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Sunday, March 30, 2025

2025-03-30

 ***** denotes well-worth reading in full at source (even if excerpted extensively here)


Economic and Market Fare:

FRBoA: GDPNow
Latest estimate: -2.8 percent — March 28, 2025

The GDPNow model estimate for real GDP growth (seasonally adjusted annual rate) in the first quarter of 2025 is -2.8 percent on March 28, down from -1.8 percent on March 26. The alternative model forecast, which adjusts for imports and exports of gold as described here, is -0.5 percent. After recent releases from the US Census Bureau and the US Bureau of Economic Analysis, the nowcast of the contribution of net exports to first-quarter real GDP growth declined from -3.95 percentage points to -4.79 percentage points in the standard model and from -1.92 percentage points to -2.53 percentage points in the alternative model.




Abstract
Why does the stock market rise and fall? From 1989 to 2017, the real per capita value of corporate equity increased at a 7.2% annual rate. We estimate that 40% of this increase was attributable to a reallocation of rewards to shareholders in a decelerating economy, primarily at the expense of labor compensation. Economic growth accounted for just 25% of the increase, followed by a lower risk price (21%) and lower interest rates (14%). The period 1952–88 experienced only one-third as much growth in market equity, but economic growth accounted for more than 100% of it.


With little evidence that risk appetite is returning, the best thing for the bulls would be a return of quiet strength.

Bull markets bring quiet strength: little day-to-day movement, but lots of longer-term progress.
Bear markets bring noisy weakness: lots of day-to-day movement, but little longer-term progress



....................... JPMorgan strategist Bruch Kasman made some hay this week by calling out a 40% recession probability for this year. To my knowledge, this is the second-highest recession probability on the Street behind BCA Research's veteran forecaster Peter Berezin — he's at 75%.



As each year passes, we have come to appreciate Bob Farrell’s 10 Investment Rules.
  1. Markets tend to return to the mean over time.
  2. Excesses in one direction will lead to an opposite excess in the other direction.
  3. There are no new eras; excesses are never permanent.
  4. Exponential rapidly rising or falling markets usually go further than you think, but they do not correct by going sideways.
  5. The public buys the most at the top and the least at the bottom.
  6. Fear and greed are stronger than long-term resolve.
  7. Markets are strongest when they are broad, and weakest when they narrow to a handful of blue-chip names.
  8. Bear markets have three stages — sharp down, reflexive rebound, and a drawn-out fundamental downtrend.
  9. When all the experts and forecasts agree, something else is going to happen.
  10. Bull markets are more fun than bear markets.
........... Excesses (new highs or lows) or a topping/bottoming process can go on for a lot longer than you could ever rationally comprehend… as you will see in the charts below. But eventually, these excesses do come to an end for reasons you probably didn’t think of at the time.  ...........

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Charts:
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X: 



(not just) for the ESG crowd:



......................................... Americans who are not fully brainwashed into the cult of Trumpism should be asking themselves if this is the kind of country they want to live in, though. Do you really want your government deciding what kind of political speech you are allowed to hear, and protecting your fragile little mind from wrongthink? Or do you want to decide such matters for yourself?



........................................... Too many people are reading into Trump want they want to see, not seeing what is actually there—and not there.



Geopolitical Fare:

Led by captains of London bankers, European leaders are leading us back to 1930s

......................... Zelensky’s t-shirt didn’t make itself: someone had to think up its message and they wanted us to see it. They took the trouble to design that t-shirt and made sure that Ukraine’s president wore it while addressing Western audiences. That message was somebody’s brainchild and it wasn’t a random choice, nor was it a joke. It was a disclosure of mission and intent and it should be taken seriously as such. Today we can see that Europe’s leading powers are following the call as they collectively and single-mindedly embrace militarization and earnest preparations for war.

.................................... But what is the point of all this busywork? Even European leaders are not so delusional as to think that they can reverse Ukraine’s defeat or vanquish Russia with their weak militaries. Instead, they simply want the war to continue, hoping to weaken and exhaust Russia with the view of toppling Vladimir Putin’s government. Well, let’s see how that’s going…......... 

....................... Of course, Eisenhower’s words fell on deaf ears and the disastrous rise of misplaced power ​h​as indeed displaced the democratic processes and liberties in the ​U​nited States, leading it into one war after another, everywhere around the world, creating misery at home and mayhem abroad. European leaders are now deliberately embarking on that same path.

.............. The very fact that all of a sudden, Britain, France, and Germany, together with the EU, are all on board with this “sharp U-turn,” toward militarization and war preparations, also rings familiar. It’s reminiscent of that pandemic we had back in 2020 when nearly all the governments in the world somehow came to adopt the same unscientific, incoherent and nonsensical countermeasures.



Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer said in a recent interview that his job “is to keep the left pro-Israel,” which is just sad. Being a liberal Israel supporter these days probably feels like being a defense attorney for an accused murderer who won’t shut up about how much he loves murdering. ...............

.............. Liberal Zionists are having a hard time reconciling their positions of antiracism and social justice with their support for Israel because at the end of the day western liberalism is just as fraudulent and deceitful as Zionism is. We all watched them passively allow the Democratic president to turn Gaza into a pile of steaming blood-soaked wreckage and then demand everyone vote for his vice president. Democrats hold their worldview in place by psychologically compartmentalizing away from the atrocities their government commits in the here and now, while singing fondly about innocuous whitewashed historical revisionist versions of their civil rights heroes who died decades ago. .................



The US launched 65 airstrikes in 24 hours in Yemen, and then Trump’s intelligence chief Tulsi Gabbard tweeted, “President Trump IS the President of Peace. He is ending bloodshed across the world and will deliver lasting peace in the Middle East.”

These freaks have no connection with reality. ...........................


Trump is as evil as Biden. Biden was as evil as Trump. If you can’t see this by looking at the raw data of the behavior of their administrations, it’s either because you’re looking at incomplete data or because you’re letting your political biases do your thinking for you.

Both presidents are guilty of extreme evils, and you can’t separate the evils of one from the evils of the other. Biden spent the latter part of his term incinerating Gaza, and then Trump began working to clear it of Palestinians. Trump managed to secure the Gaza ceasefire that Biden spent 15 months avoiding, but then he immediately began sabotaging that very ceasefire as soon as he took office. Biden has been waging a dangerous proxy war in Ukraine that Trump helped provoke in his first term, and now that he’s back in office Trump is tasked with winding that war down to focus on new wars.

The crimes of the Republican and Democratic parties are inseparably intertwined with each other. It’s not that they’re the same — there are some differences — it’s that they work in conjunction to advance the same evil agendas. Saying the Democrats are better than Republicans or vice versa is like saying the top teeth of the shark are nicer than the bottom teeth; they might look and function a bit differently, but they’re used toward the same deadly end. .......................


Democrats pretended to support justice and oppose racism, then Biden exposed them all as frauds in Gaza. Republicans pretended to support free speech and oppose war, then Trump exposed them as frauds with his Israel policy. US politics is just empty noise draped over an empire. ...............



Sci Fare:


I have been warning you all since 2021 about the fact that the current vaccines have the effect of making it impossible to genuinely achieve herd immunity. That’s what evolutionary biology suggested and that’s what the facts on the ground increasingly began to suggest after a while, with higher SARS2 mRNA in sewage in more highly vaccinated places and the curves began to deviate between highly vaccinated and unvaccinated parts of the world.

Most of the population now has brain damage from the constant COVID reinfections. The first infection robs you of three IQ points, assuming it’s mild enough to mean you don’t need to go to the hospital. The second reduces your IQ by two more points on average. Well, we can ignore all the excess deaths we’ve suffered for a moment. But the brain damage we all suffered, that’s harder to ignore. 

If there is some sort of mechanism related to mass vaccination that subsequently led to an increase in the total number of SARS-COV-2 infections, wouldn’t we want to know about it? If we made the whole situation worse by vaccinating, wouldn’t we want to know? Well, if you wait long enough, you find out this is what actually happened. We caused ourselves a massive self-inflicted wound. ..................



............................. To any of you who thought this virus should now just be like the other corona viruses, let me just remind you, that things take time to go wrong. It takes time to evolve a second cleavage site. Five years into the pandemic, it now happened. The first known SARS-type virus with a furin cleavage site, just added a second overlapping one.

Previous versions commonly depended on the lungs or the gut. You constantly get new versions of this virus, that focus on different organs. And importantly, those different versions don’t just compete, they mostly cooperate. Their internal genes are often identical, so with different Spikes they can enter different tissues. Some versions will benefit from the fever induced by the other version. That’s why it gets worse over time, as the genetic diversity of the virus expands. ...................

My position is simple: Our immune systems have ways of responding to viruses of this nature, that serve to keep our population healthy. With vaccination you can change the sort of response in an individual, but that change in the response then has the effect of spreading the virus and thereby making the ultimate long term outcome of the pandemic worse. .....................

But equally important to note, is that people end up with immune system damage. It’s gradual damage, it takes months to reveal itself. Ten months after infection, you see a reduction in T cells, as well as innate immune cells. The average American caught it 3.7 times so far. So you’re dealing with a population where practically everyone has an acquired immunodeficiency syndrome by now. That’s what all the studies suggest. It’s also what the excess mortality, along with the strange spikes in unrelated respiratory viruses suggest.

So we’re in big trouble. All the evidence points in the same direction: A population that’s developing brain damage and immune system damage. ..............



Out There Fare:

The left is treating a Netflix drama like it’s real life, marking a turning point in mass liberal psychosis.

............................................. I have no idea how to deal with that problem. You can’t have rational discussions with people who are locked out of reality, whose information diet is composed entirely of self-generated fictions, and who – like that pronouned grad student – will simply terminate any interaction that threatens their psychic parasite with toxic facts. You can’t convince them of things, because their psyche is completely walled off.

This is why psychiatric hospitals just throw psychotic patients in padded rooms, restrain them so they can’t injure themselves or others, chemically sedate them, and then gradually try to talk them back to something approaching sanity. That’s a long, labour-intensive process. What do you do when it’s tens of millions of people all across the Western world, all hooked together into one vast, all-encompassing, self-reinforcing, epistemically closed collective hallucination? There aren’t enough padded cells; there aren’t enough psychiatrists. ..................................

................. things might get weird for a while.



Fun Fare / Vid Fare:




Pics of the Week:



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Saturday, March 22, 2025

2025-03-23

 ***** denotes well-worth reading in full at source (even if excerpted extensively here)


Economic and Market Fare:


The Outlook projects global growth slowing to 3.1% in 2025 and 3.0% in 2026, with important differences across countries and regions.

GDP growth in the United States is projected at 2.2% in 2025 before slowing to 1.6% in 2026. In the euro area, growth is projected to be 1.0% in 2025 and 1.2% in 2026. China’s growth is projected to slow from 4.8% this year to 4.4% in 2026.

Inflation is projected to be higher than previously expected, although still moderating as economic growth softens. Services price inflation is still elevated amidst tight labour markets, and goods price inflation has begun picking up in some countries, although from low levels. .........

The Outlook highlights a range of risks, starting with the concern that further trade fragmentation could harm global growth prospects. ..............




Earlier this month, Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell made a sneakily profound comment, important for understanding how the central bank will approach policy in its meeting this week and beyond.

The big picture: "However fat you think the tails are, they're fatter than you think," Powell said, referring to the outer edges of a probability distribution.

Translation: The odds of some seemingly unlikely, extreme scenario occurring are higher than most people comprehend.

Powell made the comment in discussing the pandemic-era economy, but it could apply just as well in thinking about the Trump 2.0 economy, where an onslaught of policy change is creating a wider range of possibilities than usual for how the economy will evolve. ..............

The bottom line: The tails are fat, with possibilities for extreme results on either growth or inflation. But they're fat on both sides of the Fed's mandate, which will make the case for caution.


A trade war could push up inflation when both the UK and US economies really need cheaper borrowing. So what’s a central bank to do?


Something much bigger is going on than simply correcting prices.

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............... Most corrections do not turn into bear markets. 14 of the 44 post-WWII corrections morphed into bear markets, while over the past three decades that ratio dropped to 4 out of 16.

More importantly, much of a market recovery happens quickly. For instance, the S&P 500 returns an average of 8.1% in the month following a non-bear market correction low, which equates to a roughly 50% retracement of the average correction loss (down 13-14%).


The US president wants both to protect domestic manufacturing and hold the dollar as the reserve currency

......... If one is to understand this more sophisticated approach, one should read Miran’s “A User’s Guide to Restructuring the Global Trading System”, published in November 2024. The author states that “this essay is not policy advocacy”. But if it quacks like a duck, it is a duck. From a man in his current position, this must now be read as advocacy. ..............







In 2023, the US had the lowest tariff levels in the world, lower than the European Union, Canada, Mexico, and China, see the first two charts below.

The US also has fewer non-tariff barriers than China, Mexico, Canada, and many European countries, see the third chart below.

When some countries have lower barriers to trade, the gains from trade are not distributed evenly, and the US is currently investigating tariffs and non-tariff barriers with individual countries. 

The bottom line is that the purpose of the trade war is to create a more level playing field so that the benefits from trade are more evenly distributed, including to the US manufacturing sector.

 







What characterizes a wait-and-see economy is that consumers and firms are more cautious about spending decisions. Consumers are more reluctant to plan vacations, to buy cars, and to buy new washers and dryers. Similarly, firms are more reluctant to hire and more reluctant to do capex.

The wait-and-see economy is no longer just for companies directly involved in trade with Canada and Mexico. Uncertainty for small businesses is near all-time high levels. This is a problem because small businesses are the foundation of the economy, accounting for more than 80% of total US employment, see the first chart below.

Markets are not yet pricing in the coming slowdown in the hard data. The spread between CCC and single-B has only widened modestly and is still significantly tighter than where it was during the summer of 2022—when the economy was doing just fine—see the second chart. In a slowdown scenario, investors would start to migrate to higher-quality names.

The bottom line is that a wait-and-see economy eventually leads to a slowdown in the hard data. And markets should prepare for that scenario.


Donald Trump’s one-month concession does not apply to large swaths of goods exported north

............. Businesses are being forced to make these existential decisions with no certainty about which of the boomeranging policies Trump has proposed will stick.

That uncertainty is its own burden, said Díaz Bedolla.

“Everything comes to a halt, no one takes decisions,” he added. “If you’re going to impose tariffs, just do it already.”





Quotes & Tweets of the Week:

MS: Coming to grips with the idea that President Trump is keeping promises made to reform US trading relationships, investor and consumer confidence cracked. If economic data slow, ratifying investor concerns, CEO confidence may crack next. As April 2 approaches, investor nerves may fray further. ..........

Growth Concerns and Volatility Are Likely to Persist...Policy uncertainty has only ramped up further recently, which means growth risks are likely to persist over the coming months. Perhaps even more importantly, this administration doesn't appear to be preoccupied with stock prices. In other words, we don't think investors should view a relief rally from oversold levels as a sign that volatility is subsiding in a durable manner. Not only is policy being sequenced in a more growth-negative way to start the year (in line with our views from last November), the speed and uncertainty around new policy introduction is denting investor, consumer and corporate confidence


MS, again: Many investment professionals spent most of their career dealing with a bull market in US Treasuries. The pandemic-related inflationary episode caused bond bulls to second guess themselves. The time has come for investors to reacquaint with their inner bond bull. Stay positioned for lower yields.


Bessent: "Corrections are healthy. They're normal. What's not healthy is straight up, that you get these euphoric markets. That's how you get a financial crisis. It would have been much healthier if someone had put the brakes on in ‘06, ‘07. We wouldn't have had the problems in ‘08. So, I'm not worried about the markets. Over the long term, if we put good tax policy in place, deregulation and energy security, the markets will do great."

cont'd: "The American dream is not “let them eat flat screens.” That if American families aren't able to afford a home, don't believe that their children will do better than they are, the American dream is not contingent on cheap baubles from China, that it is more than that. And we are focused on affordability, but it's mortgages, it's cars, it's real wage gains."






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(not just) for the ESG crowd:

Signs of human-induced climate change reached ‘new heights’ last year, say UN scientists


It’s hard to see right now, and impossible for most people to mentally accept.

How many millions of years has it been since CO2 levels were this high? .................

Look at the first graph, see the surge in CO2 levels about 16mya to around 480ppm(CO2). That period is known as the Miocene Climatic Optimum (18-16mya) ..............

........................ That's what a CO2 level in the 480ppm to 550ppm range looks like in the geologic record. It was about +6°C to +8°C over our 1850 baseline temperature when CO2 levels were at 280ppm. ..................

Does it seem like 2025 is going to be “better” than 2024?

OR

Does it seem likely that we have crossed another tipping point?

We have increased the Global Mean Surface Temperature (GMST) enough, the changes to the Climate System have degraded the biosphere to the point that it is loosing its ability to absorb and sequester CO2.

If the +3ppm yearly increase in the atmospheric CO2 level continues the consequences are very clear. .......................


Analysis: How Soon Will Large Scale Collapse Happen

..................... Albedo loss advances insurance industry collapse by 10–15 years, with regional uninsurability beginning in the 2030s and systemic failures by the 2040s. The industry’s core business model—spreading risk across time and geography—fails in a world of concurrent, accelerating disasters. While wealthier economies may temporarily subsidize coverage, the global insurance system will fragment by mid-century, shifting climate costs directly to households and governments. Without radical emissions cuts and financial reforms, climate-driven economic collapse becomes unavoidable by 2060.


There is nothing RFK Jr. can do at the Department of Health to make up for what's happening at the EPA.

......... I’m going to say this with the most grace and sympathy toward my Robert F. Kennedy Jr.-admiring readers as I possibly can: There is nothing Kennedy can do at the Department of Health that will make up for what Donald Trump is doing at the Environmental Protection Agency. Nothing.





Vid Fare:




U.S. B.S.:

Two months into his second term, Trump is making mere plutocracy seem quaint.

.............. In the process, the president is offering a lesson in how to turn a plutocracy into a full-blown oligarchy.

The US has arguably been a plutocracy—a system of government run by the wealthy—for some time now. .................


Paul Dans, the ousted director of Project 2025, says he’s delighted that Trump is implementing his agenda after all.

............. “It’s actually way beyond my wildest dreams,” Dans said. “It’s not going to be the easiest road to hoe going forward. The deep state is going to get its breath back. But the way that they’ve been able to move and upset the orthodoxy, and at the same time really capture the imagination of the people, I think portends a great four years.” ...................


You can’t make America great again by wrecking the government.

........ Leaving aside the buckets called “culture wars” and “foreign policy,” we may distinguish eight distinct forces at work in Trump’s economics. They are (a) the targeted destruction of specific regulatory agencies, (b) random disruptions of the federal civil service, (c) old-fashioned Reaganism, (d) tariffs, (e) migration, (f) energy, (g) the military, and (h) the general effect of rash and unpredictable policymaking—otherwise called uncertainty and chaos. ...................................

............................. Over the longer term, it is hard for an old progressive, who fought against the forces of deindustrialization and financialization when they took control under Reagan in the early 1980s, not to sympathize with the stated vision of the old man now in charge. But it is one thing to yearn for a vanished past of superior American engineering, industrial strength and technological prowess—and quite another to create the conditions for revival. Handing the economy over to libertarians, monopolists, speculators, and rich reactionaries with big egos will not make America great again.


A Deep Dive into the End of Post-WWII Moral Internationalism and a Revival of the 2,500-Year-Old Melian Dialogue

There are some timeless truths that never change no matter how hard we try to bury them. They may be forgotten or ignored — for a while — but it is only ever a matter of time until events bring them back into focus, much to the surprise of everyone who thought that the current political, economic, or social order had somehow managed to tame the self-serving brutality of history.

In the 19th century, Germans coined a term for politics based purely on pragmatic calculations rather than on moral or ideological considerations — realpolitik. Perhaps the most famous example of realpolitik in action comes from Chancellor Otto von Bismark’s ruthless 19th-century campaign of using “blood and iron” (military force) and economic pressure (customs unions) to unite all German-speaking lands under Prussian leadership — by any means necessary — in order to achieve his goal of establishing the German Empire.

At the core of realpolitik is the timeless rule that a nation's strength and its ability to impose its will are the ultimate determinants of legitimacy in international affairs (a.k.a. “might makes right”). Since the dawn of time, national interests have always trumped all other considerations. To quote ancient Greek historian Thucydides, writing in the 5th century BC in the context of the infamous war between Athens and Sparta, “The question of justice arises only between parties equal in strength. Outside of that, the strong do what they can and the weak suffer what they must.”

The post-WWII era emerged as a giant experiment to try to replace realpolitik with a kinder, fairer, more moral world order — it was an effort to impose classical liberal moral principles onto the interactions between nations by entangling Western Civilization in a maze of treaties, alliances, and international institutions designed to restrain the endless wars, exploitation, plunder, and bullying that stronger nations have always imposed on the weak.

But despite the lofty rhetoric and high-minded moral intentions, this new coalition of liberal-minded nations failed to bring about an end to history.

It was always a pipe dream to think that national interests could be subordinated to post-WWII morality — predictably, that era is now unravelling as all those post-WWII institutions, treaties, and alliances crumble beneath mountains of corruption and (above all) because in reality every member-state, big and small alike, never stopped working to selfishly manipulate and exploit all those institutions, treaties, and alliances for their own national interests. Beneath the lipstick, a pig is still a pig. ........................................



Geopolitical Fare:

During Trump's first term in office, Gabbard was a leading critic of Trump's backing of the Saudi war in Yemen, which she called genocidal



Something similar could be said about almost all Western policies except those which make the rich richer. “Is the policy working? No. Are we going to continue? Yes.”

Here’s the thing, AnsarAllah is the only nation in the world taking military action to try and stop the Israeli genocide of Palestinians. ...............

It is tiresome to keep saying this, but Israel, with the full support of many countries, including Britain, Germany and most importantly America (and my own nation, Canada, not that our help amounts to anything) is committing red letter genocide. There is no question about this, it is not “complicated” and there is no possibility of being a moral person, or even not a complete fucking waste of human skin, if you support genocide.

As for Yemen and AnsarAllah, they appear to be the only nation in the world which is fully moral in this respect, and the only nation in the world fully living up to the requirement for nations to actively try and stop genocide.  .......................


How the USA is leaving behind not only devastation but hardened enemies, too.

With Israel and the West committing genocide against the Palestinians to ethnically cleanse Gaza, the only outside (de facto) government that has lived up to the elementary demands of the most basic ethics – as well as the UN 1948 UN Genocide Convention and the 1998 Rome Statute – by taking direct military action to confront the perpetrators is that of Yemen. Otherwise, the heroic Palestinian Resistance defenders of Gaza stand alone.

(In Lebanon, Hezbollah has also interfered with Israel, but while powerful, it is not a government, de facto or internationally recognized, and it has been careful to limit its response, so as not to expose its country to mass murderous retaliation, as threatened by Israel and thus, in effect, by the West.)

That is the dystopian hell world we really live in: Its strongest (for now) states commit and support a genocide and ethnic cleansing war of extermination, proudly announced by the Israeli perpetrators and broadcast in detail for the whole world to watch in real time. Rich-world war tourists, meanwhile, get on planes to get their slice of the mass murder action and post about it on X.

It is left to Yemen, a poor and small country, itself recently ravaged by a brutal war of bombing and starvation, conducted under the leadership of Saudi Arabia and, of course, backed by the West, to do what all of us should be doing: help Palestine and fight Israel  ..........



This is Trump’s genocide. Trump is just as culpable for what happens in Gaza as Netanyahu. Just as guilty as Biden was during the last administration.

Trump signed off on the reignition of the Gaza holocaust. He spent weeks sabotaging the ceasefire and then gave the thumbs up to the resumption of the genocide. He did this while bombing Yemen and threatening war with Iran for Israel. ...........


America's "anti-war" candidate is bombing innocent civilians in Yemen to eradicate the last flicker of moral courage on this planet.





Sci Fare:

gotta link to any article that starts off talking about one of my favourite books, Sawyer's book Calculating God:
In “Calculating God,” Robert J. Sawyer’s first-contact novel, the aliens who arrive on Earth believe in the existence of God – without being particularly religious. Why?

There are certain physical forces, they explain, that make life in our universe possible only if they are tuned to very specific values. Which they are. We are here, after all. But there’s no physical reason that the values need to be set the way they are. The aliens have concluded that someone, or something, set the values of these parameters at the beginning of the universe to insure that life would come into existence. That something they call God. .................

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Swenson helpfully put the argument like this. There are four possibilities: (i) There is a God and a multiverse, (ii) There is a God and only one universe, (iii) There is no God and there is a multiverse, and (iv) There is no God and only one universe.

If (iv) there is no God and only one universe, then it’s surprising that this one universe is somehow fine-tuned. If (i) there is a God and a multiverse, and we assume that God doesn’t fine-tune every universe, it’s surprising that this one is tuned. If (iii) there is no God and there is a multiverse, it’s (again) surprising that this universe is one of the fine-tuned ones. Finally, only (ii) is it not surprising. That there is a God and only one universe, in other words, is more likely than the alternatives.







Other Fare:

The central banker airdropped in as Canada’s new prime minister is adopting the language of ethnic pride, and maybe that should worry us.

............. After almost a decade of tyranny, mismanagement, corruption, demographic vandalism, forced medical experimentation, hoaxed blood libels, Academy Award-winning performances, and cringe-inducing dress-up, Justin Trudeau, the second-worst1 Prime Minister in Canada’s history, is finally, at long and long-awaited last, gone.

You’d think I’d be ecstatic, yet I find myself greeting his departure with a shrug.

It’s possible we’ll look back on Justin’s circus act as the good old days.

......................... Despite Carney’s lack of political experience, he’s arguably one of the more charismatic politicians Canada has seen on the federal stage in some time. He projects a calm aura of reassuring technocratic competence, which appeals at a visceral level to the Canadian electorate, preferring as it always has the firm hand of authoritarian paternalism.

.................. This may be one of the most embarrassing electoral reversals of Canadian history. Poilievre was being handed the Prime Minister’s Office on a silver platter, but has already blown a massive lead out of sheer milquetoast cowardice, and so is on track to hand that silver platter back to the Liberals.

............... It’s all very savvy political manoeuvring, and of course Canada’s puckstick patriots are eating it up, yet I cannot help but worry that there is something much darker at play.

Canadian politics does not take place in a vacuum. Canada is a vassal state of its southern neighbour, effectively a resource colony which is permitted as a polite fiction to maintain its pretensions to sovereignty. .....................................

.................................... Meanwhile Ukraine’s real estate and natural resources have been appropriated by its foreign creditors as payment for assistance in the war. The globalists poured 100-proof ethnonationalism straight into the hindbrain of Ukrainian society, sent them into an unwinnable war, encouraged them to fight Russia to the last flower of Ukrainian youth, and will repay the Ukrainian people by stealing everything they own and giving their depopulated land to foreign peoples far more alien than the Russians.

Neat trick. With allies like these, etc.

So, Canada. ............................

Across Canadian history, one of the only consistent threads in Canada’s national identity has been that Canadians are Not-Americans: we might not quite know what we are, but we aren’t (ugh) that. This frequently manifests as a sort of brittle insecurity, an ostentatious inferiority-superiority complex: unlike those stupid Americans, Canadians are smart, we are law-abiding, we are polite, we are sensible, we are European, we are educated, we aren’t racists, we have free health care. Much of this is overcompensatory cope – Canadians, by and large, are every bit as ignorant and provincial as Americans – but this really is how Canadians feel. ............

If the plan really is to Ukrainify Canada, then reasoning by analogy with what happened in the Ukraine, there are some things we can expect to see in the coming months and – God forbid – years of Carney’s administration. .................

That’s a dark scenario, and perhaps my imagination is getting away from me, afflicting me with a fever dream, and if so, hey, one of my functions here is to say the crazy stuff out loud. Maybe Carney’s rhetorical pivot is just a cynical campaign strategy. Maybe it’s more than that, but there’s no intention of using Canada to do anything other than sabotage America’s natural resource pipeline.

But then I see Chrystia Freeland making deranged statements about deploying British nuclear deterrents on Canadian soil.



Canada’s Liberal Party selected central banker Mark Carney to lead the country as prime minister.  

He only recently became a politician, but already he’s sitting at the head of the class!  No worries, though.  He has the kind of résumé all globalists in good standing with Klaus Schwab’s World Economic Forum would envy.  He ran not only the Bank of Canada, but also the Bank of England.  He’s a central banker extraordinaire!  He loves printing funny money and manipulating markets.  Artificially created inflation is his jam, man!

Carney is the most recent iteration of the World Economic Forum’s standard operating procedure for captured governments (and Canada is most definitely WEF-captured): Whenever possible, put bankers in charge of those pesky territorial designations nostalgically known as nation-states.  France’s petit fromage, Emmanuel Macron, was a Rothschild & Co. investment banker.  Former U.K. prime minister Rishi Sunak was a Goldman Sachs and hedge fund guy.  Don’t be surprised when more transnational bankers seemingly come out of nowhere and immediately dominate the politics of other pseudo-sovereign countries.  Investment banking — and more specifically, central banking — is the lifeblood of globalism.  Why?  Because once a bank is big enough, it gambles with the futures of entire nations (and the millions of individual lives therein) as if they were mere poker chips.

So the globalist cabal claims another section of the world map!  Or retains its claim over Canada, I should say. ..................

How jolting it must be for the uninitiated to discover that Volodymyr Zelensky’s fiefdom is not renowned for its “democratic” norms, but is instead considered one of the most irredeemably corrupt crime dens in all of Europe.  If you’ve ever found yourself near any of Europe’s other troubled conflict zones, you know that a reputation for being the continent’s premier destination for depravity is not an easy distinction to claim.  Ukraine had to work hard for its deserved notoriety. 

No matter.  Klaus Schwab’s globalists are good at rebranding.  

When money-printing central bankers fund USAID, and USAID pays Western journalists to run stories about the glorious nobility of Ukraine’s system of government, then the less informed among us eventually start spouting the same thing: Ukraine good.  Russia bad.  We make nuclear war now?  It’s not our fault that we humans can be programmed so easily.  We are biologically wired to trust people in positions of authority. .............



................. You all realize how insane this is, right? From 1975 to 2024 you’re looking at a 2.7 degree Celsius rise. So 2.7 degree in half a century. So 5.4 degree Celsius per century in Germany right now is what we’re getting. ..................


Pics of the Week:






Sunday, March 16, 2025

2025-03-16

***** denotes well-worth reading in full at source (even if excerpted extensively here)


Economic and Market Fare:


Today, we lowered the policy interest rate by 25 basis points, bringing it to 2.75%.

The Canadian economy ended 2024 in good shape. Inflation has been close to the 2% target since last summer. Substantial cuts to our policy rate through the second half of last year boosted household spending and economic growth.

However, in recent months, the pervasive uncertainty created by continuously changing US tariff threats has shaken business and consumer confidence. This is restraining household spending intentions and businesses’ plans to hire and invest.

Against this backdrop, and with inflation near the 2% target, Governing Council decided to reduce the policy rate a further 25 basis points.

Looking ahead, the trade conflict with the United States can be expected to weigh on economic activity, while also increasing prices and inflation. Governing Council will proceed carefully with any further changes to our policy rate given the need to assess both the upward pressures on inflation from higher costs and the downward pressures from weaker demand.

Let me expand on these key considerations.

Economic data since our January Monetary Policy Report (MPR) suggests the Canadian economy ended 2024 on a stronger footing than we expected. Past interest rate cuts have boosted consumer spending and business investment, increasing domestic demand in the fourth quarter by a robust 5.6%. Overall, GDP grew 2.6% in the fourth quarter after upwardly revised growth of 2.2% in the third quarter. This growth path is considerably stronger than we were expecting based on the information we had in January. ............................

Let me wrap up.

We ended 2024 on a solid economic footing. But we’re now facing a new crisis. Depending on the extent and duration of new US tariffs, the economic impact could be severe. The uncertainty alone is already causing harm.

Monetary policy cannot offset the impacts of a trade war. What it can and must do is ensure that higher prices do not lead to ongoing inflation. The focus of Governing Council will be on assessing the timing and strength of both the downward pressure on inflation from a weaker economy and the upward pressure from higher costs.

As always, the Bank will be guided by our monetary policy framework and our commitment to maintain price stability over time.


It’s still a long way to the top if you mark to market.

............ And finally: I really dislike the word “correction,” and particularly the notion that it means a 10% fall from peak to trough. That 10% number is arbitrary. If the market was massively overvalued in the first place, a 10% drawdown won’t correct it. The word implies that the market is now correct, which is a dangerous assumption. To take one measure that admittedly makes this market look particularly expensive, the S&P 500 still trades at a higher multiple of sales than at the top of the dot-com bubble in 2000. That multiple may or may not prove to be justified, but there’s no obvious reason to believe that US stocks are now “correctly” valued:


The market has fallen fast, looks oversold on many measures, and may well be ready to bounce. But we should attach minimal significance to the fact that its fall is now in double figures. It really doesn’t matter.


Capital inflows could be the Trump administration’s next target

This month, many investors feel dazed and confused. No wonder: as the US government flirts with another shutdown and President Donald Trump intensifies his trade war, indices of economic uncertainty have skyrocketed above even the 2020 pandemic or the global financial crisis of 2008.

But the uncertainty could get worse. For amid all the tariff shocks, there is another question hovering: could Trump’s assault on free trade lead to attacks on free capital flows too? Might tariffs on goods be a prelude to tariffs on money? ............................

But Trump is also eager to use all available tools to bolster his leverage on the world stage. And Pettis’s ideas seem to be influential among some advisers, such as Treasury secretary Scott Bessent, Stephen Miran, the chair of the Council of Economic Advisers, and Vance.

This trio appears minded to reset global trade and finance, via a putative Mar-a-Lago accord, although their ambitions are on a grander scale than the 1985 Plaza accord. The latter “merely” weakened the dollar via joint currency intervention but Miran’s vision of a Mar-a-Lago accord includes a possible US debt restructuring too, which would force some holders of Treasuries to swap them for perpetual bonds. ....................

“[The trio’s] ultimate goal isn’t a series of bilateral [trade] deals but a fundamental restructuring of the rules governing global trade and finance [to remove] distorted capital flows,” says McNair. “Whether this approach succeeds remains to be seen, but the strategy itself is more coherent and far-reaching than most observers recognise.” .............

Either way, the key point to understand is that a shift in economic philosophy is emerging that is potentially as profound as the rethinking unleashed by John Maynard Keynes after the second world war or that pushed by neoliberals in the 1980s. ......



Strategy I: Trump Turmoil 2.0.

We haven’t had to change our subjective probabilities for our three alternative economic scenarios for quite some time. We are doing so today and may have to do so more frequently in coming months or even coming weeks in reaction to the volatile nature of policymaking under President Donald Trump. The initial animal spirits of Trump 2.0 have been trumped by the uncertainty unleashed by Trump Turmoil 2.0. The administration has been in office for less than two months. The whirlwind of tariffs imposed on America’s major trading partners, federal job cuts implemented by the DOGE Boys, and the upending of the world order have been head spinning.

We held off changing our probabilities because we expected that the master of the art of the deal was going to get a deal with Canada and Mexico that would allow him to declare victory and bury his threat to impose 25% tariffs on America’s only two neighbors and biggest trading partners.  ................

Now that Trump has started a trade war, it could escalate. Or it could de-escalate. Either way, uncertainty has increased significantly, as evidenced by the sharp decline in stock prices  ............

Considering the above, we are recalibrating our subjective probabilities for our three scenarios:

(1) Roaring 2020s (55%, unchanged). Our subjective probability of our base case remains the same at 55%. We are assuming that the trade war doesn’t escalate. We are continuing to bet on the resilience of the economy and on a technology-driven boost in the growth rate of both productivity and real GDP.

In this scenario, the economy continues to grow, a tariff-related spike in inflation proves transitory, and the stock market remains choppy during the first half of the year, with the S&P 500 remaining below its February 19 record high. The index resumes its climb in record-high territory during the second half of the year, reaching 7000 by year-end .................

(2) Meltup/meltdown (10%, down from 25%).  .....................

(3) Bearish bucket (35%, up from 20%). Over the past three years, we’ve assigned a 20% subjective probability to the various prospects that could go wrong for the economy, resulting in a recession and a bear market for stocks. We are raising it to 35% ....................









Bubble Fare:


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How a Promising Technology Became a Tool for Elites and Financial Manipulation

This post criticizes cryptocurrency as a negative reflection of the world’s increasing corruption and material “solidification”. It outlines three increasingly subtle methods of analyzing the space: first, as revolutionary technology; second, as a fraud-ridden space, notably with Tether; and third, as a controlled system used by elites to test technologies for central bank digital currencies. It argues that the crypto fraud will eventually be offloaded onto the public, leading to even higher inflation as the West shifts toward a more controlled, manipulative system that consolidates power and erodes freedom. It is a follow up to a 2023 post criticizing crypto. ....................



Tweet of the Week:
“The easy thing for us to have done, would have been to come in and just keep this massive spending going. But it’s unsustainable. Could we have kept it going for another 4 years? Yea maybe, but you’re risking financial calamity down the road.”


Quotes of the Week:

Delwiche: Equal-weight S&P 500 is 10% off its 2025 peak and only 10% above its 2022 peak.

Sharp: Headlines blamed yesterday’s crash on Trump. It’s the tariffs! But I have a much simpler explanation: U.S. stocks have never been so overvalued. With stocks trading at nosebleed valuations, almost anything could catalyze a crash. Sure, tariffs played a role, but the underlying problem is the bubble itself. American stocks are priced for perfection, so anything less than that is bound to disappoint.

Millard: The U.S. exceptionalism trade has been experiencing major turbulence over the past two weeks as policy uncertainty (namely tariff announcements) rose sharply at the intersection of a budding economic growth scare and crowded investor positioning. Tech and momentum have been at the center of the carnage, as investors rotate their exposures elsewhere.

Steve: Stocks are RICH. Bonds are a safety valve. Still. And those suggesting the death of 60/40 (or opting for some other model) have been doing so for as long as I can remember…




Charts:
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(not just) for the ESG crowd:

In his latest book, one of my favorite authors argues that solving hunger requires more than producing more food.

In the introduction to his latest book, How to Feed the World, Vaclav Smil writes that “numbers are the antidote to wishful thinking.” That one line captures why I’ve been such a devoted reader of this curmudgeonly Canada-based Czech academic for so many years. Across his decades of research and writing, Vaclav has tackled some of the biggest questions in energy, agriculture, and public health—not by making grand predictions, but by breaking down complex problems into measurable data.

Now, in How to Feed the World, Vaclav applies that same approach to one of the most pressing issues of our time: ensuring that everyone has enough nutritious food to eat. Many discussions about feeding the world focus on increasing agricultural productivity through improved seeds, healthier soils, better farming practices, and more productive livestock (all priorities for the Gates Foundation). Vaclav, however, insists we already produce more than enough food to feed the world. The real challenge, he says, is what happens after the food is grown. ..........



U.S. B.S.:

America's Hidden Transformation

What if the America you pledge allegiance to isn't the one running the show? This investigation examines how America's governance system fundamentally transformed since 1871 through a documented pattern of legal, financial, and administrative changes. The evidence reveals a gradual shift from constitutional principles toward corporate-style management structures - not through a single event, but through an accumulation of incremental changes spanning generations that have quietly restructured the relationship between citizens and government.

This analysis prioritizes primary sources, identifies patterns across multiple domains rather than isolated events, and examines timeline correlations - particularly noting how crises often preceded centralization initiatives. By examining primary sources including Congressional records, Treasury documents, Supreme Court decisions, and international agreements, we identify how:
  • Legal language and frameworks evolved from natural rights toward commercial principles
  • Financial sovereignty transferred incrementally from elected representatives to banking interests
  • Administrative systems increasingly mediated the relationship between citizens and government
This evidence prompts a fundamental reexamination of modern sovereignty, citizenship, and consent in ways that transcend traditional political divisions ..................................................................




Geopolitical Fare:


.................... What poses a threat to you is the political status quo which robs your country of riches and resources to inflict military violence on innocent people overseas while strangling your civil rights and poisoning your planet. What poses a threat to you are the oligarchs and empire managers who uphold this status quo which is driving our species to authoritarian dystopia and extinction via environmental disaster or nuclear annihilation.

They want you blaming your problems on anyone else besides the actual source of your problems. They prefer to get you freaking out about their primary targets — the disobedient groups and nations they want to destroy to advance the interests of the empire — but if they can’t accomplish that then they’re happy to get you hating powerless groups who pose no real threat to you. Anything they can do to keep your eyes off your real oppressors: the billionaires, bankers, media barons, intelligence agencies, warmongers, ecocidal capitalists, military-industrial complex plutocrats, and all the empire lackeys in your official elected government. .....................



A collapsing world order, market chaos, trade wars, and recession fears—JPMorgan Chase put it bluntly: last week delivered “a year’s worth of economic turbulence.”

Some blame Trump. Others see it as the inevitable unraveling of long-building trends. Many still hope it’s just a rough patch, that normalcy will return.

Don’t count on it. This isn’t a correction—it’s a transformation.

We are in the midst of a global upheaval rivaling the aftermath of the World Wars, the Great Depression, decolonization, and the oil shocks of the 1970s. Some mourn the world they knew; others welcome the dawn of something new. ......................

.......... Geopolitics is the wildcard. Markets just got a preview of the new world order—Trump’s shake-up, Europe rewriting the rules, and a fight for natural resources and defense. The old system is unraveling, and the reset will be painful.

Most still don’t see it yet—the financial and political shift that started with Covid and Ukraine is speeding up. Trump’s U.S. overhaul, rising global tensions, and Europe’s costly rearmament point to economic and political upheaval on a scale we haven’t seen in decades. Brace for impact. ............



Every day brings a new barrage of announcements by US President Donald Trump and billionaire bigot buddy Elon Musk. Working on the basis that, if they throw enough shit at the wall, some of it will stick, Trump and Musk are creating pandemonium in Washington, DC.

But while all may seem to be chaos in the halls of power, there is a thread of logic behind it all. Trump is ripping up accepted political norms at home and the liberal world order abroad because, in his view, they have failed to secure American supremacy. Trump’s package of measures, taken together, constitutes a strategy to break America from its cycle of relative decline and come out on top.

Trump’s program is squarely aimed at China. China’s rise to world power status is an existential threat to US hegemony, and Trump's program is the latest attempt to hold China down and assert US global power. ..........


The US is resetting, but not how the world expected

Donald Trump’s return to the White House is shaping up to be nothing short of a political revolution. The new administration is rapidly dismantling the old order, purging the ruling elite, reshaping both domestic and foreign policy, and cementing changes that will be difficult to reverse – even if his opponents regain power in future elections.

For Trump, as for all revolutionaries, the priority is to break the existing system and consolidate radical transformations. Many of the principles that guided US policy for decades – sometimes for over a century – are being deliberately discarded. Washington’s global strategy, long built on expansive military, diplomatic, and financial influence, is being rewritten to serve Trump’s domestic political needs. 

For the past 100 years, the US has functioned as a global empire. Unlike traditional empires built on territorial expansion, the American empire extended its reach through financial dominance, military alliances, and ideological influence. This model, however, has become increasingly unsustainable. Since the late 1990s, the costs of maintaining global hegemony have exceeded the benefits, fueling discontent both at home and abroad.

Trump and his allies seek to end this ‘liberal empire’ and return America to a more self-reliant, mercantilist model – one reminiscent of the late 19th and early 20th centuries under President William McKinley. Trump has openly praised this era, viewing it as the golden age of US prosperity, before the country took on the burdens of global leadership.

Donald Trump has suddenly remembered a long-forgotten president – and for good reason
Read more Donald Trump has suddenly remembered a long-forgotten president – and for good reason
Under this vision, America will reduce unproductive foreign expenditures and refocus on its natural advantages: Vast resources, an advanced industrial base, and the world’s most valuable consumer market. Rather than policing the world, Washington will wield its economic power more aggressively to secure trade advantages. However, the transition to this model carries significant risks, particularly in a highly globalized economy. .............



“There are decades where nothing happens; and there are weeks where decades happen”

This statement is—wrong-ish.

For decades various people have been predicting what is happening now: the end of the American empire, the late Imperial wars, the despair and poverty of late-imperial rentier capitalism, and the rise of China.

Indeed a lot of people (your host included) were screaming about this 30 years ago. I read my first book on the way that America was turning to Gilded Age plus inequality in 1986. Everyone who wasn’t stupid, bought or ideologically captured could see what neoliberalism would lead to. From the late 90s we yelled about sending the West’s industry to the West, but hey, it was the “End of History” and capitalism and democracy had won and it didn’t matter where industry was because “comparative advantage” was, and still is, completely misunderstood, as were the constituents of state power.

So—it’s all happening now, along with massive wildfires from climate change and it seems like for decades nothing happened, but really, it was all happening: without deliberate policy choices, these weeks wouldn’t be possible.

The key to making accurate predictions is simply asking “what must happen if the current course continues, and will the course continue.” In 2009, when Obama decided he’d rather have a couple mansions and Hollywood friends than be the next FDR, and massively increase fracking to top it off, it became clear that the course would continue and all this became inevitable. Realistically, the rise of China was locked in when they were allowed to join the WTO and climate change was locked in when Reagan tore down the solar panels on the White House roof. ...........



President Trump wants Ukraine settled, full stop. This is so that he can move ahead quickly – to normalise with Russia, and begin the ‘big picture’ project of setting a new World Order, one that will end wars and facilitate business ties.

The point here – which Europe feigns to not understand – is that the end to the Ukraine conflict simply is Trump’s ‘gateway’ to the entire rationale and platform on which he stood: The Great Reset of the Geo-Political landscape. Ukraine, simply said, is the obstacle to Trump’s pursuit of his primordial objective: The Global Reset. .................



Every day I become more grateful for the election of Donald Trump. All praise. Millions of millions of people have worked to destroy the American empire, and all failed. Donald is succeeding, speeding the process by about a decade, I’d guess.

Likewise I and many others have hated the neoliberal trade order for decades: since the late 80s in my case. It was designed to destroy countries' sovereignty, making it impossible to truly regulate investors, to run industrial policy or even, in rich nations, to keep wages up. As a Canadian, ever since the FTA Canadian manufacturing has proceeded on a slow death march, till instead of selling the US more good than the US sells us, as was historically the norm, we now buy more goods from the US than vice-versa. (The trade surplus is due to energy.)

Meanwhile Trump is essentially forcing the Europeans to take charge of their own destiny and stop doing what America says. This should have happened decades ago, and EU elites to man-up have cost Europe’s countries dearly. It’s quite likely neither NATO nor the EU itself will survive: both excellent outcomes. NATO should have been disbanded when the USSR fell. American troops may leave Europe, or at least there should be a further draw-down, also excellent. As for the EU, it has been an engine of stagnation and de-industrialization, especially since the introduction of the Euro.

The end of the Empire, the end of the “no industrial policy, no sovereignty” free trade order, possibly the end of NATO and American occupation of Europe.

Oh, the process will suck, and it will hurt. But for the first time since the US imposed its terrible neoliberal trade order on the world, there is at least a chance of most  countries being able to properly manage their own economic affairs. ..........



A hundred years ago two battered and beleaguered old men, one an Italian prisoner, the other taken to wandering Irish bogs, arrived at the same fateful truth: the world around them was collapsing.

Antonio Gramsci, Marxist theorist, imprisoned member of the Italian parliament, wrote from his cell that “the old world is dying, and the new cannot be born; in this interregnum, a great variety of morbid symptoms appear.”

William Butler Yeats, a sort of mystic horrified by violence and uncertainty across his Irish homeland, saw the same future. From a cottage in County Galway he wrote “things fall apart; the center cannot hold.” What was worse, “the best lack all conviction, while the worst are full of passionate intensity.”

One a political theorist dissecting history’s brutal transitions, the other a poet divining the chaos of human nature, both foresaw the same truth—that societies don’t glide one era to the next. Sufficiently stressed they shatter, and from the wreckage, new orders struggle to emerge. A hundred years on, Gramsci and Yeats’s alarmed realizations read less like prophecy than real time commentary. 

Today’s Americans grew up confident that they stood outside history’s cycles of rise and fall. Battered but buoyed by victory in World War II (and recognizing an opportunity), the United States built a powerful international system meant to foster global stability and economic growth while, naturally, serving its own interests. And, in a world laid waste by war, so it did.

For the longest time this system forestalled large-scale conflicts, allowing America and its allies to prosper.

That system has played itself out.

It was easy enough for the mighty and victorious United States to stamp its model on a war-exhausted world. Turns out, maintaining that system indefinitely in a restive world is challenging.

Gramsci speaks outside of time straight to this week that the old is dying. As a new alignment struggles to be born, just as he said: witness the morbid symptoms.

American legend still holds that the US is fundamentally different from and superior to other nations. We call it American Exceptionalism.

Exceptionalism thrived during the fleeting unipolar moment. With the Soviet collapse and the Cold War’s end, the U.S. bestrode the globe—for better and worse. But the hubris and mutations born of that era now blind us to our decline. .................

To the extent that MAGA Exceptionalism challenges authoritarianism abroad, it does so even as it accelerates America’s democratic decline. Maddening question: why can’t more people see it?

Not only can it happen here, it obviously, quite clearly and quickly is happening here. The road to ruin isn’t hypothetical; we are on it.

Exceptionalism isn’t the cause of American political decline; it’s the story we tell ourselves to avoid confronting it. Exceptionalism allows us to look at other countries with righteous indignation rather than inward, toward our own faltering institutions. It’s an excuse, a rationalization, balm for a society avoiding the truth. .....................


It didn't have to be this way.

And so, by common consent, Europe faces its gravest collective political crisis since 1945. And so, by equally common consent, its political class has never been so weak and incompetent, and so evidently out of its depth, encountering for once a problem that cannot be solved by well-judged tweets and complicated financial instruments. Socked around the face by the large wet fish of Real Life, the European political class retreats into silly games, hallucinatory fantasies and futile aggressivity. ...........

Rather, I want to go back to the core questions that animate these Essays, and made me want to start writing them in the first place. Behind all the handwaving, shouting and empty gestures, What is going on here? In other words, what are the deeper forces operating? How are the laws of politics playing themselves out? What are the various underlying stresses on the fabric of the political system? And of course, where might things reasonably go? ...........................................

.............. The Europe we had is gone, the Europe we might have had never was. Why anyone should want to defend the Europe we have, is beyond me.


The authority being used to detain and deport Mahmoud Khalil reveals--for the millionth time--the false foundations of national security.



Sci Fare:



How Columbia researchers are working to treat, prevent, and ultimately cure the world’s fastest-growing neurological disorder.


Researchers identified a gene that seems to help slow brain aging in women, and studied links between hormone therapy, menopause and Alzheimer’s.


Scientists dive into the genomes of whales, elephants, and other animal giants looking for new weapons in the fight against cancer.



I have often argued that the main reason there is no durable herd immunity to SARS-COV-2, is because we began to vaccinate everyone. We should have had herd immunity by now, but we don’t, because of the catastrophic decision to vaccinate everyone.

And so it seems only fair to me, to point it out to you when the evidence confirms this assertion ............

It’s not hard to see what’s going on here. Note how the 95% confidence intervals don’t even come close to overlapping, so it’s clearly statistically significant, not just a fluke.

If you’re vaccinated, infection recalls Spike-directed IgG antibodies, which work well against relatively similar versions of the virus, but don’t really work against genetically different versions of the virus.

If you’re unvaccinated, an infection induced training of the innate immune system, with antibodies contributing to your immunity to a far less extent. This is not perfectly able to prevent a reinfection, you’ll need to catch it a few times due to the spread of Omicron, but it’s the only sort of immunity that’s going to have any meaningful effect against more distantly related versions of the virus. ................

So good job boomers! You saved yourselves! This is really the final fuck you of the boomers. Perhaps you thought climate change was the final fuck you, or you thought the housing crisis was the final fuck you. No, they had one final fuck you left, they decided to basically destroy the brains and blood vessels of their own grandchildren, by buying themselves a few more years with a poor quality vaccine.  ............... In a normal world, there would be a new Nuremburg tribunal right now for the people who pushed this vaccine. .................

Meaning, that you’re stuck with it. You’re stuck with this virus, for years, potentially decades to come, maybe for the rest of industrial civilization’s lifespan.

You triggered a positive feedback loop, of immune-system depleting antibody-facilitated waves of constant mass reinfection, even during the middle of summer in 2024 in Northern European countries, the clearest possible evidence that this virus is not behaving like a normal respiratory infection. It did not have to be like this, you did not have to vaccinate everyone against it. But you did, so now you taste the consequences. Idiots.



Other Fare:




Fun Fare:

“I guess I thought there was more humanity to unravel with J.D.”



Pics of the Week: