemnly put into budgets. They lower GDP, lower employment, and raise opposition parties to new levels of absurdity and notoriety. And never quite reach their objectives.

But thanks to central banks…they never go broke.

In America, the deal is pretty straightforward. The Fed prints. The feds borrow the counterfeit money and spend it.

In Europe, the central bank prints up money too. It lends it to the banks. The banks lend to the marginal governments around the periphery. This puts the banks in a bad situation. They’re holding a lot of subprime government debt. But the central bank keeps lending them money to buy more!

Bloomberg has the story:

April 18 (Bloomberg) — Spanish, Italian and Portuguese banks are loading up on bonds issued by their own governments, a move that shifts more of the risk of sovereign default to European taxpayers from private creditors.

Holdings of Spanish government debt by lenders based in the country jumped 26 percent in two months, to 220 billion euros ($289 billion) at the end of January, data from Spain’s treasury show. Italian banks increased ownership of their nation’s sovereign bonds by 31 percent to 267 billion euros in the three months ended in February, according to Bank of Italy data.

German and French banks, meanwhile, have cut holdings of those countries’ bonds, as well as Irish and Greek debt, by as much as 50 percent since 2010 in some cases. That leaves domestic firms on the hook for a restructuring such as Greece’s last month and their main financier, the European Central Bank, facing losses. Like Greece, governments would have to rescue their lenders with funds borrowed from the European Union.

The jump in sovereign-debt holdings by Spanish and Italian banks has been fueled by the ECB’s 1 trillion-euro long-term refinancing operation, or LTRO, initiated in December, to provide liquidity to the region’s lenders. Encouraged by their governments to take the money and buy bonds, banks borrowed 489 billion euros on Dec. 21 and 530 billion euros on Feb. 29.

For lenders in so-called peripheral countries — Spain, Portugal, Ireland, Greece and Italy — profit also was an inducement: They could borrow at 1 percent to buy government bonds yielding between 6 percent and 13 percent.

In Europe as in America, nobody goes broke…until they all go broke.

Meanwhile, in Greece, farmers are organizing special “food relief” programs to help children in the cities who are said to be almost starving. The government, meanwhile, is preparing to head off “food riots.”

In France, the communist party, which was practically dead a few years ago, is coming back to life…like the zombie it is…under the leadership of Jean-Luc Melenchon. Unlike the ‘responsible’ politicians in Europe, Melenchon wants no cutbacks in government spending. Just the contrary. He wants to increase it. For example, the minimum wage would go up from about $1,600 per month to $2,300 per month. And the top marginal income tax on rich people, those who earn more than about $500,000 per year, would go to 100%.

Melenchon’s star is rising. His left coalition could get 12% or more of the vote on Sunday. Which is only natural. Promise the mob that you will give them free money; few will resist it.

*** Alone among the developed nations…America has something the others don’t have…and by the look of things, something they don’t want. The US population is growing!

Yes, dear reader, when it comes to having babies…or importing babies from other countries…America still has what it takes. The UN says that US population will increase by nearly 27 million people by 2020.

Twenty-seven million people is about 40 cities the size of Baltimore. If each one of these people lives in a household of four people, it’s more than 6 million new houses…and, assuming they are all two-car families, about 12 million autos. And, of course, each family needs a dishwasher, a toaster oven, a refrigerator, and so forth. A lot of stuff, in other words.

Compared to the rest of the developed world, America is still enjoying a major population boom. After all, Japan’s population is shrinking. So is Germany’s. Europe as a whole is still growing, but not by much. And after 2020, it begins to shrivel up too.

But American population growth may not be as strong as it is advertised. Why? Because more and more people are sneaking out.

As we reported yesterday, illegal immigrants are going home…as well as the children of legal immigrants. And now comes word that native-born Americans are slipping away too. Yes, according to our sources, 742 US citizens leave the country every hour — and don’t come back.

So many are leaving that Sen. Barbara Boxer has proposed legislation — a law that would make it impossible for Americas to cross the border until they settle up with the IRS.

The noose tightens…

Regards,

Bill Bonner
for The Daily Reckoning

Read more: Subprime State of Mind http://dailyreckoning.com/subprime-state-of-mind/#ixzz1sm3G5nrC

QUOTE OF THE DAY

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Posted on 30th October 2011 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

Where is the peace dividend that was supposed to come after the end of the Cold War? Where are the fruits of the amazing gains in efficiency that technology has afforded? It has been eaten by the bureaucracy that manages our every move on this earth. The voracious and insatiable monster here is called the Federal Code that calls on thousands of agencies to exercise the police power to prevent us from living free lives.

It is as Bastiat said: the real cost of the state is the prosperity we do not see, the jobs that don’t exist, the technologies to which we do not have access, the businesses that do not come into existence, and the bright future that is stolen from us. The state has looted us just as surely as a robber who enters our home at night and steals all that we love.

- William “Bill” Bonner

CASH IS KING – FOR NOW

23 comments

Posted on 30th September 2011 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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I’ve been reading Bill Bonner for eight years. I’ve read all his books. He gets it. His advice is sound. Cash is king today, but don’t sell your gold. Hold on. The USD will meet its maker in the not too distant future. Timing is everything.

Uneasy Lies the Head that Wears a Crown

Bill Bonner
Provided as a courtesy of Agora Publishing
&
The Daily Reckoning
Sep 28, 2011

Cash is king.

Ai yi yi…

Last week was the worst for investors in 3 years. Even gold melted down, as we thought it eventually would.

The only things to go up were US Treasury debt and the dollar. As expected, the Great Correction is doing its work.

So far, the stock market has held up as well as it has. But now it seems to be selling off. And gold is selling off too.

Rich people buy gold. They can afford to. They know the end of the dollar is coming – sooner or later. They can wait.

But the middle classes need dollars. Debtors need dollars. Consumers need dollars. Almost everybody needs dollars. In a correction, cash is king. And the king of kings is the dollar. Here’s CNN confirming what Dear Readers already know:

… the data [from the census] gave the first glimpse of what happened to middle-class incomes in the first decade of the millennium. While the earnings of middle-income Americans have barely budged since the mid 1970s, the new data showed that from 2000 to 2010, they actually regressed.

For American households in the middle of the pay scale, income fell to $49,445 last year, when adjusted for inflation, a level not seen since 1996.

And over the 10-year period, their income is down 7%.

“Economists talk about the lost decade in Japan. Well, with these 2010 data, we can confirm the lost decade for the American middle class,” said Jared Bernstein, senior fellow at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

Sure, it’s fair to say Americans at all levels of income, from rich to poor, were hit hard in the decade that started with the dot-com boom and bust, and ended with the Great Recession.

But according to the census data, those losses disproportionately hit the lowest 60% of Americans, while the richest 40% actually gained wealth, relative to the entire US economy.

The middle classes need dollars. They want dollars. Because it’s a currency – believe it or not – that you can still trust. No thanks to Bernanke, Obama, et al. Instead, our gratitude goes to the Great Correction itself. It’s doing the work of an honest central bank. It is making the dollar respectable again. Thanks to the Great Correction the greenback can hold its head up. Uncle Sam’s money is Number One.

How so? In a correction, almost everything goes down. And almost everyone gets scared that his investments and his savings (which he put into stocks on the advice of his financial magazine) will go down too.

Your editor says that in the long run gold will be a better place for your money than dollars. But everyone can’t wait for your editor to be proved right. Most people have bills to pay. And you don’t pay bills with gold. You pay them with dollars.

And imagine that you are a European or an Asian investor? What are you going to do with your money? Put it in a French bank or a Greek bond? Nope. You want something safer. You want a US treasury bond.

And as long as the Great Correction is allowed to continue…US Treasury debt will be a good place for your money. The trouble is, we don’t know when the feds might run in, like a bull in a china shop, and break all the teacups. So, here at The Daily Reckoning at least, we’ll stick with our gold through this correction, confident that when we come out the other side the dollar will be among the porcelain shards and gold will still be standing tall.

When we entered this Great Correction we figured the process would take a few years. We felt like a judge had just given us a prison sentence.

“Five to ten,” said your honor.

Now, it looks like it will take longer. We figured the feds wouldn’t be able to finance their deficits for very long. That would force them to hit the panic button and begin dropping dollars from helicopters. But what the market is showing us now is that this Japan-like phase can last a long, long time. Because the correction itself is making the dollar and dollar debt more attractive!

Get this: the yield on 10-year US Treasury debt is now lower than the yield on the S&P. The longer the correction goes on, the deeper it goes, the more people will want the safety of US notes and bonds. And the more they buy Treasury debt, the lower go the yields.

Meanwhile, stocks should go down, pushing up yields. That’s what happens in a correction. That’s what happened in Japan over the last 20 years.

Most likely, we’ll see yields of 5% on the S&P before this is over. That’s because prices will be cut in half.

Meanwhile, we’ll see yields on bonds go down to 1% or so on the 10- year bonds. This correction means business. It appears to be even more powerful than we imagined. It is not merely correcting a bull market and a credit bubble. We don’t know for sure, but it may be correcting an empire, modern government, the dollar-based monetary system, and who knows, maybe an entire civilization.

We’ll just have to wait to see how far it goes.

Dear Reader, do you recall our Daily Reckoning interpretation of the Iraq War? Well, we didn’t either.

But then we remembered. How could the Bush Administration do something so stupid? It played right into the terrorists’ hands. It put the empire on course for bankruptcy. While stirring up enemies everywhere.

Our interpretation of this was that George W. Bush and the neocons were not really trying to protect the US; they were trying to destroy it. Otherwise their actions made no sense. After all, they aren’t stupid.

In other words, they were just the witless tools of history. America had gotten too big for her britches. She had no foreign enemies that were up to the challenge of bringing her down. She needed to do the work herself.

So far, so good. The empire is going broke, and nobody seems able to do anything about it.

What’s more, the work of destruction goes on.

IMPERIAL INERTIA
Michael Brenner
19 September 2011

The United States’ audacious bid to dominate the greater Middle East by military force is going at close to full throttle. This is despite the talk in Washington about over-extension, budgetary constraints, and war fatigue. Three stories this week reveal this dismaying truth while conveying the flavor of the prevailing mindset in the White House and the security agencies.

First is the revelation that the imperial-scale American embassy complex in Baghdad already needs expansion to accommodate the 6,000 mercenaries there to ride shotgun for the 9,000 civilian employees whenever they clamber out of their bomb-proof offices. That number includes roughly 1,200 US officials and 7,800 hired help from places like Bangladesh and Sri Lanka to do the laundry, clean the rooms and serve the food. The mercenaries also will guard the citadel and its satellite fortresses in Basra, Mosul and Erbil. These Blackwater types have the additional duty of escorting salesmen and agents for American businesses selling and servicing weapons for the Iraqi military. The forces commander-in-chief will be Hillary Clinton. They are in addition to the 10,000 troops that Washington is trying to impose on the reluctant Iraqi government and thousands more on call next door in Kuwait.

The second story recounts the Obama administration’s plans to escalate further the drone campaigns in Yemen and Somalia. There is a mild debate between those who want to restrict assassinations to (supposedly) identified leaders of al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula and al-Qaida in East Africa. Others are keen to expand the target list to include (suspected) foot soldiers; other radical Islamist groups who use violence against people on our side, i.e. remnants of the Saleh regime in Yemen or those who currently reside in the presidential palace in Mogadishu (with an American-sponsored African Union force having taken the baton from the Christian Ethiopians whom we earlier inflicted on the Muslim Somalis in a foregone bloody failure to hold at bay the Islamists); and even radical fundamentalist organizations only potentially hostile to the United States. In this latter perspective, a manifest threat to the United States is unnecessary for targeted killings and Special Forces operations. Again, there is no public statement of exactly why it is imperative to do these things that not only violate international law and national sovereignty but are counter-productive by their provoking bitter anti-American feelings among the natives – leading some to contemplate doing us harm directly.

Finally, there is the mounting military campaign to eliminate all anti-American groups in Northwest Pakistan – be they local al-Qaida residue, some variety of Taliban, the Haqqani network, their Kashmiri and Punjabi based allies and whomever else gets in the way.

Regards,

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source: http://www.dailyreckoning.com.au/uneasy-lies-the-head-that-wears-a-crown/2011/09/28/

Bill Bonner
email: DR@dailyreckoning.com
website: The Daily Reckoning