Kmiec Seriously Injured

Posted by Bill on Aug 27th, 2010
2010
Aug 27

The U.S. Ambassador to Malta, the turncoat and opportunist, Douglas Kmiec, was seriously injured in a single car crash in Calabasas.  A nun was killed when the car rolled and a Monsignor was also critically injured.  The cause of the crash is not known.

Kmiec, a law professor and one time dean of the Columbus School of Law at the Catholic University of America, turned his back on morality by supporting the infanticide supporting Barack Obama for President.  He stumped hard for him during the 2008 campaign.  For his soul, Kmiec was awarded the position of Ambassador to Malta by Barack H. Obama.

I Think I Just Puked in My Mouth

Posted by Bill on Aug 26th, 2010
2010
Aug 26

This is the biggest pile of rubber dog crap I have ever laid eyes on.  Please read, then laugh…after you have finished vomiting.

Was that an iceberg?

Posted by Karl on Aug 21st, 2010
2010
Aug 21

Stop me if this sounds familiar:

Now few people recognize the necessary implications of the economic statements they are constantly making.  When they say that the way to economic salvation is to increase credit, it is just as if they said that the way to economic salvation is to increase debt:  these are different names for the same thing seen from opposite sides.  When they say that the way to prosperity is to increase farm prices, it is like saying that the way to prosperity is to make food dearer to the city worker.  When they say that the way to national wealth is to pay out government subsidies, they are in effect saying that the way to national wealth is to increase taxes.  When they make it a main objective to increase exports, most of them do not realize that they necessarily make it a main objective ultimately to increase imports.  When they say, under nearly all conditions, that the way to recovery is increase wage rates, they have found only another way of saying that the way to recovery is to increase costs of production.

Henry Hazlitt, Economics in One Lesson, 1946.

Karl writes a free speech for the president

Posted by Karl on Aug 19th, 2010
2010
Aug 19

Good evening America,

Over the course of the last few weeks, the news has focused on the proposed mosque near Ground Zero.  Ground Zero, of course, possesses a tremendous amount of significance to Americans as the place where nineteen Muslim extremists conspired to kill thousands of Americans on September 11, 2001.  Such an act can never be forgotten.  Likewise, the building a mosque mere steps from the site of such a tremendous evil, conjures the prospect that it is being done for reasons that are less than pure.  I cannot say, from my vantage point what the motives are of those who wish to build a mosque in this location in a city that already contains so many hundreds of mosques.  But I can say without reservation that the appearance that it is calculated to reinforce and celebrate that act of terrorism is undeniable.  Consequently, I cannot personally support the building of a mosque on that property.

Furthermore, I cannot imagine that economically such an endeavor is wise.  I don’t know for sure how things are in New York, but in my hometown of Chicago, I know that such a project would require the cooperation of the unions.  I can’t believe things are much different in New York City.  Union members are patriotic Americans and their personal beliefs are sure to run contrary to the building of such a monument to anti-Americanism.  As advice to those who seek to build such a mosque, I can only imagine that the cost will exceed your estimates by at least six-fold, and the length of time you believe the mosque will take to erect will be multiplied by five.  There is little that the government can, or in most places will, do to sanction unions.  These calculations should be taken into account by those who wish to build such a mosque as it may prove a foolhardy project with little hope for relief from local government.

That said, there is nothing that government can do to obstruct the project.  The Constitution prohibits the federal government from interfering in the exercise of one’s religion. Our Supreme Court has extended that prohibition to the States.  The plans for the mosque are perfectly legal constitutionally and there is little that government can do to obstruct it.  All faiths are welcome in this country, which is part of what make America the greatest nation on earth.  We look forward to the day when Muslims, Christians, Jews, and all the religions of the world, worship side-by-side in perfect peace.  America is the only place on earth where that dream is obtainable.

God Bless America,

And good night.

Consumers got Bernanke Scratching Head

Posted by Karl on Aug 2nd, 2010
2010
Aug 2

I recently finished reading Thomas E. Woods’ book, Meltdown.  This was my first exposure to the Austrian School of economics.  Fantastic.  It made this passage from the Financial Times’ website this morning make perfect sense.  The article was entitled: Bernanke faces US growth mysteries.

It begins as follows:

If Ben Bernanke, Federal Reserve chairman, expected the release of second-quarter growth data to clear up the “unusually uncertain” outlook for the US economy, then he will have been sorely disappointed.

On the surface, the numbers were easy to interpret. Growth over the previous quarter at an annualised rate fell from 3.7 per cent in the first three months of this year to 2.4 per cent in the second. That fits with many other signs that the recovery is slowing down.

The details, however, hide a series of economic mysteries – about how fast the economy can grow, how weak it actually is, and what US consumers have been up to for the past few years – that policymakers will have to solve.

Let us take a moment to focus on that last mystery, and a mystery it most certainly is.  The reason Bernanke cannot tell what consumers have been up to is because those very measures that might have revealed their doings are the very same ones that the Fed is constantly tinkering with.  Consequently, the true activities of consumers is obscured by the Fed’s interventions.  Let us take one example.

According to the Austrian School, interest rates are not artificial constructs, but are an inherent element of the market.  Interest rates convey information.  For instance, when a large number of depositors put money into a bank (that is, they opt to save instead of to consume), the bank, being flush with cash, will lower interest rates to encourage investors to take out loans.  This makes sense in an elementary economics sort of way.  The supply of loanable money is great, therefore the price of that money will sink until it meets its corresponding level of demand from those disposed to purchase it.  Therefore, in a market free from external interference,  low interest rate tells businesses that consumers, by and large, are sitting on the sidelines saving their money for future purchases.  Conversely, a high interest rate tells businesses that consumers are not saving, but are consuming immediately available goods.

It should be plainly evident that artificial interference with the interest rate will obscure the true nature of consumer saving or spending.  This will, of course, mislead businesses into allocating resources into long-term or short-term projects according to the nature of the distortion.  Of course, that is precisely what Bernanke and the Fed do – they tinker with interest rates.  When he later finds it a mystery what consumers are up to, that can hardly be surprising.  Indeed, it was his own actions that made him ignorant.  That fact, in itself, should be ample argument that the Federal Reserve should be abolished.  Its own activities interfere with the market to such a degree that their actions can only ever be based on guesswork.  They are no more competent to solve a financial mess than a monkey shaking a Magic Eight Ball. And whatever solutions they propose should carry as much weight – even less, when one considers that the solutions that they proposed are the very ones that created the problem in the first place.

Puzzled by the fact that even when they thought they had a handle on the numbers for 2007, 2008, and 2009, those numbers are continually revised downwards.  First, this fact strongly suggests that the numbers have been massaged along the way.  Second, this also suggests that the government interference in the market plays a role in obscuring the nature of the transactions even after the fact so that unraveling what actually happened is unnecessarily complicated.  To my mind, this strongly suggests that government officials are trying to fit the outcomes into predetermined narratives that are not up to the task of accounting for these outcomes.  In short, the narrative is wrong; the expectations are fantasy; and the continued course of action should be obviously misdirected.  Instead, they scratch their “brilliant” heads and say things like, “‘The recession was un­usually long and unusually severe and has proved unusually resistant to unusual amounts of stimulus,’ says Neil Soss, chief economist at Credit Suisse in New York.”

Perhaps its because we are trying to cure a recession caused by excessive spending and regulation by increased spending and regulation.  Consider these paragraphs:

There are two ways to read the revisions. One is that the economy is even further from using its full capacity than previously believed – an argument for more easing by the Fed. The other is that the economy’s capacity to grow is less than thought.

Paul Ashworth, senior US economist at Capital Economics, says he leans towards the latter explanation because inflation numbers remain the same. Less growth for the same inflation suggests a lower potential to grow.

Another question is quite how weak the economy actually is. Purchases by US consumers and businesses grew a lot faster in the second quarter than in the first – up by 4.1 per cent from 1.3 per cent – it is just that many of them came from abroad.

Ignoring the impossibility of further easing when the Fed is damn near at zero percent as it is, it is unbelievable that one conclusion that can be reached is that the economy is “even further from using its full capacity than previously believed,” necessitating even more destructive distortion to temporarily prop up a market that is sorely out of whack.   In a sense the statement that the economy is not at full capacity is quite true, the economy has been bamboozled into allocating its resources into projects that are unsustainable because of a lack of savings, while other near-term (obtainable) projects are ignored.  A properly allocated economy would indeed run at a fuller capacity, by responding to the true nature of consumer demands.  Concededly, many of those producers who engaged in long-term projects, for which there are too few resources to complete, will find themselves facing bankruptcy.  But, these are the oats that are sown by massive government disruption of the free market.  Those companies (and their stockholders) will inevitably feel the pinch for their (inadvertent) mismanagement.  But instead of blaming the directors of the company, they should cast their eyes toward Washington.