Fate is like a strange, unpopular restaurant filled with odd little waiters who bring you things you never asked for and don’t always like, but you fall for them anyway.
Friday, June 28, 2019
Saturday, February 9, 2019
Tuesday, January 1, 2019
Wednesday, August 1, 2018
Things to do today
“I've suffered loss in my career for not being obedient.
Believe me, the loss was little compared to the fear all of you stomach every day.
When the sun sets, I can sing ‘My Way’ with Elvis, Frank Sinatra, and Francis Coppola.
What is your anthem?”
- john milius
Friday, February 9, 2018
Monday, January 1, 2018
Thursday, February 9, 2017
Sunday, January 1, 2017
Tuesday, February 9, 2016
Friday, January 1, 2016
A few tips about 2016
You've got to know when to hold 'em
Know when to fold 'em
Know when to walk away
And know when to run
You never count your money
When you're sittin' at the table
There'll be time enough for countin'
When the dealin's done.
Know when to fold 'em
Know when to walk away
And know when to run
You never count your money
When you're sittin' at the table
There'll be time enough for countin'
When the dealin's done.
Monday, February 9, 2015
Monday, January 26, 2015
Saturday, January 24, 2015
Thursday, January 1, 2015
Still looking for an avalanche
Like any dealer he was watching for the card
That is so high and wild
He'll never need to deal anotherMonday, July 7, 2014
CENSORSHIP IS BEING OUTSOURCED TO THE MOB
Two recent cases Down Under show how dangerous
Twittermobs can be.
By BRENDAN O’NEILL
One of the curious things about the
twenty-first-century West is that it feels deeply censorious even though,
historically speaking, there isn’t a huge amount of state censorship. Yes, many
Western societies have anti-‘hate speech’ laws, debate-choking defamation
statutes, and a host of methods for regulating the raucous press, all of which
limit how daring or just downright offensive we can be. But we don’t exactly
live under nightmarish Orwellian regimes that pass laws explicitly designed to
silence political opinions, or to punish anti-Christ iconoclasm, or to
criminalise people found in possession of indecent novels or art. How do we
explain the existence of an almost unprecedented culture of censoriousness in
the absence of too much old-style state censorship?
It’s because censorship has been outsourced to the
mob. Censorship is alive and well; it’s just that today it is enforced, not so
much by brute law and the copper’s boot, but by mobs of self-styled guardians
of acceptable thought.
The illiberal job that was once done by the state and
its offshoots - the policing of thought and the punishment of outré speech - is
now increasingly done by informal intolerant networks. Outsourcing has been all
the rage among Western states in recent years. They’ve outsourced
responsibility for aspects of policing, for the guarding of prisoners, even for
the fighting of wars, as we saw with the use of mercenary outfits in the West’s
conquering of Iraq. Now, the moral authority to decree what can and can’t be
uttered in the public sphere has been outsourced, too, passed from the
government to moral lynch mobs, noisy cliques of non-state censors. The
relatively small amount of explicit state censorship today shouldn’t be taken
as a sign that we live in a more free society, but rather speaks to something
quite terrifying - that the state doesn’t really need to enact laws that police
our words at a time when there are so many mobs willing to do that dirty work
on its behalf.
In Australia over the past week, there have been two
striking examples of outsourced censoriousness, which reveal how this new
phenomenon works and how damaging it can be.
In the first case, a Georgian opera singer, Tamar
Iveri, was hounded out of Opera Australia (OA) after it was revealed she once
made homophobic comments on her Facebook page. Ms Iveri had been due to perform
in OA’s production of Otello,
which opens in Sydney next month. But then someone exposed that, a year ago,
she had said on FB that she was glad Georgian protesters had spat on Gay Pride
marchers in Tbilisi, and had asked the Georgian president not to let into
Georgia what she called the ‘West’s faecal masses’ - that is, homosexuals. Oz’s
left-leaners, small-L liberals and artsworld inhabitants decided that such a
person was not fit to perform in Australia, and so they used their considerable
influence - their newspaper columns, their social-networking pages, the
financial leverage of their patronage of the arts, which they made clear could
be withdrawn - to put pressure on OA to drop Ms Iveri. They won. Ms Iveri was
cast out, dumped by OA on the basis that her views were ‘unconscionable’. And
thus was Australian opera made morally pure once more.
Sunday, July 6, 2014
Incredible confusions, Part 2
Of interest and the
dangerous habit of suppressing it
The idea that the charging
of interest is unethical and should be banned has a long tradition in the
history of human civilisation. It seems to have played a role at some point in
all the major religions, certainly in Christianity, Judaism and Islam, and it
is today promoted most strongly by advocates of Islamic banking.
As an economist I cannot
(and should not) comment on matters of religion. Religion and economics deal
with completely different aspects of human existence. Religion is about
‘ultimate ends’ and ‘personal values’. Economics does not deal with ends but
with means. Economics does not tell anybody what his or her values should be.
Contrary to what is frequently claimed – usually by those who do not understand
economics – economics does not tell you that you should strive for more
material goods and more services at your disposal.
But it so happens that we
live in a world in which most people have personal aims or goals that involve
having at least a certain material wealth, and in which most people prefer the
possession of more material goods to less material goods; and the science of
economics – for economics is a science, and in fact an objective, wertfreie (value-free) science – can then
explain why people have a better chance of achieving these (material) aims if
they use such social institutions as the division of labor, private property,
trade, money, and many others. Additionally, the science of economics can show
how these social institutions work, demonstrate the laws and regularities
inherent in them, and can develop rules for their most appropriate use.
Economics is purely about the means of social cooperation for the attainment of
material goals. It never concerns itself with ultimate ends.
If most of the population
became Buddhist monks tomorrow and would lose any interest in accumulating
material wealth, would happily withdraw into monasteries and dedicate
themselves to meditation, none of the principles and laws of economics would
have suddenly become less true or invalid. The law of comparative advantage as
articulated by David Ricardo would be as true on that day as on any other. The
laws of economics would still apply just as the laws of gravity would. Of
course, the interest in economic studies would probably diminish rapidly but
that is all. Or, not quite all: Society would also be rapidly impoverished in
material terms – even to the point of mass starvation –, and this the economist
can ascertain with certainty, although nothing can be said about any
compensating gains in spiritual wealth, of course.
If you believe that your
God demands that if you lend money you should not charge interest, than there
is nothing that I, as an economist, can say to you – other than, maybe, give me
a call whenever you have some extra cash. The point at which I can – and should
– comment is when you were to claim in addition that the observance of this
rule would lead to a more stable and better functioning economy, that the
non-charging of interest would not diminish society’s wealth but even increase
it, or that the resulting economic structure would at least conform better to
some generally accepted notion of fairness. Here we have reached a point where
debate has become possible, not because I, as an economist, have intruded onto
the religious ground of values and ultimate ends but because the advocate of
religion has intruded onto the economists’ ground of the study of the laws for
wealth creation.
Thursday, July 3, 2014
Incredible confusions Part 1
‘Positive Money’ and the fallacy of the need
for a state money producer
By Detlev Schlichter
I am usually inclined to encourage the inquiry of the fundamental aspects
of money and banking. This is because I tend to believe that only by going back
to first principles is it possible to cut through the thicket of widely
accepted but deeply flawed theories that dominate the current debate in
mainstream media, politics and the financial industry. From my own experience
in financial markets I can appreciate how convenient and tempting it is in a
business context, where quick and easy communication is of the essence, to
adopt a certain, widely shared set of paradigms, regardless of how flimsy their
theoretical foundations. Fund managers, traders and financial journalists live
in the immediate present, preoccupied as they are with what makes headlines today,
and they work in intensely collaborative enterprises. They have neither the
time nor inclination to question the body of theories – often no longer even
perceived as ‘theories’ but considered accepted common wisdom – that shapes the
way they view and talk about the outside world. Thus, erroneous concepts and
even outright fallacies often remain unquestioned and, by virtue of constant
repetition, live comfortably in the bloodstream of policy debates, economic
analysis, and financial market reportage.
This goes a long way in explaining the undeserved survival of a number of
persistent modern myths: deflation is the gravest economic danger we face;
Japan has been crippled by deflation for years and would grow again if it only
managed to create some inflation; lack of ‘aggregate demand’ explains
recessions and must be countered with easy monetary policy; and money-printing,
as long as it does not lead to higher inflation, is a free lunch, i.e. we can
only expect good from it. None of these statements stand up to scrutiny. In
fact, they are all utterly absurd. Yet, we can barely open a newspaper and not
have this nonsense stare us in the face, if not quite as bluntly as stated
above, than at least as the intellectual soil from which the analysis or
commentary presented has sprung. Deep-rooted misconceptions can only be
dismantled through dissection of their building blocs and a discussion of basic
concepts.
The dangers of going back to basics
However, going back to basics and to first principles, analyzing critically
the fundamental aspects of our financial system, is not free of danger. Here,
too, lies a minefield of potentially grave intellectual error, and when things
go wrong here, at the basic level, the results and policy recommendations
derived from such analysis are bound to be nonsensical too, if not even more
nonsensical than what the mainstream believes. In this and the following essays
I am going to address some of the erroneous notions at the fundamental level of
money and banking that seem to have gained currency in the public debate of
late.
I get periodically confronted with these confusions through readers’
comments on my website. Some of the questions and suggestions expressed there
reveal the same, or very similar, errors and misunderstandings, and these often
seem to have their origin in other publications circulating elsewhere on the
web. Among them are the following fallacies, in no particular order:
§ The idea that
the charging of interest, or in particular the charging of interest on money,
is a fundamental problem in our financial system.
§ The notion that
there must be a systematic shortage of money in the economy because banks,
through fractional-reserve banking, bring into circulation only amounts of
money equivalent to the principal of the loans they create but not the
necessary amount to pay the interest on these loans.
§ The notion that
it is a problem that money-creation is tied to debt-creation (again, as a
consequence of fractional-reserve banking) and that it would be possible and
advantageous to have the state issue money directly (debt-free) rather than
have the banks do it.
§ The idea that
schemes are feasible that allow the painless shrinkage or even disappearance of
the national debt.
All these ideas are nonsensical, based on bad economics and
fundamental logical flaws, and to the extent that they entail policy proposals,
these policies, if enacted, would not only not give us a stable and more
prosperous economy but would surely lead to new instabilities or even outright
chaos.
None of these misconceptions originate, or even resonate, as far as I can
tell, with the ‘mainstream’. The mainstream– the financial market
professionals, the central bankers, financial regulators, and the media –
remain resolutely uninterested in dealing with fundamental questions of money
and banking for the reasons given above. Here, the discussion continues to
centre on how the economy can be ‘stimulated’ more, what ‘unconventional’
policies the central banks may still have up their sleeves, and if the central
banks need new targets or better central bankers. Icebergs or no icebergs,
these deckchairs need re-arranging.
Read more at :
Monday, June 30, 2014
The Great War And Its Terrible Aftermath
Sarajevo Is The Fulcrum Of Modern History
By David Stockman
One hundred years ago today the world was shook loose of its
moorings. Every school boy knows that the assassination of the
archduke of Austria at Sarajevo was the trigger that incited the bloody,
destructive conflagration of the world’s nations known as the Great
War. But this senseless eruption of unprecedented industrial
state violence did not end with the armistice four years later.
In fact, 1914 is the fulcrum of modern history. It is
the year the Fed opened-up for business just as the carnage in northern
France closed-down the prior magnificent half-century era of liberal
internationalism and honest gold-backed money. So it was the Great War’s
terrible aftermath—–a century of drift toward statism, militarism and fiat
money—-that was actually triggered by the events at Sarajevo.
Unfortunately, modern historiography wants to keep the
Great War sequestered in a four-year span of archival curiosities about
battles, mustard gas and monuments to the fallen. But the opposite
historiography is more nearly the truth. The assassins at Sarajevo
triggered the very warp and woof of the hundred years which followed.
The Great War was self-evidently an epochal calamity,
especially for the 20 million combatants and civilians who perished for no
reason that is discernible in any fair reading of history, or even unfair one.
Yet the far greater calamity is that Europe’s senseless fratricide of 1914-1918
gave birth to all the great evils of the 20th century— the Great Depression,
totalitarian genocides, Keynesian economics, permanent warfare
states, rampaging central banks and the exceptionalist-rooted follies of
America’s global imperialism.
Indeed, in Old Testament fashion, one begat the next
and the next and still the next. This chain of calamity originated in the Great
War’s destruction of sound money, that is, in the post-war demise of the pound
sterling which previously had not experienced a peacetime change in its gold
content for nearly two hundred years.
Not unreasonably, the world’s financial system had
become anchored on the London money markets where the other currencies traded
at fixed exchange rates to the rock steady pound sterling—which, in turn, meant
that prices and wages throughout Europe were expressed in common money and
tended toward transparency and equilibrium.
This liberal international economic order—that is,
honest money, relatively free trade, rising international capital flows and
rapidly growing global economic integration—-resulted in a 40-year span
between 1870 and 1914 of rising living standards, stable prices, massive
capital investment and prolific technological progress that was never
equaled—either before or since.
During intervals of war, of course, 19th century
governments had usually suspended gold convertibility and open trade in the
heat of combat. But when the cannons fell silent, they had also endured
the trauma of post-war depression until wartime debts had been liquidated and
inflationary currency expedients had been wrung out of the circulation. This
was called “resumption” and restoring convertibility at the peacetime parities
was the great challenge of post-war normalizations.
The Great War, however, involved a scale of total
industrial mobilization and financial mayhem that was unlike any that had gone
before. In the case of Great Britain, for example, its national debt
increased 14-fold, its price level doubled, its capital stock was depleted,
most off-shore investments were liquidated and universal wartime conscription
left it with a massive overhang of human and financial liabilities.
Yet England was the least devastated. In France, the
price level inflated by 300 percent, its extensive Russian investments were
confiscated by the Bolsheviks and its debts in New York and London catapulted
to more than 100 percent of GDP.
Among the defeated powers, currencies emerged nearly
worthless with the German mark at five cents on the pre-war dollar, while
wartime debts—especially after the Carthaginian peace of Versailles—–soared to
crushing, unrepayable heights.
In short, the bow-wave of debt, currency inflation and
financial disorder from the Great War was so immense and unprecedented that the
classical project of post-war liquidation and “resumption” of convertibility
was destined to fail. In fact, the 1920s were a grinding, sometimes
inspired but eventually failed struggle to resume the international gold
standard, fixed parities, open world trade and unrestricted international
capital flows.
Only in the final demise of these efforts after 1929
did the Great Depression, which had been lurking all along in the post-war
shadows, come bounding onto the stage of history.
Read more at : http://davidstockmanscontracorner.com/sarajevo-is-the-fulcrum-of-modern-history-the-great-war-and-its-terrible-aftermath/
Wednesday, June 25, 2014
This time is really, but really, different
These Fake Rallies Will End in Tears
By Detlev
S Schlichter
Investors and
speculators face some profound challenges today: How to deal with politicized
markets, continuously “guided” by central bankers and regulators? To what
extent do prices reflect support from policy, in particular super-easy monetary
policy, and to what extent other, ‘fundamental’ factors? And how is all this
market manipulation going to play out in the long run?
It is obvious that
most markets would not be trading where they are trading today were it not for
the longstanding combination of ultra-low policy rates and various programs of
‘quantitative easing’ around the world, some presently diminishing (US), others
potentially increasing (Japan, eurozone). As major U.S. equity indices closed
last week at another record high and overall market volatility remains low,
some observers may say that the central banks have won. Their interventions
have now established a nirvana in which asset markets seem to rise almost
continuously but calmly, with carefully contained volatility and with their
downside apparently fully insured by central bankers who are ready to ease
again at any moment. Those who believe in Schumpeter’s model of “bureaucratic
socialism”, a system that he expected ultimately to replace capitalism
altogether, may rejoice: Increasingly the capitalist “jungle” gets replaced
with a well-ordered, centrally managed system guided by the enlightened bureaucracy.
Reading the minds of Yellen, Kuroda, Draghi and Carney is now the number one
game in town. Investors, traders and economists seem to care about little else.
“The problem is
that we’re not there [in a low volatility environment] because markets have decided
this, but because central banks have told us…” Sir Michael Hintze, founder of
hedge fund CQS, observed in conversation with the Financial Times (FT,
June 14/15 2014) [1]. “The beauty of capital markets is that they are voting systems,
people vote every day with their wallets. Now voting is finished. We’re being
told what to do by central bankers – and you lose money if you don’t follow
their lead.”
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