***** denotes well-worth reading in full at source (even if excerpted extensively here)
Economic and Market Fare:
The closely watched Santa Claus Rally period officially wraps up tomorrow. This historically strong seven-day stretch for stocks was first discovered by Yale Hirsch back in 1972. Hirsch, creator of the Stock Trader’s Almanac, officially defined the period as the last five trading days of the year plus the first two trading days of the new year.
The Santa Claus Rally usually generates a lot of headlines due to the market’s tendency to post strong returns over this short period — or perhaps it receives more attention because it occurs during a usually slow financial news cycle. Regardless, since 1950, the S&P 500 has generated an average return of 1.3% during the Santa Claus Rally period, with positive returns occurring 79% of the time. This compares to the market’s average seven-day return and positivity rate of 0.3% and 58%, respectively. Finally, back-to-back years of negative Santa Claus Rally periods are rare, occurring only in 1993–1994 and 2015–2016.
Another important aspect of the Santa Claus Rally period is its linkage to January and the following year’s returns. As Yale Hirsch put it, “If Santa Claus should fail to call, bears may come to Broad and Wall.” As highlighted below, historical data supports this adage. When investors are on the “nice” list and Santa delivers a positive rally, the S&P 500 has generated an average January return of 1.4% and an average following-year return of 10.4%. This compares to the respective average January and following returns of -0.2% and 6.1% when investors are on the “naughty” list and receive a negative Santa Claus Rally return............ December did not live up to its reputation of being a strong month for stocks, an important reminder that seasonality trends may represent the climate, but they do not always reflect the weather. The Federal Reserve has been the scapegoat for the selling pressure after policymakers delivered a hawkish rate cut earlier this month. However, we don’t believe they should take all the blame for the recent dip. Rates were rising well before the Federal Open Market Committee Meeting on December 18, while market breadth and momentum indicators were deviating from price action. Technical damage has been most acute on a short-term basis. The S&P 500 has dipped below its 50-day moving average but remains above its longer-term uptrend. However, we believe near-term downside risk remains elevated given the recent deterioration in market breadth and momentum, stretched bullish sentiment, and macro headwinds from higher rates and a stronger dollar.
DB: December, Q4 and 2024 Performance Review (via TheBondBeat)
2024 was another strong year for asset returns, as economic growth surprised on the upside and central banks finally began to cut rates. That meant the S&P 500 posted a total return of +25%, marking the first time since the late-1990s where it’s achieved back-to-back annual returns above 20%. The index was powered by further gains for the Magnificent 7, which were up +67%, and other risk assets did very well too. Indeed, credit spreads tightened further whilst Bitcoin more than doubled. Moreover, the US exceptionalism narrative helped push the US Dollar to its strongest annual close since 2001.
Yet despite the generally upbeat performance, there were plenty of bumps along the way. Rate cuts took longer than many expected, meaning that sovereign bonds struggled to gain traction. In fact, the 10yr Treasury yield rose for a 4th consecutive year, which is the first time that’s happened since the 1980s. Political developments also caused several wobbles, particularly around April as tensions in the Middle East escalated. Over in France, the country’s assets underperformed amidst the political uncertainty. And there was huge (albeit brief) market turmoil in the summer, as weak US data and a BoJ rate hike led to the unwinding of the yen carry trade. So with quite a few concerns still in the background, gold prices posted their strongest annual gain since 2010.
… Year in Review – The high-level macro overview
… Whilst global bonds recovered strongly over Q3, October was then their worst monthly performance since September 2022, back when the Fed were still hiking by 75bps per meeting. That was partly driven by strong economic data, as the US jobs report showed nonfarm payrolls were up +254k in September, with upward revisions. On top of that, the core CPI print for September also hit a 6-month high. And fiscal policy was back in focus as well, as prediction markets placed a growing probability that the Republicans would win the Presidency and both chambers of Congress, which was seen as raising the likelihood of fiscal stimulus compared to divided government. Meanwhile in the UK, the government announced additional borrowing in its budget, which contributed to a notable widening in the spread of gilt yields over bunds, with the 10yr spread moving above its 2022 peak when Liz Truss was PM.
…Which assets saw the biggest gains of 2024?
Equities: Global equity markets advanced across almost every region in 2024. The S&P 500 was up +25.0%, the STOXX 600 rose +9.6%, and Japan’s Nikkei advanced +21.3%. Emerging markets were relatively weaker, but the MSCI EM index still posted a +8.0% gain.
.............. As we look forward to the year ahead, it’s also worth remembering that none of the last 5 years have exactly gone to plan or consensus in the macro sphere. 2020 was the best example of that, with the pandemic making the 2020 outlooks redundant by the end of Q1. And since then, the surprises have kept on coming. After all, the surge of inflation in 2021 surprised virtually everyone if you look back at consensus forecasts. Then in 2022, markets were caught completely off guard by the most aggressive rate-hiking cycle since the 1980s. By 2023, the consensus was then expecting a US recession that didn’t happen. And in 2024, the upside growth surprises continued, and the S&P 500 has just seen its strongest two-year performance since the late-1990s …
......... Three consecutive years of double-digit gains don't happen too often. Nevertheless, that’s what we are expecting: We see the S&P 500 increasing 19.0% this year to 7000. However, we think it could be a bumpier ascent than in recent years, especially during the next couple of months. Fed officials are likely to be less dovish in the coming weeks. In addition, uncertainty about fiscal, trade, and immigration policies might continue to put upward pressure on bond yields. .............
But keep in mind that 'usually' does not mean 'always'
…Stocks rallied in 2024 with the S&P 500 climbing 23.3% to close the year at 5,881.63.
A resilient U.S. economy bolstered sales growth during the year. Meanwhile, corporations widened their profit margins, which amplified earnings growth. Already-high stock market valuations got richer — but this can be at least partly explained by the prospects for further margin gains and earnings growth in 2025 and beyond.
It’s the latest reminder that the stock market usually goes up.
If you feel uneasy about the >20% gain, you really shouldn’t. Gains of this scale are actually common.
As we discussed in October, you don’t earn long-term average returns by experiencing a lot of average years. You earn them by experiencing a lot of above-average years and some below-average years.
........
#137: The Sentiment Cycle and Late Stage Dynamics
......... The Last Bear Standing was born on Twitter on April 1, 2021 as a rebuttal to the mania of the day. The bull market that began with contrarian optimism around COVID a year prior had morphed into a frenzy, fueled by easy money, options, and social contagion — YOLO meets FOMO. Optimism led to ignorance and eventually an unwind — one that began almost exactly three years ago.
The bear market of 2022 was brief but punishing. Despite ongoing economic growth, stocks and bonds fell on fears of rising inflation, rapidly tightening monetary conditions, margin compression, global instability, macroeconomic pessimism, and an energy crisis. The tide of sentiment washed out — evidenced by declining margin debt balances, rising put volumes, and widening volatility indices, credit spreads.
But the economy did not crater — in fact, it proved far more durable than most expected, leaving a tall wall of worries to climb. By 2023, the trough in mega-cap tech earnings which had pummeled Nasdaq turned upwards. Massive new investment in infrastructure, manufacturing, and data centers reinvigorated the landscape. Interest rates steadied as inflation waned, banks were bailed out of their bad bets on duration, the commercial real estate implosion never arrived. As contrarian optimism became conventional wisdom, the new bull market took full swing.
Having climbed the wall of worries, 2024 was a year of extension. Extension in valuations, as expanding multiples provided outsize returns. Extension in leverage via margin debt and call options. Extension from demonstrated technological winners to speculative technological gambits. By the end of the year, it became impossible to avoid the déjà vu. Or, as I wrote in November, the market has Jumped the Shark.
In short, over the nearly four year history of TLBS, market sentiment seems to have come full circle.
**Market Outlook:** Expect lower yields in 2025, limited reflationary trade, and lower inflationary pressures due to oil market dynamics and shelter component adjustments.
**Investment Strategy:** Favor bonds over stocks due to high starting valuations and tight credit spreads. Focus on income and diversification through individual bonds and closed-end funds.
**Risks and Opportunities:** Watch for economic slowdown in the US, potential growth scare, and geopolitical factors. AI investment and pro-growth policies could boost sentiment and corporate spending…......
In The Decades Of Surplus Productivity
- Behavior of the U.S. Treasury yield curves continue to confuse and confound
- Flatter figuratively forever
- Don’t conflate yield volatility for price inflation
The irony in the fact that the only thing that is clear in this new year is that monetary policy is a mess isn’t lost on the Treasury market. This situation, of course, has been building for years as the surplus productivity led widening of the output gap has, by and large, been allowed to encroach across the entire economic landscape pushing labor’s share of income to 76 year lows and price volatility to new heights. These two results strike at the heart of the Fed’s dual mandate of full employment and stable prices which means that momentary policy is increasingly failing the economy as a whole; reflected in the the behavior of the yield curves. Given its generally silent and stealth approach, surplus productivity is the crucial piece that many continue to miss in today’s economic puzzle leaving many bewildered as to just what the Fed is doing or not doing enough of. However, if the ability to predict is the best test of any theory, then surplus productivity’s forecast impact on everything, much less the trending dynamics of the 2yr/30yr yield curve over these past 6 years proves that it is much more than a force to be dealt with; it is THE force to be reconciled with in the economy in 2025 and much beyond.
A key technical indicator hovers at levels last seen before the market peaked in 2022.
..... In the last five decades, the S&P 500 has gained more than 20% in a year on fifteen separate occasions. The average annual return of those years hovers at 27.3%.
In the 12 months after each of those strong performances, the index’s average return hovers at 14.1%, according to data from LPL Financial.
......... Indeed, strategists across Wall Street remain bullish for 2025 with an average forecast of a 14% gain for the S&P 500, according to the 16 firms tracked by Opening Bell Daily.
The Magnificent Seven stocks’ valuations continue to balloon, and analysts expect earnings growth to improve for names outside that batch, too. ...........
***** The Rules Of Bob Farrell – An Updated Illustrated Guide
.......... Bob was a Wall Street veteran with over 50 years of experience crafting his investing rules. Farrell obtained his master’s degree from Columbia Business School and started as a technical analyst at Merrill Lynch in 1957. Even though Farrell studied fundamental analysis under Gramm and Dodd, he turned to technical analysis after realizing there was more to stock prices than balance sheets and income statements. Farrell became a pioneer in sentiment studies and market psychology. His ten rules on investing stem from personal experience with dull markets, bull markets, bear markets, crashes, and bubbles. In short, Farrell saw it all and lived to tell about it.
With that said, let’s dive into Bob Farrell’s famous rules:
1) Markets tend to return to the mean (average price) 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 will happen. ........
10) Bull markets are more fun than bear markets ...........
China Fare:
Overindebtedness, overbuilding and overcapacity are causing problems at home and abroad
China's top analysts expect Beijing to push for greater consumption and infrastructure investment to deal with Trump.
Quotes of the Week:
Melody Wright: In many ways I don’t feel like 2024 really happened. If 2023 was a blur, 2024 just felt like a high-speed car chase that went by even faster than 2023. So many headlines, so much drama, so many limited hangouts, so many frauds. Fact and fiction became impossible to discern, and by the end of 2024 I think we are all just a bit exhausted.
...
(not just) for the ESG crowd:
The third global threat: a politically induced systemic event
.................................... Machiavelli, if he were here to advise, would have warned that
There is nothing more difficult to carry out, nor more doubtful of success, nor more dangerous to handle, than to initiate a new order of things.
We develop and implement a new method for identifying wasted subsidies and use it to provide systematic evidence of the misallocation of carbon offsets in the Clean Development Mechanism—the world's largest carbon offset program. Using newly constructed data on the locations and characteristics of over 1,000 wind farms in India, we estimate that at least 52 percent of approved carbon offsets were allocated to projects that would very likely have been built anyway. We estimate that the sale of these offsets to regulated polluters resulted in substantially higher global carbon dioxide emissions.
U.S. B.S.
The new year has kicked off with some truly bizarre and highly suspicious major news events. A US military veteran killed 14 people when he drove a pickup truck into a crowd in New Orleans early New Year’s Day and was then killed in a shootout with police. Hours later, another US military veteran reportedly blew himself up in a Tesla Cybertruck outside of the Trump International Hotel in Nevada.
Both men had worked at Fort Bragg (now called Fort Liberty), a large North Carolina military base which has become notorious for mysterious homicides, an epidemic of drug overdoses, and rampant child sex abuse. Both had also participated in the US occupation of Afghanistan, and both used the same app to rent their vehicles. ............
..... I don’t pretend to know what’s going on with all this. All I know is that as the US prepares to inaugurate a new president whose cabinet has been packed full of Iran hawks, it’s probably a good idea to remain intensely skeptical of any and all narratives which might be used to manufacture consent for more aggression in the middle east.
Geopolitical Fare:
Not the best of all years. Annus Horriblus.
Gaza: Genocide continues and seems likely to be successful. I’d guess the actual casualties are somewhere north of 700K at this point, they sure aren’t anywhere close to the official numbers. Guess “never again” didn’t meany anything.
Hezbollah: Held the Israelis off on the ground, but were devastated by Mossad assassinations and terrorism (the cell phone attack) plus a bombing campaign against civilians they were unwilling to endure. Some signs the war may start up again after the 60 day ceasefire, but without air defense, I don’t think they have it in them to tough it out. Could be wrong.
Syria: I don’t know anyone who expected the Syrian army to collapse the way it did. Israel’s occupied an area about 4X that of Gaza and destroyed most of the Syrian army’s stockpiles, plane and air defenses. Syria’s pretty much defenseless. Some signs of a guerilla war starting against the new “government”. Meanwhile Turkey and its proxies are hammering the Kurds.
Iran: the leadership has proved extremely cautious, though the youngs in the Revolutionary Guard are not and when Khamenei dies, there may be a change in policy. Proved that Israel can’t stop their missile attacks, but unwilling to use them except under extreme provocation and pressure from the youngs. Lost their Syrian ally and Hezbollah has taken hard hits, while the population has lost faith in the system. Not a good year for them.
Russia: continues to grind forward in Ukraine. Economy is doing very well, thanks and they’re now arguably the 4th largest economy in the world, having overtaken Germany. Solid alliance with China. Pretty good year, actually.
Ukraine War: Russia’s winning and all signs are that the Ukrainian army is running out of manpower. Assuming Putin doesn’t accept a peace deal (he shouldn’t, unless Trump offers a better deal than Trump’s likely to offer) I expect the Ukrainian army to collapse in 2025 and the war to go big arrow. Most likely the war will end in a humiliating surrender, perhaps even an unconditional one.
Europe: Industrial collapse, especially in Germany. Germany and France are now ungovernable by either the center-right or left. France is being kicked out of Africa. China is buying fewer and fewer German cars and European goods. America is cannibalizing European industry thanks to lower energy costs. Without a massive turnaround in policy Europe is headed for a massive decline. Wouldn’t expect EU collapse in 2025, but 2026 is possible.
America: Continues its slow decline. Cannibalizing its allies industry to try to sustain itself. Largely unable to create new tech outside of the information sector. Costs are insane, the rabble are getting uppity and Trump is likely to pursue policies better for oligarchs than ordinary people. Loss in Ukraine will be a huge hit to American prestige and power.
Massive eighteen percent increase in homelessness, even as billionaires have doubled their wealth since 2020.
Yemen: The only truly moral nation in the world, as the only one going all out to try and stop a genocide. I don’t like their ideology much, but when they’re the only people standing up, so what?
Anglosphere (Canada, Britain, Australia): experimented with massive immigration and its skyrocked housing and rent and caused massive political instability. Labour and the Canadian Liberals will lose their next elections, but the people who will replace them are Trump-style tards and decline will continue even as looting of the public sector intensifies.
China: Slowing growth but still doing fine, thanks. Massive investment in industry, has taken the lead in about 80% of tech fields, including electric vehicles and drones. Pumping out naval vessels like there’s no tomorrow and has over a 1,000 ICBMs now. Moving up the semiconductor chain far faster than almost anyone (except me) predicted. Eating America and Europe’s lunch in the developing world, since they offer cheaper goods, development and loans without the hypocritcal lectures about human rights.
Generally speaking the decline of the American empire, the rise of a new cold war, the end of neoliberal globalization and the age of revolution and war are all on track as I predicted years ago. Climate change is accelerating, we’re ignoring it and morons are worried about population declines when humanity is in vast population overshoot. This isn’t the worst year of you lives, it’s the best year of the rest of your lives in geopolitical, economic and ecological terms.
Annus Horribulus will return next year.
How energy and resource depletion undermined the post WWII world order and democracy
First, some background
Let’s start with the basics driving all this upheaval around the world: energy. Industry, (geo)politics and the economy are all functions of affordable energy, and that practically means fossil fuels. Like it or not, we live in a self-destructing economic paradigm, where all of our essential technologies — from concrete to iron and steel, or from fertilizers to plastic and transport fuels — are solely based on high carbon-density fuels. Despite causing climate and ecological mayhem — as well as being very much finite — industrial civilization remains hopelessly dependent on them. Bad news is, that no proposed alternative so far has proved to have the potential to take their place soon enough and at an adequate scale to prevent both an economic and ecological collapse.
Simply put: there is no such thing as an “energy transition”. It’s a myth. All proposals, from wind and solar to hydrogen, depend on minerals mined, delivered and refined by using these polluting fuels in copious amounts. As soon as the extraction of fossil fuels begin to decline, you can bet that the production of solar panels and wind turbines will eventually follow suit. And since diesel fuel is also used to grow and deliver crops, the question whether to burn it to mine minerals for EV batteries, or use it to grow food to prevent hunger will resolve itself rather quickly. And only when you add our propensity for war whenever resources grow thin, you start to really appreciate the relative peace and calm we have today. .............................................
Political Implications
I find it harder and harder to talk about the real life implications of energy and resource depletion without addressing the hot mess people call ‘politics’ downstream to it. Keep in mind, though, that state affairs are just theater, an emotional roller coaster ride designed to manufacture consent for more war, and to divert your attention away from the obscene levels of social inequality and the terrifying levels of ecological destruction. And what did our corporate-oligarchic elite — infesting both sides of the political divide — do while you were not watching? They have demolished what little remained of our democratic institutions, and used their media apparatus to hypernormalize even the weirdest of things happening (or just bury them under a pile of irrelevant manure). ........................................
................. So treat the following list of events lightly, and always keep the larger context in mind:
- Trump won the election after multiple attempts on his life (one of which almost got through).
- Governments of the two largest EU economies fell in quick succession: first in France, then in Germany. In both cases (beyond the usual political theater) one can find deficit spending and a collapsing real economy as root causes for their malaise.
- Elections got annulled in Romania on dubious claims; but not independent from the fact that an alternative candidate had a significant chance of winning it. So much for democracy.
- Moldova and Georgia, two countries outside the EU (and with significant number of Russian residents as well as expats living in Russia), experienced a massive pressure campaign from the EU to elect a pro-western leader. In the case of Moldova, they succeeded, and no protests, sabotage, or anything similar followed. In case of Georgia, following an election where no outside interference has been proved so far and which a pro-independence party won by a huge margin, revolts were “spontaneously” organized, the French born president failed to step down peacefully and the country was hit by sanctions.
- The Syrian state collapsed in an insurgency led by western backed “moderate rebels”. With it the Axis of Resistance led by Iran has also came to an end, with Russian military presence in the country likely to follow suit.
- The South Korean president has launched a failed coup against his own parliament, and planned to start a limited war with North Korea (together with sending even more weapons and troops to Ukraine to fight alleged North Korean soldiers there).
- After crossing all possible red lines, Russian territory (in Kursk of all places) was invaded by a NATO trained, armed and led force (containing French, Polish, English and Romanian elements) presumably to capture the nuclear power plant there. A few months later, long range missiles were lobbed on Russian territory — based on western satellite intelligence and with the help of NATO personnel programming targeting data into these armaments (1).
- In response to these events, the Yuzhmash missile factory and armored vehicle maintenance site in Dnipro, Ukraine was hit by an entirely new hypersonic weapon, the Oreshnik (a road mobile rocket-system with a range of 5500 km and a speed of 10–12 Mach).
- Both Russia and Europe, as a result of these escalations, warned their citizens to prepare for a hot war in the coming years.
- Last week, a high ranking general in Moscow was assassinated. Who, by the way, was collecting hard evidence on Western military involvement in biological and chemical warfare labs and activities from Syria to Ukraine.
- The incoming US president has threatened Greenland, Panama, and Mexico with taking control over their territories / assets, and called Canada the 51st state.
Viewed in the larger context of energy and resource depletion what we have here is not an isolated war in Europe or the Middle East between a country and its neighbors, or some random political events around the world, but a global war between western and Eurasian powers waged on many fronts. .................................
Apparently Donald Trump wants to bring it back under American control. Here's a crazier idea
Sci Fare:
Short sleepers cruise by on four to six hours a night and don’t seem to suffer ill effects
Other Fare:
Welsh: Tracking the Signs of Decline in America
If you want to be a decent analyst, let alone a forecaster, you need to know how to find real information. A lot of official statistics are either useless (inflation, unemployment numbers) or misleading. ...........
Escaping from the matrix of the mainstream western worldview is like escaping from a cult: it starts with one tiny heresy. One small, secret thought that goes against all your indoctrination.
Maybe it’s the realization that you’ve been lied to your whole life about Israel and Palestine. Maybe it had something to do with watching the mass media manufacture consent for the invasion of Iraq. Whatever it is, it starts out as a tiny little mental suspicion that the information sources you’ve been trusting to help form your understanding of the world might not be nearly as trustworthy as you’d been led to believe. ................
...........
Those are the kinds of sparks we’re trying to get flying when working to wake people up from the indoctrination of the empire. We’re trying to get those first tiny heresies to form in people’s minds, using whatever’s happening in the news at the moment or whatever relevant ideas are trending.
We don’t need to get anyone to wake all the way up in one go — we just need to get the snowball rolling. ...............
Every day there’s something coming up that you can show anyone who will listen to you, saying, “See? Look at that! They lied! They’re lying right now! I wonder what else they’re lying about?” .........
When Avril Haines, Director of National Intelligence, announced during Event 201’s pandemic drill in 2019 that they would “flood the zone with trusted sources,” few understood this preview of coordinated narrative control. Within months, we watched it unfold in real time—unified messaging across all platforms, suppression of dissent, and coordinated narrative control that fooled much of the world.
But not everyone stayed fooled forever. Some saw through it immediately, questioning every aspect from day one. Others thought it was just incompetent government trying to protect us. Many initially accepted the precautionary principle—better safe than sorry. But as each policy failure pointed in the same direction—toward more control and less human agency—the pattern became impossible to ignore. Anyone not completely subsumed by the system eventually had to confront its true purpose: not protecting health or safety, but expanding control.
Once you recognize this pattern of deception, two questions should immediately arise whenever major stories dominate headlines: “What are they lying about?” and “What are they distracting us from?” ..............
The template is consistent: Saturate media with emotional spectacles while advancing institutional agendas with minimal scrutiny. ........................
Most revealing is what they don’t cover. Notice how quickly stories disappear when they threaten institutional interests. Remember the Epstein client list? The Maui land grab? The mounting vaccine injuries? The silence speaks volumes. .....................
These decisions aren’t accidental—they result from media ownership, advertiser influence, and government pressure, ensuring the narrative remains tightly controlled. .......................
The hardest truth isn’t recognizing the programming—it’s confronting what it means for human consciousness and society itself. We’re watching real-time evidence that most human minds can be captured and redirected through sophisticated psychological operations. Their thoughts aren’t their own, yet they’d die defending what they’ve been programmed to believe. ......................
If a large chunk of the public can be persuaded that a man who is incapable of finding the door is “sharp as a tack,” they can be made to believe a lot of other things too...
Only in the world of political make-believe we inhabit in the West would The Wall Street Journal’s account of Biden’s years-long cognitive decline, and its concealment by his officials, count as a scoop.
And only in a world in which the billionaire-owned media alone constructs and polices what counts as reality would the WSJ be able to run this story without also being expected to consider what it signifies about America’s professed democracy.
The emperor, we are now told, was naked all along. How did it take more than four years for the fearless, tenacious billionaire-owned media to notice? ...........
But more significant than the media deceptions are the fact that much of the public fell for them, not once but over and over again: day after day, week after week, month after month, year after year.
Why? Because far too many of us are in the grip of the West’s propaganda system. We believe that the billionaire-owned media is to be trusted, that it serves the public good, not private wealth.
If a large chunk of the public can be persuaded that a man who is incapable of finding the door through which he’s supposed to leave is “sharp as a tack”, then why would they not also believe that the United States is promoting democracy as it has laid waste to the Middle East over the past two decades to control the region’s oil?
Or that Washington is seeking peace for the world and Ukraine by arming it with ever-more offensive weapons against a nuclear-armed Russia so that the U.S. can place ballistic missiles on Moscow’s doorstep?
Or that the U.S. wants a ceasefire in Gaza even as it supplies the munitions, intelligence and diplomatic cover for Israel to carry out a genocide there?
The problem is that, subjected to a lifetime of elite propaganda, many are readier to believe that very propaganda than the evidence of their own own eyes. They are truly hypnotised. ..........
Does the U.S. run by itself? Does it need a president? Or is the president nothing more than a figurehead for a permanent bureaucracy that expects to wield power from the shadows, unobserved by voters and unaccountable to them? Is the U.S. a democracy, or is the democracy just a facade behind which a wealth elite maintains its power?
Biden has given us the answer. Were you listening?
QOTW:
Taibbi: If you’re in the growing population of Americans that is tired of being fed streams of sensational and inexplicable news stories, while authorities that appear to delight in public confusion sit back with buttoned lips, yesterday might have been the last straw. We are officially Gaslit Nation
Fun Fare:
Pics of the Week: