Canada prepares for the U.S. election debacle

Hat tip vannalex


FOURTH TURNING UPDATE WITH NEIL HOWE

Talk about comprehensive. Neil Howe gives his opinion about everything he thinks will happen in this crucial year of 2016. He isn’t optimistic. He is in the midst of writing a new book called The First Turning. I hope we make it there.

Via John Mauldin

The Big Picture

January 2016 Report

All signs point to 2016 being a momentous year on every front, from the shuddering global economy to the stormy upcoming election season. How will the world look by year’s end? BP interviewed Saeculum Research Founder and President Neil Howe to get his take on what’s ahead. (This is an expanded version of the interview we published as a Social Intelligence report on January 6, 2016.)
BP: Neil, 2016 sure began with some big headlines, didn’t it?
NH: Yes, the year began with a bang—and not in a good way. Both the Dow and the S&P 500 suffered their worst 5-day and 10-day start to a year in history. With the market down roughly 8%, we are suddenly back to the “correction” lows of late last summer. China’s Shanghai market entered free fall, with circuit breakers stopping trading on January 6 after only 29 minutes. Beijing had to intervene massively to keep the CNY from following suit. Meanwhile, most of the Sunni Arab nations abruptly broke off diplomatic relations with Iran. And North Korea successfully tested an H bomb, which—Dear Leader Kim Jong Un helpfully, if not quite accurately, reminded the media—“is capable of wiping out the whole territory of the U.S. all at once.”
BP: Wow. “Bang” may be just the right word. Neil, could you give us a sense of what everybody is going to be talking about in 2016?
NH: In January, analysts always predict how the economy will perform over the coming year. Now is no different, especially with the big December announcement that the Federal Reserve is raising short-term interest rates by 25 basis points to between 0.25 and 0.5%. The Fed boldly suggests that interest rates may close in on 1.4% by the end of 2016 and 2.4% by the end of 2017. Spoiler alert: I think this is delusional. The global economy is in no condition to take this medicine. My very safe prediction is that the Fed will either stall or back down. And the risk of U.S. recession by the end of the year? It’s higher than most are estimating: I’d say roughly 50-50.
Abroad, there are signs of progress in international relations, but the overall geopolitical outlook is dangerous. The Middle East has become a maelstrom. Europeans are voting for leaders who want to dismantle Europe. Putin seems to enjoy doing whatever he damn well wants to—while boasting off-the-chart popularity ratings at home. Meanwhile, Americans are left wondering why their country no longer plays a leadership role in world affairs.
These issues only raise the stakes for the upcoming elections. Not that Americans needed more reason to pay attention: Ever since the first slate of primary debates last summer, we haven’t been able to take our eyeballs off this race. We have the prospect of seeing another Clinton in the White House, a highly polarized presidential campaign season, and—oh yeah—Donald Trump endlessly in the headlines.
BP: OK, let’s focus on the economy. You sound a bit more downbeat than most.

Seeking a Saviour

Guest Post by Jeff Thomas via 321Gold

It’s an unfortunate truth that, when people are worried about the future, they often put their faith in politicians to somehow make everything better.

Politicians, of course, are famous for promising panaceas for whatever troubles voters and even invent new troubles to worry about, presenting themselves as the only ones who can solve these woes.

Not surprising then, that, over time, any nation may slowly deteriorate into a population of nebbishes who turn to their government to do their thinking for them and take responsibility for their futures.

In the last year, the world has seen many elections in which the top spot (President, Prime Minister, Premier, etc.) was contested. In Brazil, socialist President Dilma Rousseff was returned, but almost immediately ran into trouble over a failing economy, scandals and corruption charges. In less than a year, her popularity sank to the lowest level for any Brazilian president on record.

In the UK, conservative Prime Minister David Cameron was returned, which immediately triggered riots in London by the anti-austerity crowd. He will soon be facing increasingly angry voters of all stripes who are boiling over with the dramatically- worsening Immigration question. In addition, he’ll soon be facing a referendum on the UK’s membership in the EU – an eventuality he’s been postponing for quite some time.

Continue reading “Seeking a Saviour”

Wealthiest Americans Ominously Remind Nation They Could Easily Drop Another $10 Billion On Election

WASHINGTON—Calmly stating that they would not even need to think twice about doing so, the nation’s wealthiest individuals ominously reminded the populace during a press conference Wednesday that they could easily drop another $10 billion on the 2016 election. “We want to make it completely clear to voters that there’s absolutely no reason—none at all—why we couldn’t shell out another $10 billion between now and next November,” said casino magnate Sheldon Adelson on behalf of the top tenth of a percent of income-earners in the U.S., adding that creating dozens of new and extremely well-funded super PACs would mean practically nothing to them. “Trust me, we’ve got plenty to throw around, so it really wouldn’t be a problem. We could spread it around a bunch of congressional races, or, heck, we could put it all on one presidential candidate—it doesn’t really affect us much either way. Why don’t we toss in a billion right now just to give you a taste?” The nation’s wealthiest families then added that they would have no problem repeating the process for the next 30 election cycles before silently walking off the stage.

Via The Onion


 

The Real Issues You Won’t Hear from the 2016 Presidential Candidates This Election Year

Guest Post by John W. Whitehead

“Apparently, a democracy is a place where numerous elections are held at great cost without issues and with interchangeable candidates.”—Gore Vidal

The countdown has begun.

We now have less than one year until the 2016 presidential election, and you can expect to be treated to an earful of carefully crafted, expensive sound bites and political spin about climate change, education, immigration, taxes and war.

Despite the dire state of our nation, however, you can rest assured that none of the problems that continue to undermine our freedoms will be addressed in any credible, helpful way by any of the so-called viable presidential candidates and certainly not if doing so might jeopardize their standing with the unions, corporations or the moneyed elite bankrolling their campaigns.

The following are just a few of the issues that should be front and center in every presidential debate. That they are not is a reflection of our willingness as citizens to have our political elections reduced to little more than popularity contests that are, in the words of Shakespeare, “full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.”

The national debt. Why aren’t politicians talking about the whopping $18.1 trillion and rising that our government owes to foreign countries, private corporations and its retirement programs? Not only is the U.S. the largest debtor nation in the world, but according to Forbes, “the amount of interest on the national debt is estimated to be accumulating at a rate of over one million dollars per minute.” Shouldn’t the government being on the verge of bankruptcy be an issue worth talking about?

Black budget spending. It costs the American taxpayer $52.6 billion every year to be spied on by the sixteen or so intelligence agencies tasked with surveillance, data collection, counterintelligence and covert activities. The agencies operating with black budget (top secret) funds include the CIA, NSA and Justice Department. Clearly, our right to privacy seems to amount to nothing in the eyes of the government and those aspiring to office.

Continue reading “The Real Issues You Won’t Hear from the 2016 Presidential Candidates This Election Year”

MEANWHILE….IN GREECE

Greeks Vote Again – Why Bother?

athens

greek-theatreI am here in Athens for the elections this weekend. I must state, at this point in the game it appears to be just Greek theater with the politicians playing merely parts with the strings beging pulled from Brussels. Whoever governs is almost really a moot point, for it seems that the political forces are not interested in any honest democratic process which was invented in Athens. The political forces appear to be simply prepared to fit in with whatever the country’s international creditors demand.

The Greek people seem to be staring into the abyss with no chance of reversing the economic decline. What governments do not comprehend is rather stark. When the people lose the right to vote, then dictatorship emerges. That historically leads to revolution. If the political forces of Europe do not listen to the people, this is what will lead to civil unrest, uprisings, and revolution. Often, government sensing it will face an uprising, then seeks and external enemy to blame. Revolution can then only be avoided by war with another nation. This is the cold blunt truth of history.

Continue reading “MEANWHILE….IN GREECE”

American Oligarchy – 400 Families Represent 50% of Money Raised by 2016 Presidential Candidates Thus Far

Guest Post by Michael Krieger 

Screen Shot 2015-08-03 at 2.45.08 PM

Ever since I started this website in 2012, one of my primary objectives was to convince readers that the American system of government is nothing like what we are told in school and via the oligarch-owned mainstream media. That the country has become so captured and corrupted by sociopathic oligarchs, that a neo-feudal modern serfdom was emerging where the opportunities to enjoy rising standards of living for the vast majority of people was rapidly becoming a pipe dream.

I think many readers appreciated my warnings, but it wasn’t until an academic study from Princeton and Northwestern came out and factually proved it, that it become undeniable to many people. Here’s a brief excerpt from that post titled, New Report from Princeton and Northwestern Proves It: The U.S. is an Oligarchy:

Despite the seemingly strong empirical support in previous studies for theories of majoritarian democracy, our analyses suggest that majorities of the American public actually have little influence over the policies our government adopts. Americans do enjoy many features central to democratic governance, such as regular elections, freedom of speech and association, and a widespread (if still contested) franchise. But we believe that if policymaking is dominated by powerful business organizations and a small number of affluent Americans, then America’s claims to being a democratic society are seriously threatened.

Continue reading “American Oligarchy – 400 Families Represent 50% of Money Raised by 2016 Presidential Candidates Thus Far”

Heinous Waste of Money Officially Begins

Guest Post by Andy Borowitz

Credit Photograph by Alex Wong/Getty Images

WASHINGTON (The Borowitz Report)—The two major political parties’ unconscionable waste of money officially commences this weekend, as Democrats and Republicans will soon begin spending an estimated five billion dollars of their corporate puppet masters’ assets in an unquenchable pursuit of power.

The billions, which could be spent rebuilding the nation’s crumbling infrastructure, improving schools, or reducing the scourge of malaria in Africa, will instead be squandered in a heinous free-for-all of slander and personal destruction, alienating voters as never before.

The media will inevitably focus on the personalities of the bloated roster of narcissists lusting after the White House, but scant attention will be paid to the Wall Street bankers, industrial polluters, and casino magnates whose grip on American democracy will remain vise-like.

While attention this weekend turns to the Democrats, the Republicans remain quietly confident about their chances of purchasing the nation’s highest office. In the words of one top operative, “Our billionaires can beat their billionaires.”


One Reader’s Shocked Response Upon Learning His Health Insurance Cost Just Doubled

Not only are Obamacare premiums skyrocketing for working Americans, the deductibles on these policies are so fucking high that people who live paycheck to paycheck (the majority) could never pay the deductible if they have a major illness. Douchebags like Obama, Gruber and any dyke on MSNBC never talk about the outrageously high deductibles as they blather about the joys of Obamacare. And remember, Obama delayed all the really bad shit until after the mid-term elections by Executive order. Guess what? The elections are over and 2015 has arrived. Bend over for your eternal Obamacare proctology exam with a cold finger.

Tyler Durden's picture

From a reader

ZH:

My wife and I own a small business and we had previously (in 2013)  been buying health insurance on our own for ourselves and our two kids.  The cost was about six hundred per month with a $5200 deductible, $6800 total out of pocket exposure for the family of four.

After spending months trying to register for the ACA in late 2013 and early 2014 my kids got put on our state’s insurance (at “no cost”) and my wife and I bagged an ACA policy at a subsidized cost of $281 per month with a total out of pocket of about $6500 (just for the two of us).

Attached is the ACA notification of next year’s price increase.  As you can see the cost goes from $281 to $555, a monthly increase of $274, a percentage increase of 97%. 

Basically we are now paying the same amount for the two of us that we paid for all four of us one year ago.

How can that increase occur in a “free market” economy?  Did I miss something? Has some input cost leaped exponentially in order to double the price I pay? Or has private industry colluded with government to rig the markets (again) in their favor?

How much longer will the American people allow corporations to rip them off in collusion with the government?  Fuck this bogus economy and government captured by corporations.  Where is the leader who will rise up from the masses and snuff out the corp/govt nexus before it imprisons us all in debt serfdom police state?

Do you think for one minute that freaking Mitch McConnell, Harry Reid, Nancy Pelosi, John Boehner or anyone newly elected or previously elected cares one shit about my wife and kids or what we pay for crappy health care that we cannot afford to access due to high deductibles?  Those fucks cannot see beyond the next donor phone call, and only come clucking out of the hen house in order to give voice to the latest party certified political meme, be it ‘freedom’, ‘liberty’, ‘security” or some other hollowed out focus group tested bullshit sound bite.

OFF TO A GREAT START

Wow. The Fed government is really taking this austerity thing too far. The October deficit was only up 34% over last October. I wonder if the 16% spike in Federal spending had anything to do with the mid-term elections? Obama wouldn’t do such a thing. Would he? After one month the Federal government has already increased the national debt by $122 billion. That is a rate of $3.9 billion PER DAY. The Feds will spend $3.9 TRILLION of your money and your unborn grandchildren’s money this year. It looks like those years of declining deficits are over. We’ve got wars to wage and illegal immigrants to support. When a politician of either party talks about cutting spending, the way you know he or she is lying is if they are talking. The national debt will rise by $1 trillion this year. It is already about to break through the $18 trillion level. Yippee!!!

This fiscal austerity sure is holding us back.

U.S. October budget deficit widens to $122 billion: Treasury

By Robert Schroeder

Published: Nov 13, 2014 2:00 p.m. ET

WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) — The U.S. government ran a budget deficit of $122 billion in October, the Treasury Department said Thursday. The shortfall is $31 billion, or 34%, more than in the same month a year ago. The government spent $334 billion in October, an increase of 16% from last October. Receipts totaled $213 billion in October, an increase of 7%. October is the first month of the 2015 fiscal year, which runs through September.

Pendulum Politics No Longer Works

Guest Post by Monty Pelerin

Recent polls suggest a possible landslide election for Republicans. That is not good news for Democrats who, until recently, were buoyed by the possibility of retaining the Senate.

The shift toward Republicans results from Obama fatigue and disgust. On virtually every metric the country is seen as worse off as a result of his policies and lack of leadership.

If these findings are real and hold, Republicans will be celebrating on election day. But, should they be? Four years from now, does anyone expect the public to be more satisfied with Republican party performance than they are with Democrats today?

That this question can be asked and suggests its answer. It says more about the state of American government and politics than it does about the Republican Party.

Pendulum Politics

pendulumpolitics__9425918788_a61e4389e5_zObama was elected because Democrats and some Republicans were mad as hell at Bush and his party. Now we are at the opposite end of the pendulum’s arc — Republicans and some Democrats are mad as hell at Obama and his party for their performance. Pollsters are picking this sentiment up in their canvassing and reflecting it in their forecasting.

Pendulum politics refers to the natural inclination to replace someone that disappoints. It reflects quintessential American meritocracy. If America is “apple pie,” surely meritocracy is the secret ingredient in the recipe that made it so special.

The two most recent presidents were perceived as flawed, at least toward the end of their terms. Both had in-the-gutter approval ratings at the end of their terms.

The pendulum view of political replacement is consistent with what is happening today, although it is more likely that other factors are drive matters.

An Alternative View

Political and government aggrandizement has reached the point where the expectations of the public can no longer be satisfied. Government, in the process of grasping power and wealth never intended for it, made claims and promises that exceeded its ability to deliver.  As a result, it must disappoint.

John Kenneth Galbraith wisely observed:

You will find that the State is the kind of organization which, though it does big things badly, does small things badly, too.

No one ever looked at government as a paragon of efficiency. Until recently, government inefficiency was assumed and tolerable so long as government did not do much or waste too much of the country’s resources. As the State took on bigger and bigger tasks, government was increasingly seen as failing and incompetent. The costs of such failures became a bigger burden on the productivity of the nation.

The claims and promises made to enhance its power only raised the expectations of the public and the impossibility for government to be successful. As a result, government has guaranteed its perceived failure and characterization as incompetent. It has become so big, unwieldy and misapplied that no one is capable of running it well.

Anyone elected is doomed to failure and the ire of the American public. The problem is the system no longer work because it is tasked with things it cannot possibly do well, if at all. Government  is broken, at least from the standpoint of those who it pretends to serve. It works quite well for the political class and their cronies, enriching them in bigger and better ways with each election. Government has become little more than a plunder machine, draining the energy and creativity from the productive, while pretending to solve the problems it creates.

The failure is still reacted to by the public by “changing horses” via elections. But pendulum politics cannot solve the problem of metastasizing government. The majority of the public does not yet realize how fruitless elections have become, but they are beginning to understand. As Rasmussen concluded from his polling:

Fewer voters than ever think either major political party has a plan for the nation’s future, with most still convinced that neither represents the American people.

The End of Democracy

Voting out one party and in the other does little anymore. Government is too big and involved in too many things it is incapable of doing. Yet it continues to grow in size and power.

Both parties are incompetent, corrupt and self-serving, but both benefit from the scam. Every legislative day represents this trade-off:  how much more can be taken before the fools figure out they are being plundered.

Unless power is taken away from Washington, the next election will be a replay of this one. The country will turn on those currently in power and replace them with their opponents in the hopes that things will change. Continuing to repeat this process over and over will change nothing. Continuing to do this and believing that the results will change is merely another example of Einstein’s definition of insanity.

Democracy as we know it is about to end. It should! However, there are only two ways that it can end:

1. Government loses.

2. Government wins.

Government Loses

There is only one way that government can lose or be rolled back. We are past the point where the ballot box can effect such change. Virtually every election, at least at the national level, affords two choices — Statistism Heavy  or Statism Medium. Neither choice changes the continued increase in government growth. One party grows it slower than the other, but that is all.

It is not an accident that the Republican Party did not want Goldwater, Reagan or the Tea Party. They are the party of Statism Medium and any outsider threatens them as much as it does the Democrats. The two parties beat each other up in the attempt to lead, but they come together whenever their great scam is threatened.

The only way that government can lose is by voters rebelling demanding massive rollbacks in the size and power of government. That solution is fraught with danger, including a faster route to dictatorship.

Government Wins

If the current voting  system continues, the government wins. Each year it moves the country closer to totalitarianism, regardless of who is elected. That is ensured because of the candidates put up for office.

Those who hated George Bush six years ago gave us Barack Obama. Those who now hate Barack Obama will give us someone else who will be appropriately despised after a brief honeymoon period.

The horrors of democracy and the abandonment of the Constitution are responsible for the current condition. Democracy is going to end under either solution above.  Unfortunately something much worse could be in store.

As a citizen, I would rather risk everything to save the country. Not taking that option ensures a slow and certain death to what freedoms and prosperity remain.

10 YEAR TREASURY YIELDS AT 2008 CRISIS LEVELS

The 10 Year Treasury yield this morning is 2.35%. It was 3.04% earlier this year and 4% in 2010. In a healthy growing economy with GDP supposedly exceeding 4%, and real inflation running at 5%, would the 10 Year Treasury be trading at 2008 financial crisis levels? Of course not.

If Obama and his minions, touting our growing economy and millions of “new” jobs one month before the mid-term elections, are telling the truth than why have rates plunged from 3.04% to 2.35% since the beginning of this year? This is while the Fed has been tapering their QE heroine injections. When 10 year rates fall by 23% in nine months it is signaling trouble ahead.

HOW LOW CAN WE GO?


Chart of the Day

For some perspective on all-important long-term interest rates, today’s chart illustrates the 30-year trend of the 10-year Treasury bond yield (thick blue line). As today’s chart illustrates, the 10-year Treasury bond yield has moved within the confines of a 28-year downward sloping trend channel. Since 2008, the trend channel has narrowed slightly (see dashed gray lines). The recent spate of economic concerns (Europe, China, etc.) and geopolitical issues (ISIL, Ukraine, etc.) has encouraged a flight to safety resulting in a decline of the 10-year Treasury bond yield over the past ten months. In fact, the 10-year yield is currently at a level similar to what occurred during the height of the financial crisis in late 2008.

WAS THE TRUE DEFICIT $500 BILLION OR $800 BILLION?

Michael Snyder reported last week the annual deficit had gone up by over $1 trillion. He was wrong. It’s a good headline, but he failed to take into account the impact of the fake budget impasse last year. The government drones at the U.S. Treasury stopped counting the daily increase in the national debt on June 1, 2013 and didn’t resume counting until October 16, 2013, after the new fiscal year began. On that day they added $337 billion to the national debt. The fact is the government continued to function and to spend money every day during the budget impasse. You can find the daily national debt total at this website:

http://www.treasurydirect.gov/NP/debt/current

Over the next month you will hear how Obama has reduced the annual deficit to $500 billion in FY14. Your government keepers reported a deficit of $680 billion in FY13. One little problem. It’s a lie, based on ridiculous government accounting and fake adjustments. Let’s assess the true deficits with some fact finding:

National Debt on 9/30/12 – $16.066 Trillion

National Debt on 9/30/13 – $17.036 Trillion (calculated as $16,738 on June 1, 2013 + ($2.44 billion per day x 122 days)

National Debt on 9/30/14 – $17.824 Trillion

These figures are produced by the U.S. Treasury. Using basic subtraction, you come to annual deficits of:

FY13 – $970 billion

FY14 – $788 billion

It’s also interesting that the national debt jumped by $50 billion on the first day of the new fiscal year, when it averages going up by $2.2 billion per day. The Obamanistas weren’t window dressing the fiscal year just before mid-term elections, were they?

You may have noticed the true deficit in FY13 was 43% HIGHER than the reported figure of $680 billion.

You may have also noticed the true deficit in FY14 will be 56% HIGHER than the CBO’s latest projection of $506 billion.

I sense a trend in fraudulent accounting.

Part of the fraud are the fake Fannie & Freddie “payments” back to the U.S. Treasury from their fake “profits” generated by accounting entries. The $100 billion of “payments” in FY13 and $80 billion of “payments” in FY14 reduced the reported deficits. It’s all part of the plan to manipulate the housing market in order to save Wall Street and the insolvent Fannie and Freddie, which have hundreds of billions in toxic mortgage debt on their balance sheets. The Federal Reserve has the rest on their $4 trillion insolvent balance sheet. The deficit figures also don’t include the $16 billion of USPS losses per year. I wonder who will be bailing them out when they go bankrupt?

When someone quotes you the deficits reported by Obama, ask them whether the interest paid by the taxpayers is on the increase in the reported deficit or on the increase in the national debt. They’ll be confused and indignant.

The national debt stands at $17.873 Trillion. Interest on the debt will top $250 billion this year and surge past $300 billion next year. Does the trend depicted on the chart appear sustainable? Based on conservative assumptions, interest as a percentage of total federal spending will increase from 6% to 11.5% by 2019. And that is without a surge in interest rates.

And now for the coup de grace. The Federal Government uses cash basis accounting. If your keepers were forced to use GAAP based accrual accounting, the annual deficit reported would exceed $6.6 Trillion per year. That isn’t a typo. Corporations must record their future promises as an expense. Your Federal Government just pretends they don’t exist. That is how you end up with $200 trillion of unfunded liabilities.

This will surely end well.

WHY ELECTIONS NO LONGER MATTER

Via Monty Pelerin

Many argue that elections no longer matter. I tend to agree, although it is difficult to explain why. The article below deals with this issue.

In a wonderful piece in American Thinker, Daren Jonescu provides his interpretation of the stacked political deck known as elections. The institutionalism of Socialism and tyranny infects both parties. Both fight each other until their scam is threatened. Then, they unite to defend their spoils.

Meet the 2016 Republican Nominee

How does the Republican Party establishment choose its presidential candidate?  Typically, constitutionalists accuse their establishment rivals of being moderate, risk-averse, stubborn old fools who lack faith in conservative principles.  This is a soothing interpretation, as it begins from the hypothesis that the contest between conservatives and the GOP elite is a family feud.

But there is another hypothesis — less soothing, but, at least from an outsider’s bird’s-eye view, more reconcilable with the facts.  This hypothesis is that America has reached a stage of progressive soft despotism in which the only important family feud in national politics is between the fundamentally allied factions of the Washington establishment itself.

The great advantage of despotism is its predictability.  In nations whose leaders have forsaken the manners and morals of representative government, the future can mean only two things: the present, continued, or the present, escalated. Thus, if my alternative hypothesis is correct, it becomes possible to identify the 2016 Republican presidential nominee “a priori,” if you will, with no need for rumors or speculation.

My only proviso is that we keep in mind the central difference between traditional despotism and progressive soft despotism, namely that in traditional despotism, the personal character and whims of the man with the fancy title are paramount, whereas today’s is a ruling establishment game, in which major directional decisions are made by committees of mutual back-scratchers who outlast any of the figureheads they prop up to front the organization for a while.  Thus, whereas in a monarchy, popular democracy, or old-fashioned tyranny, the particular identity of the leader is everything, in soft despotism the standard-bearer is less significant for who he is than for which interests he advances for his handlers.

By “interests” here I mean only “specific agenda items.”  Of course the true, fundamental interest of progressive establishmentarians, all German philosophical rationalizations aside, is simply to control and stabilize the masses, i.e., to maximize their usefulness while minimizing their threat.  This essential goal is as invariable as the feelings that fuel it, namely fear and greed.  Thus to predict the establishment’s practical moves is as simple as looking away from the increasing artificiality of electoral politics — polls, “momentum,” “electability,” and well-timed scandals — to observe the broad pattern of outcomes that remains consistent through successive campaigns.

That pattern, in American politics, is as obvious as it is unspeakable in polite society, namely the gradual imposition of a permanent progressive authoritarian state with unlimited executive power, answerable to no imperatives of human nature, and administered by unelected technocrats.

America’s national political establishment is factionalized along lines that correspond to what remains of the nation’s unofficial “two-party system.”  But what the competing factions lack in uniformity of emphasis and vocabulary — “polite society” means different things to different men — they more than make up for in unanimity of overarching purpose.

Let’s be clear: we are not talking about lizard-men meeting in a vat of jelly in the White House basement.  These are ordinary men with ordinary moral weaknesses who, having in one way or another found themselves within reach of the world’s biggest cookie jar, developed an irresistible habit of dipping in — for financial advantages, regulatory favors, careers, self-importance, and in general for the means to permanent, risk-free status as kings of their various little hills.  In other words, they are men who have found, on the “honor among thieves” principle, that they have more in common with one another than with the cookie bakers they are robbing blind, and therefore a greater vested interest in covering for one another than in defending the rights of bakers.

By induction from the major public policy initiatives these men actively or passively promote, we may conclude that, surface frictions aside, the American ruling class seeks: (a) to shrink the range of unregulated human action; (b) to narrow men’s moral horizons in order to foster conscienceless resignation to theirparasitocracy; (c) to reduce citizenship to compliance and conformity; and (d) to promote “security,” variously defined, as a primary social goal that trumps all considerations of self-determination, human dignity, and private property.

These goals are embodied in various forms by the elite, and then either trumpeted as “idealism” (Democrats) or finessed as “realism” (Republicans) via the elite’s kabuki theater of competing electoral dummies, dhimmis, and dandies.  In short, these men have turned electoral politics into the comforting charade of which Tocqueville wisely forewarned, in which “the people shake off their state of dependence just long enough to select their master, and then relapse into it again.” (Democracy in America, Bk. IV Ch. vi.)

As is well known, the Democratic Party takes the lead on the goals cited above, continually shifting the vanguard just a little farther towards the socialist tyranny with which their leading lights always sympathized internationally, and which they now advocate boldly at home.  In our quest for the establishment’s current mainstream, however, we ought to think conservatively, and look not to the daring vanguard, but to those points of alliance between the establishment’s two public faces.

That is, if you want to gauge the long-term trajectory of the ruling class, listen to the Democrat professors and activists who are calling for the criminalization of non-progressive opinions, the confiscation of all firearms, or the regulation of journalism based on socialist-defined “critical information needs.”  But if you are seeking a snapshot of today’s ruling class status quo, with a view to what they plan to accomplish in 2016, watch the GOP establishment.  For they — and by “they” I mean the party elders, corporate insiders, and pandering “conservative media” fixtures — show us precisely where the Democrats and Republicans are essentially allied on current objectives.

Therefore, if one gets over the mental habit of imagining presidential politics are what they were when Calvin Coolidge won, or even when Ronald Reagan won — after a war against the establishment, which learned a lesson from this defeat that it would never forget — one can fairly certainly identify the next Republican nominee.

The trick to reading the Washington elite is to avoid overemphasizing the differences between Republicans and Democrats, which are minimized when the GOP establishment gets its way.  A great egret has a longer neck than a little egret, but we call them both egrets because what unites them is plainly more essential than what distinguishes them.  The same goes for great progressives and little progressives.

(The current Nightmare on Pennsylvania Avenue is often cited as an exception, even by establishment standards.  Obama represents the lawless vanguard, to be sure.  But if he is so far away from the mainstream establishment, then how do you explain all those cheerful Boehner-Obama photo ops, his signature power-grab being upheld as constitutional by a Republican-appointed Chief Justice, or all the establishment “conservative” pundits fawning over him in 2008 as though he were a combination of Daniel Patrick Moynihan and Cary Grant.  My hypothesis, by contrast, explains these seeming incongruities very neatly.  Obama is not the establishment mainstream — yet.)

A thought experiment: try plotting U.S. presidential politics on a Venn diagram.  I provide a template below.

Populate the two circles with the major policy positions and of any plausible Democrat and Republican presidential candidates.  Policies that fall within the intersection of the two circles represent what the two sides of the ruling class substantially agree upon right now, thereby revealing the heart of today’s Washington establishment.  The GOP faction of the establishment, therefore, can be counted on to promote the candidate they regard as falling most reliably within that intersection.  (Notice that this means the candidate himself need not be a full-fledged member of the establishment; they are merely looking for the man whose positions most closely match their priorities.)

For example, the left circle alone will contain the terms “transgender rights,” “federally funded abortion,” “gun confiscation,” and “tax increases.”  The right circle alone will contain “religious freedom,” “anti-abortion,” “gun rights,” and “tax cuts.”

The intersecting area will contain several items which, whatever else the candidates who embrace them may say, will truly define those candidacies, in the sense of revealing why the ruling elite favor those men as presidential nominees.  (For example, Mitt Romney was the only candidate in the 2012 primaries who was hopelessly compromised on ObamaCare; thus, on my hypothesis, he was the obvious choice for an establishment that intended not to challenge that most unpopular lurch towards authoritarianism too vigorously.)

Anything else the establishment candidate may represent, beyond the items in that intersection, will be useful optics for idiosyncratic purposes, and something for conservatives to cling to. This is not negligible, but its role is mainly aesthetic, putting a partisan face on an establishment agenda.

Nevertheless, the surest window to the establishment’s “soul” is that middle section of your Venn diagram, where we find the “bipartisan” goals the Republican candidate will most assuredly stand for.

So here he is, the 2016 GOP nominee:

He supports a “path to citizenship” for illegal immigrants. This drops anchor for the progressive captains of the ship of state, eventually inflating the electorate with millions of people lacking education or cultural heritage related to individualism and property rights, while deflating manufacturing costs with low-skill, low-literacy workers.

His position on manmade climate change is “evolving,” drifting and shifting somewhere along the continuum from “climate change may be real” (Jeb Bush, 2011) to “when you have over 90 percent of the world’s scientists who have studied this stating that climate change is occurring and that humans play a contributing role it’s time to defer to the experts” (Chris Christie, 2011).

He criticizes ObamaCare as “failed legislation” (who could call it anything else?) but finesses any concrete talk of fundamental reversion.  He advocates a watered-down version of the establishment’s thin gruel of “Repeal and Replace” — something along the lines of “Tweak and Touch-up,” with “free market solutions” as a euphemism for a heavily regulated pseudo-market analogous to cap-and-trade.

He is insistent that no one should impugn the motives and patriotism of the Democrat candidate — any Democrat candidate — and that “we all want what’s best for America.”  When asked during a presidential debate whether his Democratic opponent would make a good president, he says “Yes, but….”

He supports the Common Core agenda for nationalizing education standards, claiming that this is necessary to keep America “competitive,” and to ensure that “everyone has a fair chance to learn the skills needed in today’s economy.”  He plays to conservatives by saying the problem with education is the teachers unions and “lack of choice.”  Improving quality and providing choice are his euphemisms, just as in healthcare, for standardizing methods and outcomes to the point where every American child’s fate will henceforth be molded by a centralized spiritual death panel — this will be called “equal opportunity.”

He supports the “vitally important” work being done by the “patriots” at the NSA, while promising “vigorous safeguards” to ensure that none of their top-secret methods of collecting every scrap of electronic communications data and other private information ever overstep the bounds of “legitimate” privacy concerns — where no concern voiced to date meets the threshold of legitimacy.

He is absolutely silent on the question of whether the federal government has any responsibility to abide by its constitutional (i.e., legal) limits, and indeed rarely mentions the Constitution at all, and never as an essential concern.

There he is, your next GOP presidential candidate — a man the establishment can live with.

Am I cheating by not providing an exact name?  But what’s in a name, when that name is attached to a man who is, for all practical purposes, merely a vessel for an agenda devised by self-seeking manipulators behind the scenes?  An agenda designed to concentrate more power within the federal government, and ultimately within the executive branch.  Not the constitutional agenda for which the president was meant to be a vessel, but a “transformative” agenda designed to protect the social position and wealth of the permanent ruling class America was never supposed to have.

Might events falsify my hypothesis?  Unlike the global warmists, I hope so.  Failing that, might constitutionalists find a way to slay the monster at last?  That doesn’t seem likely, to be honest.  More realistically, perhaps they can minimize the damage pre-emptively during the 2014 congressional primaries and elsewhere.  The establishment, a centralized authority monster, will be weaker in those areas it considers less vital.  Their attention and resources cannot anticipate and repel every “minor” challenge — at least not until they have finished apportioning all practical authority to themselves.

Whatever you do, don’t assume that any candidate who espouses a few items on the Republican side of your Venn diagram is satisfactory.  That section then becomes the ruling class’s shiny distraction.  Keep your eye on the intersection of the circles, where the two mildly competitive factions of the progressive elite follow their bliss together — at their nation’s expense.

DID YOU THINK YOU COULD HAVE EVEN LESS SAY IN ELECTIONS?

The beat goes on. Those with the most money control our political system. Everything is rigged. It’s a club of rich pricks and you ain’t in it. Elections are meaningless. Opt out.

Supreme Court ends overall cap on political donations

WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) – The Supreme Court on Wednesday voted 5-4 to eliminate overall caps on how much individuals can donate to political candidates, parties and interest groups. The ruling, however, left in place the $2,600 limit on how much a citizen can donate to any one candidate for Congress or the presidency. Under the court ruling, individuals can make campaign contributions to any number of candidates or groups without being subjected to a limit on total spending. Current law capped overall contributions per individual at $123,000, though political candidates themselves are allowed to spend as much as their own wealth as they like. The court’s decision is likely to be welcomed by Republicans and opposed by Democrats. Republicans have a fund-raising advantage in the 2014 election cycle, and several very wealthy donors have given tens of millions to conservative candidates and causes.