WHY THE GREAT DEPRESSION WAS GREAT

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Posted on 29th December 2012 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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Remember the Great Depression of 1921? Of course you don’t. There was a sharp short economic contraction after World War I. The government did not intervene and the economy rapidly recovered as supply and demand did its job. The storyline believed by millions of non-thinking dolts is that FDR’s Keynesian economic policies saved the country during the Great Depression. This storyline is complete and utter bullshit propagated by the liberal do-gooder control freaks that dominate the media and government. FDR’s intervention in free markets extended and deepened the Great Depression. He made the depression Great. His policies did not result in recovery. Unemployment was still 17% in the late 1930′s. Instead of learning from the past, today’s economic gurus and spineless politicians have used the same failed economic policies to “save” us from another Great Depression. Instead they have sentenced us to a Greater Depression. So it goes.

 

FDR’s policies prolonged Depression by 7 years, UCLA economists calculate

By Meg Sullivan Category: Research

Two UCLA economists say they have figured out why the Great Depression dragged on for almost 15 years, and they blame a suspect previously thought to be beyond reproach: President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
After scrutinizing Roosevelt’s record for four years, Harold L. Cole and Lee E. Ohanian conclude in a new study that New Deal policies signed into law 71 years ago thwarted economic recovery for seven long years.
“Why the Great Depression lasted so long has always been a great mystery, and because we never really knew the reason, we have always worried whether we would have another 10- to 15-year economic slump,” said Ohanian, vice chair of UCLA’s Department of Economics. “We found that a relapse isn’t likely unless lawmakers gum up a recovery with ill-conceived stimulus policies.”
In an article in the August issue of the Journal of Political Economy, Ohanian and Cole blame specific anti-competition and pro-labor measures that Roosevelt promoted and signed into law June 16, 1933.
“President Roosevelt believed that excessive competition was responsible for the Depression by reducing prices and wages, and by extension reducing employment and demand for goods and services,” said Cole, also a UCLA professor of economics. “So he came up with a recovery package that would be unimaginable today, allowing businesses in every industry to collude without the threat of antitrust prosecution and workers to demand salaries about 25 percent above where they ought to have been, given market forces. The economy was poised for a beautiful recovery, but that recovery was stalled by these misguided policies.”
Using data collected in 1929 by the Conference Board and the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Cole and Ohanian were able to establish average wages and prices across a range of industries just prior to the Depression. By adjusting for annual increases in productivity, they were able to use the 1929 benchmark to figure out what prices and wages would have been during every year of the Depression had Roosevelt’s policies not gone into effect. They then compared those figures with actual prices and wages as reflected in the Conference Board data.
In the three years following the implementation of Roosevelt’s policies, wages in 11 key industries averaged 25 percent higher than they otherwise would have done, the economists calculate. But unemployment was also 25 percent higher than it should have been, given gains in productivity.
Meanwhile, prices across 19 industries averaged 23 percent above where they should have been, given the state of the economy. With goods and services that much harder for consumers to afford, demand stalled and the gross national product floundered at 27 percent below where it otherwise might have been.
“High wages and high prices in an economic slump run contrary to everything we know about market forces in economic downturns,” Ohanian said. “As we’ve seen in the past several years, salaries and prices fall when unemployment is high. By artificially inflating both, the New Deal policies short-circuited the market’s self-correcting forces.”
The policies were contained in the National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA), which exempted industries from antitrust prosecution if they agreed to enter into collective bargaining agreements that significantly raised wages. Because protection from antitrust prosecution all but ensured higher prices for goods and services, a wide range of industries took the bait, Cole and Ohanian found. By 1934 more than 500 industries, which accounted for nearly 80 percent of private, non-agricultural employment, had entered into the collective bargaining agreements called for under NIRA.
Cole and Ohanian calculate that NIRA and its aftermath account for 60 percent of the weak recovery. Without the policies, they contend that the Depression would have ended in 1936 instead of the year when they believe the slump actually ended: 1943.
Roosevelt’s role in lifting the nation out of the Great Depression has been so revered that Time magazine readers cited it in 1999 when naming him the 20th century’s second-most influential figure.
“This is exciting and valuable research,” said Robert E. Lucas Jr., the 1995 Nobel Laureate in economics, and the John Dewey Distinguished Service Professor of Economics at the University of Chicago. “The prevention and cure of depressions is a central mission of macroeconomics, and if we can’t understand what happened in the 1930s, how can we be sure it won’t happen again?”
NIRA’s role in prolonging the Depression has not been more closely scrutinized because the Supreme Court declared the act unconstitutional within two years of its passage.
“Historians have assumed that the policies didn’t have an impact because they were too short-lived, but the proof is in the pudding,” Ohanian said. “We show that they really did artificially inflate wages and prices.”
Even after being deemed unconstitutional, Roosevelt’s anti-competition policies persisted — albeit under a different guise, the scholars found. Ohanian and Cole painstakingly documented the extent to which the Roosevelt administration looked the other way as industries once protected by NIRA continued to engage in price-fixing practices for four more years.
The number of antitrust cases brought by the Department of Justice fell from an average of 12.5 cases per year during the 1920s to an average of 6.5 cases per year from 1935 to 1938, the scholars found. Collusion had become so widespread that one Department of Interior official complained of receiving identical bids from a protected industry (steel) on 257 different occasions between mid-1935 and mid-1936. The bids were not only identical but also 50 percent higher than foreign steel prices. Without competition, wholesale prices remained inflated, averaging 14 percent higher than they would have been without the troublesome practices, the UCLA economists calculate.
NIRA’s labor provisions, meanwhile, were strengthened in the National Relations Act, signed into law in 1935. As union membership doubled, so did labor’s bargaining power, rising from 14 million strike days in 1936 to about 28 million in 1937. By 1939 wages in protected industries remained 24 percent to 33 percent above where they should have been, based on 1929 figures, Cole and Ohanian calculate. Unemployment persisted. By 1939 the U.S. unemployment rate was 17.2 percent, down somewhat from its 1933 peak of 24.9 percent but still remarkably high. By comparison, in May 2003, the unemployment rate of 6.1 percent was the highest in nine years.
Recovery came only after the Department of Justice dramatically stepped up enforcement of antitrust cases nearly four-fold and organized labor suffered a string of setbacks, the economists found.
“The fact that the Depression dragged on for years convinced generations of economists and policy-makers that capitalism could not be trusted to recover from depressions and that significant government intervention was required to achieve good outcomes,” Cole said. “Ironically, our work shows that the recovery would have been very rapid had the government not intervened.”
-UCLA-
LSMS368



OBAMA WALL STREET PROSECUTIONS: ZERO!!!!

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Posted on 23rd September 2012 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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The extreme liberal bias of the mainstream media is revealed by their complete purposeful ignoring of Obama’s absolute disgraceful bowing down to the Wall Street cabal. Bush convicted 1,300 white collar criminals. Clinton convicted 1,000 white collar criminals. And after the largest criminal fraud in the history of mankind, Obama has not even attempted to prosecute one Wall Street slimeball. Obama is a Wall Street captured stooge. How could the MSM give him a pass on this?

The liberal hypocrites who held antiwar protests against Bush have been silent during Obama’s reign of terror, where he ramped up a worthless war in Afghanistan, kills women and children with predator drones, signed the NDAA, and signs executive orders allowing him to imprison Americans without charges.

The liberal MSM is showing their true colors with their slanted coverage of this election and Obama’s disgraceful record.

Who really unchained Wall Street?

Jean-Claude Groulx

In keeping with the left’s blaxploitation enterprise, white Northerner Joe Biden feigned the hemistichical rhythm of a Southern black preacher for his largely black audience in Virginia yesterday:

They’ve said it. Every Republican’s voted for it. Look at what they value and look at their budget and what they’re proposing. Romney wants to let the-he said in the first 100 days, he’s going to let the big banks once again write their own rules.  Unchain Wall Street!  They gawn’ put y’all back in chains.

For all the bluster of Obama, pre- and post-2008, as well as that of Attorney General Eric Holder concerning the alleged criminal activities on Wall Street, there have been zero Wall Street prosecutions under Obama/Holder.  Compare that with his predecessors Bush and Clinton:

GAI [Government Accountability Institute] details how the George W. Bush and Bill Clinton administrations both actually took down financial criminals – unlike the Obama administration.  Between 2002 and 2008, for instance, GAI points out how a Bush administration task force “obtained over 1,300 corporate fraud convictions, including those of over 130 corporate vice presidents and over 200 CEOs and corporate presidents.”

“Clinton’s DOJ prosecuted over 1,800 S&L (savings and loans) executives, senior officials, and directors, and over 1,000 of them were sent to jail,” GAI adds.

But, despite having “promised more of the same,” especially in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, the Obama administration’s DOJ has not brought criminal charges against a single major Wall Street executive.

The Bush and Clinton administrations’ track records on prosecuting white-collar crime, and the Obama administration’s failure to do so, Schweizer said, is “evidence that this has less to do with some sort of partisan or philosophical issue.”

Bush – 1,300 convictions;

Clinton – 1,000 convictions;

Obama – Zero attempts.

And why the difference in prosecuting the law?  The GAI report reveals that the Department of Justice upper echelon is stacked with attorneys, including Eric Holder,  from law firms representing the very same companies involved in the financial meltdown of 2008, as well as financial corporations with questionable actions during the Obama administration…AIG, Goldman Sachs, Wells Fargo, J.P. Morgan Chase, Bank of America, CitiBank, Deutsche Bank, ING, Morgan Stanley, UBS, Wilmington Trust, and John Corzine’s MF Global.

These very same DoJ attorneys also happen to be some of Obama’s biggest bundlers for Obama’s 2008 bid for president.

“When we think of cronyism and the problems of cronyism and crony capitalism, we think in terms of economic loss and gain,” Schweizer said in a phone interview. “What we’re showing here is that cronyism is now permeating our justice system. So, it’s not just a question of dollars and cents, it’s a question of whether you’re going to face legal jeopardy or not on what you’re doing.”

Unchain Wall Street,  Joe?  There is no more corrupt and capricious “unchaining” of Wall Street that President Romney could possibly effect.  Under Obama and Holder,  “the chains” are dependent on not the Rule of Law, but rather the Law(lessness) of Men.

WINNING HEARTS & MINDS

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Posted on 17th August 2012 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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Things are going exactly as planned in Afghanistan. I think we’ve trained their security forces real good. I think if we just stay there for another 10 or 20 years, the Afghans will learn to love us. I think it’s time to declare victory and hit the fucking road. Another feather in the cap of spreading our democracy around the world. We can’t afford too many more of these victories.

Another Afghan police attack kills  2 US troops

Members of the Afghan  security forces — or someone wearing their uniform — have opened fire on  international forces seven times in the past two weeks

By  

Friday,  August 17, 2012, 8:42 AM
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	An Afghan policeman stands guard as election officials put up election participation posters at Baba Qushquar village, 25 kilometers (15 miles) northeast of Kabul, Afghanistan, Monday, July 5, 2004.<br />

Manish Swarup/AP

An Afghan policeman stands guard as election officials put up election  participation posters at Baba Qushquar village, 25 kilometers (15 miles)  northeast of Kabul, Afghanistan, Monday, July 5, 2004. A newly recruited  Afghan village policeman (not pictured) opened fire on his American allies on  Friday, killing two U.S. service members minutes after they handed him his  official weapon

KABUL, Afghanistan — A newly recruited Afghan village policeman opened fire  on his American allies on Friday, killing two U.S. service members minutes after  they handed him his official weapon in an inauguration ceremony. It was the  latest in a disturbing string of attacks by Afghan security forces on the  international troops training them.

Later Friday, an Afghan soldier turned his gun on foreign troops in another  part of the country and wounded two of them, a spokesman for the NATO coalition  said.

The attacks in the country’s far west and south brought to seven the number  of times that a member of the Afghan security forces — or someone wearing their  uniform — has opened fire on international forces in the past two weeks.

Such assaults by allies, virtually unheard of just a few years ago, have  recently escalated, killing at least 36 foreign troops so far this year. They  also raise questions about the strategy to train Afghan national police and  soldiers to take over security and fight insurgents after most foreign troops  leave the country by the end of 2014.

The NATO-led coalition has said such attacks are anomalies stemming from  personal disputes, but the supreme leader of the Taliban boasted on Thursday  night that the insurgents are infiltrating the quickly expanding Afghan  forces.

Friday’s deadly attacker in the far western province of Farah was identified  as Mohammad Ismail, a man in his 30s who had joined the Afghan Local Police just  five days ago.

He opened fire during an inauguration ceremony attended by American and  Afghan forces in the Kinisk village, the Farah provincial police chief Agha Noor  Kemtoz said.

“As soon as they gave the weapon to Ismail to begin training, suddenly he  took the gun and opened fire toward the U.S. soldiers,” Kemtoz said.

Ismail was shot and killed as the coalition and Afghan forces returned fire,  the police chief said.

A spokesman for the international coalition force, Jamie Graybeal, confirmed  that two American service members were killed Friday by a member of the Afghan  Local Police.

The ALP is different from the national police and represents a village  defense force under the Ministry of Interior that is being trained by  international forces, including U.S. special forces.

Graybeal gave no other details on the Farah attack other than confirming the  shooter had been killed.

Kemtoz, the police chief, said the attack took place about 8 a.m., after the  U.S. forces arrived in the village to train the local police. He said one Afghan  National Police officer was also seriously wounded in the shooting.

Later Friday, an Afghan army soldier fired on coalition troops in the  southern province of Kandahar. Two of the international troops were wounded but  none was killed in that shooting, Graybeal said. He added that the soldier was  shot and died later Friday of his wounds.

So far in 2012, there have been 29 attacks reported on foreign troops by  Afghans they are training, compared to 11 attacks in 2011, according to an  Associated Press count, and five attacks in each of the previous two years.

Seven such attacks have come in the past two weeks alone, with six American  troops killed last Friday in two separate shootings in Helmand province in the  south and another American killed a few days previously on a U.S. base in Paktia  province in the east.

The trend raises questions about potential resentment by Afghans after more  than a decade of international presence since the American-led intervention to  oust the Taliban regime from power for harboring the al-Qaida terrorist  leadership after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks in the U.S. The insider attacks also  renew concern that insurgents may be infiltrating the Afghan army and police,  despite intensified screening.

Insurgent infiltration or recruitment was behind only about 10 percent of  this year’s reported attacks on coalition forces by Afghan allies, Graybeal said  earlier this week, citing investigations into attacks before those of the past  week.

Graybeal insisted the deadly violence is relatively small scale compared to  the nearly 340,000 Afghan security forces now being trained.

The international coalition has said that Afghan forces are increasingly  able to lead operations and already have started to assume responsibility for  security in areas of the country that are home to 75 percent of the Afghan  population.

However, the Taliban have been quick to seize on the increasing number of  attacks as a sign of Afghan rejection of foreign forces and the insurgents’ own  successful recruitment.

The group’s supreme leader Mullah Mohammad Omar said Thursday night that the  insurgents “have cleverly infiltrated in the ranks of the enemy” and were  successfully killing a rising number of U.S.-led coalition forces.

In an email to media organizations, Omar said the plan to transfer  responsibility to Afghan forces by the end of 2014 is a “deceiving drama” that  the international community has orchestrated to hide its defeat.

The Taliban leader’s message came on the same day that a U.S. military  helicopter crashed during a firefight with insurgents in a remote area of  southern Afghanistan, killing seven Americans and four Afghans in one of the  deadliest air disasters of a war now into its second decade.

The Taliban claimed they gunned down the Black Hawk.

Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/world/afghan-police-attack-kills-2-troops-article-1.1138394#ixzz23pQbtAOD

MATHEMATICAL CERTAINTY

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Posted on 21st November 2011 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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Our entire political system is a fraud. This entire Super Committee was a farce designed to keep the stock market from falling back in August. There was no intention of reaching a compromise. There also will not be any automatic triggers. That was a lie too. These criminal politicians will just change the rules as they go along. Budget cuts of $1.2 trillion over 10 years couldn’t even be agreed to. That is hysterical. Ron Paul would cut $1 trillion in one year and it still wouldn’t be enough. But don’t worry. Our interest rates are low, so there is no danger. Just go about your daily life and leave all the important decisions up to your fine representatives in Washington DC. They’re doing just great.



You knew this was coming…

The Republican co-chairman of the bipartisan deficit panel said Sunday that the members’ inability to strike a deal is a “huge missed opportunity,” while refusing to say definitively that the committee had failed.

Rep. Jeb Hensarling, R-Texas, and Rep. Xavier Becerra, D-Calif., another member of the so-called Super Committee, both said on “Fox News Sunday” that members are not giving up on striking some semblance of an agreement before a Wednesday deadline.

“There’s still time on the clock,” Becerra said.

But the committee has a matter of hours to submit a plan in order to give congressional budget scorekeepers enough time to review it. The de facto deadline could be as early as Sunday night. While Hensarling said lawmakers are “not going to give up hope” and continuing to talk, he did not dispute suggestions that the committee was headed for failure.

I really wish people would stop talking about “success” like it would actually be success, because it’s not.

The “target” is $120 billion a year or $1.2 trillion over ten years.  The deficit last year was $1,700 billion, and this year through October has been $765 billion, with two “bad” months remaining that last year were good for more than $350 billion between them.

$120 billion a year is ten percent of what has to happen to reach budgetary balance, and that is deemed “unachievable.”

These so-called “representatives” and “senators” are frauds.  All of them, from both sides of the aisle.

They’re still trying to preserve the “skittles” that came from this over the last 30 years:

You can’t.  The promises made are simply unable to be fulfilled.  It’s a matter of mathematics and no amount of arm-waving and complaining changes this.

Back in July I advised a member of the “Tea Party” caucus to take the hit now and pull the plug on deficit spending by refusing to raise the debt ceiling.  I said the same thing in a Senator’s office with Bill Still.  This was ignored, of course, but the fact of the matter is that the longer we wait to do the right thing the worse the outcome will be.

I fully understand the political implications of doing the right thing — they’re bad, even horrific.  But the implications of not doing the right thing are that we will go through the sort of upheaval that is happening in Italy, Greece and the rest of Europe.

We not only are not doing the right thing, we’re not forcing the banks to quit writing credit derivatives they cannot cash and are allowing them to “back them” with depositor’s money.  That’s an outrage — an out-and-out fraud upon the public in that these “derivatives” cannot be performed upon when the time comes and thus won’t, and what’s worse is that the Bankruptcy “Reform” law passed in the 2000s arguably puts those derivatives in front of depositor payouts in the event of failure.

This insanity must stop now.

Europe is going to blow folks.  It cannot be otherwise.  “Money” (really just naked-created credit and a short on the Euro) has been issued to debtors that cannot be paid back.  The governments in question have made promises they cannot keep and as they fail to keep them their tax revenues have and will continue to collapse.  This is the precise mechanism of failure that I have talked about for more than four years and it is going to nail us as well.  While we cannot avoid some of the effects if we do not take steps to effectively firewall off the risks from the core of our government we’re going to find ourselves with no alternatives but a crash collapse in government spending along with literal and immediate impoverishment of those who have taken to rely on that which we cannot deliver.

I wish there was a clean and simple way to solve this problem but there is not.  There is also no time to play the “we’ll stop overspending later but not we must support the economy with more deficits” game.  We’re here because we manufactured false economic demand that did not exist and in doing so caused people to build supply to fill that false demand.  As the marginal economic expansion of this additional debt went to an effective zero we hit the wall in 2007.  Now everyone is trying to repeat the same conditions that provided this false “prosperity” in the hope pulling out of the tailspin.

It’s not arithmetically possible for that path of action to succeed, and once that which we cannot do is eliminated we’re left with what can work, which is to tell the truth and then figure out what can be provided with current tax revenues and reset the size of government to provide exactly that — and no more.