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Monday, April 14, 2025

Dan, I Allegedly, "America Is One Big Yard Sale Now! Is This the End?"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 4/14/25
"America Is One Big Yard Sale Now!
 Is This the End?"
America is turning into one giant yard sale, and I’m here to break it all down for you! From used cars to designer jackets, thrift shops to Poshmark, people are ditching new purchases and opting for second-hand savings. The economy is shifting fast - mall closures, defaulted loans, and EV vans sitting unsold… it’s all connected. If you’re not ready for this ‘yard sale economy,’ you’re going to be left behind. I’ll share real stories, like scoring a $1,750 Valentino jacket for 90% off or how you can pick up boats, trucks, and even delivery vans for a song. Plus, we’ll discuss why Portland’s luxury real estate market is a disaster, and how scams like bogus PPP loans are catching up with people. It’s all happening right now, and this is your chance to stay ahead of the curve!"
Comments here:

"How It Really Is"

 

Bill Bonner, "Gold's Rules"

Jesus enters Jerusalem
"Gold's Rules"
by Bill Bonner

‘Would you betray the Son of Man with a kiss?’
- Jesus, to Judas Iscariot

Youghal, Ireland - "When we left you last week, word had just come that China responded to Trump’s ‘reciprocal’ tariff salvo, with reciprocity of its own. Reuters: "Beijing on Friday increased its tariffs on U.S. imports to 125%, hitting back against U.S. President Donald Trump's decision to hike duties on Chinese goods to 145%, raising the stakes in a trade war that threatens to up-end global supply chains.

The hike comes after the White House kept the pressure on the world's No.2 economy and second-biggest provider of U.S. imports by singling it out for an additional tariff increase, having paused most of the "reciprocal" duties imposed on dozens of other countries. "The U.S. imposition of abnormally high tariffs on China seriously violates international and economic trade rules, basic economic laws and common sense and is completely unilateral bullying and coercion," [said China's Finance minister.]"

The best tactic for trade negotiators seems to be to pucker up and kiss Donald Trump’s derriere. As unpleasant as that must be, it is worth the shekels…or so they believe. But the Chinese, so far, have shown no intention of doing it. They are also considered a threat, because they are the most likely candidate to take America’s place as the world’s leading power.

Yesterday was Palm Sunday. It commemorates Christ’s triumphal entrance into Jerusalem, riding a donkey - a sign of humility and peace. We recalled Rep. Thomas Massie’s formula for US foreign policy: just follow the ‘Golden Rule,’ he said. Do unto others as we would have them do unto us.

In the year of our Lord, 2025, the US jefe doesn’t ride on a donkey. He is our Augustus, the Big Man in Washington. And the Chinese are probably right; even a quickie look at history, shows that neither China nor trade barriers have much to do with America’s loss of domestic manufacturing.

The US was at the peak of its manufacturing glory in the days after WWII. Small wonder. Japan was in smoking cinders - and occupied by the US Army. Germany was a smoldering ruin too - occupied by the US, the UK, France, and the Soviet Union. Britain was pretty much bankrupt. And France was settling scores from years of occupation and collaboration. It was inevitable that the US share of manufacturing would decline as these nations got back on their feet.

In 1948, approximately one of every three employed Americans was working in a factory. By 1978, only one of every five had a manufacturing job. This decline took place before China had exported a single gadget… before it took the ‘capitalist road’ and 22 years before it joined the World Trade Organization.

In this period - 1948-1978 - another reason for the decline in US manufacturing employment was probably just that fewer hands were needed. More and better machines meant less of a role for human labor. Machines became more powerful… more efficient… and more specialized.

Even in our limited experience, we went from small square bales of hay that we manually tossed onto a hay-wagon and then ricked up in the barn…to large round bales that human hands never touch. They are rolled onto the fields and then picked up by large tractors with telescopic loaders.

After the mid-‘70s came a different period. The US devalued the dollar in 1971 - refusing to pay its debts in gold. And then, it continued to devalue its currency for the next half century. A dollar in 1975 is worth only about 14 cents today - officially. In terms of gold, the decline was even greater. The price of an ounce of gold went from $160 in 1975 to more than $3,000 today. In other words, the dollar lost 94% of its purchasing power.

During the whole post-war period - roughly equal to our lifetimes - America’s manufacturing base contracted. China benefited from it; it didn’t cause it. And today only one in twelve American workers is in manufacturing.

If the US wanted to end its trade deficits…and boost domestic output… it could do so easily. It would simply go back to the ‘Golden Rule.’ An honest, gold-backed dollar would force the feds to balance its federal budget. . Thereafter, Americans couldn’t ‘print’ their way to wealth. They’d have to earn it…by producing things they could sell. And Thomas Massie’s ‘Golden Rule’ foreign policy would go a long way to making both the trade war and the trade deficit disappear."

Adventures With Danno, "What's New At Walmart?"

Full screen recommended.
Adventures With Danno, AM 4/14/25
"What's New At Walmart?"
Comments here:

Gregory Mannarino, "Get Out Of The Dollar, I Repeat, Get Out Of The Dollar Now"

Gregory Mannarino, AM 4/14/25
"Get Out Of The Dollar, I Repeat, 
Get Out Of The Dollar Now"
Comments here:

Jim Kunstler, "Systemic Considerations"

"Systemic Considerations"
by Jim Kunstler

“Every western society is confronted by an internal cultural conflict between those who 
wish to distance society from its civilizational legacy and those who wish to renew it.” 
- Frank Furedi

"Whatever else you think is happening in our world, contraction is the reality-based order-of-the-day, and everything else is downstream of that. The world has to get by with less. Nothing is going to fix this for everybody, though any number of schemes for redistributing what’s left will preoccupy the political mojo.

Right now, it’s tariffs, which are an attempt to restore industry ceded to the formerly left-behind people elsewhere in the world - taking back what we used to do. You are correct to wonder if this is even possible. The wish is surely understandable, if a bit fuzzy and over-simplified: to be again a nation of people occupied purposefully in the service of a bright future. Redemption stories are deeply appealing.

Many of us are aware that the hour for this is late. We’ve already lived through our decades of pumping cheap oil out of American ground, extracting the ores, fashioning the metal into I-beams and rails, raising the skyscrapers, laying the asphalt ribbons of highway, and strewing the landscape with split-level houses and strip-malls. Let’s not try a re-run of that.

What have we got to work with? An overly-complex matrix of systems and subsidiary systems operating on the verge of failure at excessive scale. For example, our cities and their asteroid belts of suburbs. The rot is already well-advanced in many of them from their centers outward, and we can see the process underway of strip-mining the remaining assets on-the-ground. Detroit, Cleveland, Baltimore... all occupy important geographically strategic sites. All are populated by dwindling societies of the cope-less, floundering their way out of existence. The geographies will abide without them. Others will come along and make something of these places’ virtues.

Agri-business is a method for strip-mining the value from what remains of our fruited plains. Everything about it is on an arc of failure, mortgaged to a futureless giantism. It seemed like a good idea at the time, and now that time has passed. The remaining soil itself can probably be rescued with heroic ant-like peasant labor over generations, which is to say a long and rather desperate project with no quick resolution. Even if Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., hadn’t come along to read America the riot act on food, anyone can see that the age of Froot Loops is drawing to a close.

Town and country, what human society at its best was composed of, has got to be rearranged. This is something that MAGA is not talking about. MAGA looks like it is seeking a reenactment of the years 1950 to 1964. That isn’t going to happen. What then? The tech broz propose something that looks like an A-I printed robotic future. They are drunk on their own Stanford University brand Kool-Aid, hallucinating a future that is little more than math dressed in spandex.

It is nearly impossible to grok the size of their vast fortunes, their billions. Thousands upon thousands of millions. From what? From marshaling squadrons of lawyers to draw up ownership documents for this and that venture enabling idiots with nose-rings to lecture each other about sexual etiquette on cell-phone screens? Warning: don’t become infatuated with singularities, journeys beyond biology and the ecology of planet earth. That’s a story for saps, cargo-cultists, the mentally ill.

Speaking of all that money, one thing you can surely depend on is a violent unwinding of global finance. The vast bottom of humanity already has plenty of nothing, and their abundance will abide. The hedge fund broz and related broz in the shared hallucinations of capital can make some provision for wealth preservation if they have half-a-brain. It’s the great wad in the middle that has the worst problem: they get wiped out and then they discover they have no Plan B. That’s when the fun really kicks off in America (and other sovereign lands, of course.)

Things are breaking ‘out there.’ The financial world’s feedstock is promises. In a trusting world, promises are a splendid technology. Promises allow you to borrow hamburgers from next Tuesday to have a hamburger today...and all else that follows from that. In a not-so-trusting world, promises go up in a vapor with the morning dew.

The folks in charge will attempt to manage the manifest contraction that is upon us by doing everything possible to pretend that it isn’t happening and to deflect from any signals that happen to get through the muzak they broadcast about blue skies and staying on the sunny side. If you are serious - even serious about the comedy sure to arise out of this - you will be prepared for all kinds of trouble: shortages, hunger, civil strife, cold, darkness, the absence of TikTok. Your number-one job is to stay sane. Now, go forth and revel in today’s fine spring weather, mindful of the many more fine days to come as history spools out."

"Economic Market Snapshot 4/14/25"

"Economic Market Snapshot 4/14/25"
Down the rabbit hole of psychopathic greed and insanity...
Only the consequences are real - to you!
"It's a Big Club, and you ain't in it. 
You and I are not in the Big Club."
- George Carlin
o
Market Data Center, Live Updates:
Comprehensive, essential truth.
Financial Stress Index

"The OFR Financial Stress Index (OFR FSI) is a daily market-based snapshot of stress in global financial markets. It is constructed from 33 financial market variables, such as yield spreads, valuation measures, and interest rates. The OFR FSI is positive when stress levels are above average, and negative when stress levels are below average. The OFR FSI incorporates five categories of indicators: creditequity valuationfunding, safe assets and volatility. The FSI shows stress contributions by three regions: United Statesother advanced economies, and emerging markets."
Job cuts and much more.
Commentary, highly recommended:
"The more I see of the monied classes,
the better I understand the guillotine."
- George Bernard Shaw
Oh yeah... beyond words. Any I know anyway...
And now... The End Game...
o

Sunday, April 13, 2025

Jeremiah Babe, "I'm Seeing Symptoms Of A Bad Economy"

Full screen recommended.
Jeremiah Babe, 4/13/25
"I'm Seeing Symptoms Of A Bad Economy"
Comments here:

Musial Interlude: Alan Parsons Project, “Ammonia Avenue”

Full screen recommended.
Alan Parsons Project, “Ammonia Avenue”

"A Look to the Heavens"

"Have you ever seen the Pleiades star cluster? Even if you have, you probably have never seen it as large and clear as this. Perhaps the most famous star cluster on the sky, the bright stars of the Pleiades can be seen without binoculars from even the depths of a light-polluted city. With a long exposure from a dark location, though, the dust cloud surrounding the Pleiades star cluster becomes very evident.
The featured exposure covers a sky area several times the size of the full moon. Also known as the Seven Sisters and M45, the Pleiades lies about 400 light years away toward the constellation of the Bull (Taurus). A common legend with a modern twist is that one of the brighter stars faded since the cluster was named, leaving only six of the sister stars visible to the unaided eye. The actual number of Pleiades stars visible, however, may be more or less than seven, depending on the darkness of the surrounding sky and the clarity of the observer's eyesight."

"The Cost of Living in America Is Making People Give Up"

Full screen recommended.
Michael Bordenaro, 4/13/25
"The Cost of Living in America
 Is Making People Give Up"
"The cost of living in America is making people give up because wages have not been keeping up with inflation and the spike and the cost of living. We have seen over the past five years. And the most recent consumer sentiment survey from the university of Michigan is confirming that people are giving up. We are now seeing the lowest reading that we saw since the pandemic when the world was in complete turmoil and every day was unknown."
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"A Wave Of Panic Buying Has Suddenly Erupted At Retailers All Over America"

Full screen recommended
Epic Economist, 4/13/25
"A Wave Of Panic Buying Has Suddenly
 Erupted At Retailers All Over America"
"Do you remember the panic buying that we witnessed during the early days of the pandemic? It’s back, and I have a feeling that it is only going to intensify in the days ahead. As more Americans begin to realize that products made in China will soon more than double in price and that some may no longer be available at all, there will be a feverish rush to purchase Chinese-made goods. Ironically, this may actually give a short-term boost to the U.S. economy, and the economic numbers for the first half of this year may end up looking better than they otherwise would have."
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Gregory Mannarino, "Markets, A Look Ahead: This Will Be The Next Shoe To Drop"

Gregory Mannarino, 4/13/25
"Markets, A Look Ahead: 
This Will Be The Next Shoe To Drop"
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"America’s Economic Meltdown Has Begun - We’re Not Safe"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 4/13/25
"America’s Economic Meltdown Has Begun - 
We’re Not Safe"
"America’s financial crisis is here, and it’s hitting harder than ever! In today’s video, I’m diving into the shocking realities we’re facing - from fake student scams stealing billions to banks like Solid collapsing without warning. We’re seeing massive fraud, failing institutions, and layoffs across major sectors, and it’s just the beginning. Are your savings safe? What’s next for the economy? Let’s talk about it all! Plus, California’s out-of-control community college scandal, major data breaches at Bank of America, and the growing concerns around fintech companies like Chime and Solid. And yes, even the summer of 2025 is shaping up to be a nightmare with layoffs predicted to skyrocket. It’s time to prepare, protect yourself, and stay informed."
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The Daily "Near You?"

Valley Center, Kansas, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

The Poet: Grace Schulman, “Blessed Is The Light”

“Blessed Is The Light”

“Blessed is the light that turns to fire, and blessed the flames 
that fire makes of what is burns.
Blessed the inexhaustible sun, for it feeds the moon that 
shines but does not burn.
Praised be hot vapors in earth's crust, for they force up
mountains that explode as molten rock and cool like
love remembered.

Holy is the sun that strikes sea, for surely as water burns
life and death are one. Holy the sun, maker of change,
for it melts ice into water that bruises mountains, honing 
peaks and carving gullies.

Sacred is the mountain that promises permanence but
changes, planed by rockslides, cut by avalanche,
crushed, eroded, leeched for minerals. 

Sacred the rock that spins for centuries before it shines,
governed by gravity, burning into sight near earth's
orbit, for it rises falling, surviving night.

Behold the arcs your eyes make when you speak. Behold 
the hands, white fire. Branches of pine, holding votive
candles, they command, disturbed by wind, 
the fire that sings in me.

Blessed is whatever alters, turns, revolves, just as the gods
move when the mind moves them.
Praised be the body, our bodies, that lie down and open 
and rise, falling in flame.”

~ Grace Schulman

"So..."

"That life. This life. It looks as if you can have both. I mean, they're both right there, one on top of the other, and it looks as if they'll blend. But they never will. So, you take this thing. You take this thing you want, and you put it in a box and you close the lid. You can let your fingers trace the cracks, the places where the light gets in, the dark gets out, but the lid stays on. You don't look inside. You don't look at this thing you want so much, because you Can. Not. Have. It. So there's this box, you know, with the thing inside, and you could throw it away or shoot it into space; you could set it on fire and watch it burn to ashes, but really, none of that would make a difference, because you cannot destroy what you want. It only makes you want it more. So. You take this thing you want and you put it in a box and you close the lid. And you hold the box close to your heart, which is where it wants to go, and you pretend it doesn't kill you every time you feel yourself breathe."
- Megan Hart

"Contact"

"You're an interesting species, an interesting mix. You are capable of such beautiful dreams, and such horrible nightmares. You feel so lost, so cut off, so alone. Only you're not. See, in all our searching, the only thing that we've found that makes the emptiness bearable... is each other."  - "Contact"

Full screen recommended.
"Contact"
Ellie meets her long dead father after travel across space 
via an intricate transportation system of wormholes.

"Contact"
"We are not alone..." Two-time Academy Award-winner Jodie Foster Matthew McConaughey shine in this spellbinding drama of a dedicated astronomer's quest to make first Contact. Despite scorn from her colleagues, "Ellie" Arroway devoutly eavesdrops on the universe. And then, one fateful morning, she hears a cryptic signal. As the world's scientists scramble to decode "the message," Ellie must struggle to become Earth's single emissary on a journey beyond theory or experience. Seeking support, she turns to top-level government advisor, Palmer Joss . Separated by very different beliefs, they reunite in their passion for knowledge and truth. From Academy Award-winning director Robert Zemeckis and Pulitzer Prize-winning author Carl Sagan's best-seller comes the story of a visionary scientist's unshakable conviction that somewhere in this boundless universe an intelligence yearns for Contact."
Watch on YouTube, full screen recommended. 
Full movie free with ads:

"How it Really Is"

 

"The Lines Between Fact and Fiction Are Blurred... Here's Why You Should Question the Narrative"

"The Lines Between Fact and Fiction Are Blurred... 
Here's Why You Should Question the Narrative"
by Chris MacIntosh

"I believe we are at a critical juncture where it is imperative that we do NOT fall for the ruses being put in front of us. They are playing us. Almost everything in our news cycle is questionable. The lines between fact and fiction have become blurred. What our leaders and mainstream media peddle as the truth is often misinformation… and what is really the truth is smeared as misinformation. Furthermore, attention spans have narrowed so significantly that even when the truth is hard to cover up, the populace can be distracted with a barrage of information unrelated to the problematic topic. Who, for example, still asks the question: where is Epstein’s client list? 

In this never ending exhausting stream of "information," the brain tires and the default of emotions rises with logic taking a back door. It’s far easier to be emotional than logical. This plays into the hands of, in particular, our "elites" masquerading their greed as virtue.

Reality has been replaced by false messaging and imagery to such an extent that one cannot distinguish between fact and fiction. And as a result of this, everyone squabbles through the prism of their own confirmation biases and ideological impulses.

We are ruled by a nefarious group of individuals that have an unquenchable thirst for power, control, and money. They don’t care what they have to do to get it - and that includes tricking people into thinking they are the virtuous good guys who are here to keep us all safe. And tragically, millions of people are completely duped by this. What we have witnessed over the COVID response, the war in Ukraine, the Net-Zero agenda on climate change, and many other current issues is a movement of faux virtue that has been carefully crafted by corrupt politicians, messengers within legacy media outlets, greedy corporations, messiah delusional billionaires, and undemocratic technocrats to create the impression that they are the virtuous ones who are our friends.

These people are not our friends. Their primary objective is to hoodwink us into believing and complying to their virtue, but in reality, being tricked into giving away more freedoms, power, wealth, and assets to these virtue vultures.

The reality of all of this is that we are sleepwalking towards the biggest asset grab in the history of the planet. They are trying to destroy farms, land, businesses, freedoms, housing, individual wealth, travel, and own them or sell them off to the highest bidder. And at the same time, they are trying to ring-fence society into the entrapment of being controlled by data - either through health passports or the slow mission creep towards central banking digital currencies (CBDCs). It’s a giant asset grab of what we own and control. Of course, they frame all of this being in our best interests. But make no mistake - it’s the biggest swindle ever.

This gargantuan virtue con-trick also comes with a huge slice of authoritarianism. Anyone who sees through it, questions it, stands up to it, or shows opposition to it are immediately ridiculed and ostracized by the group-think mob.

Question the COVID response? You’re a "Covidiot."
Question the Ukraine war? Bugger off, you Putin apologist, you.
Question the Israeli war on the Palestinians? Anti-Semite!
Question Net-Zero? You must be a far right climate change denier!

This is gutter politics designed to shut down and undermine any opposition or questioning. It works if you allow them to emotionally engage you. Don’t fall for it! But not questioning the narrative is a huge form of denial. Because any government, technocrat, or institution that advocates medical discrimination, suppression of civil liberties and a transfer of wealth and public assets to the rich while the rest of society endures a cost of living crisis is not your friend.

Don’t be fooled by their virtue. It’s a giant con! In reality, they are indulging in a massive asset grab. They are treating the world as feudalism, but under the guise of "it’s for your own good" or "safety" faux virtue. A Machiavellian weapon that power hungry sociopaths use for control.

Fake virtue peddled by governments and authorities for mass compliance and social control is the oldest trick in the authoritarian playbook. Don’t fall for it. Because when totalitarianism arrives, it will come cloaked in fake virtue. And now we have not only Venezuela, but Bangladesh, too, and this brings me to US foreign policy, which is a giant Ponzi scheme.

A Ponzi Scheme: Here’s how it works in six steps:
• Buy foreign leaders who are willing to sell out their people and grant cheap resources/labor to the Empire.
• If leaders refuse, sanction them and stoke political discontent, murdering thousands. Use the result of crushing sanctions as "proof" their regimes are bad for their people.
• Fund fascist "revolutions" again and again and again, until a new leader emerges who will sell out their people to the Empire.
• In the meantime, this is funded by taxpayers in the Empire. Additionally, these parasites will take videos and photos of the dying impoverished people who are dying and being impoverished by the actions of these parasites… and beg you for charity to help these unfortunate people.
• Instigate proxy wars when any of the above doesn’t work. These proxy wars cause refugee crises flooding Western countries, which destroys the homogeneity of nation states, making them weaker.
• It is nothing but a hollow, superficial crime gang masquerading as a society that only cares about one thing: perpetually increasing its power and wealth, at the expense of all else."

"Trump Walking Back Tariffs Won’t Stop The Coming Stock And Bond Market Collapse"

"Trump Walking Back Tariffs Won’t Stop 
The Coming Stock And Bond Market Collapse"
by Alex

"The illusion of control is slipping. What we’re witnessing isn’t just a market wobble. It’s the prelude to something far more disruptive. As the façade of stability continues to crack, the choices before Washington are narrowing, and none of them lead to a soft landing.

Trump’s decision to pause tariffs for 90 days on April 9 sparked a brief rally. Stocks cheered. Yields didn’t. They kept rising. Stocks dropped the next day as soaring yields stole the spotlight. That detail alone should rattle anyone still clinging to the old rulebook. When both stocks and yields surge, it’s not optimism. It’s a red flag. The bond market is flashing warnings that confidence in U.S. fiscal management is rapidly eroding.

His plan, announced Saturday, to roll back tariffs on high-tech imports from China was framed by some as a step toward de-escalation. But the deeper issue remains. Every retreat in his tariff strategy means less revenue to offset a ballooning deficit. The numbers don’t lie, and the math isn’t working.

If yields continue rising Monday as he rolls back tariffs, it will confirm our worst fears - the market is losing confidence in how America handles its debt. A big rally in stocks, widely anticipated for Monday, could fizzle out fast as the week drags on.

Trump originally claimed his tariff strategy would generate $600 billion a year. Enough to shift the balance sheet of a country hemorrhaging over $2 trillion annually. That promise is now collapsing. Walking back tariffs might buy a rally, but it sells out the long-term fiscal picture. And it’s not just the revenue that’s vanishing. The political capital is, too. He’s simultaneously pushing for more tax cuts while reaffirming that Social Security and Medicare are untouchable. That leaves almost no room to maneuver. Cuts to discretionary spending are a political landmine. Slashing military outlays is unlikely. Balancing the budget is impossible.

And now Congress is making the 2017 tax cuts permanent. Another $3.5 trillion added to the debt over a decade. The cost of political convenience is compounding faster than interest itself.

Foreign creditors see this. They’re not just selling Treasuries because of trade tensions. They’re bailing because the math no longer works. You have a $7 trillion spending plan for fiscal year 2025, with over $1 trillion of that just for interest on the existing debt. Against this stands $5 trillion in tax revenue. Every dollar borrowed is a bet that inflation doesn’t blow up. That bet is increasingly looking like a sucker’s play.

The Federal Reserve, too, is trapped. They cut rates three times late last year to breathe life into the economy. It didn’t work. Yields kept rising anyway. That’s not how it’s supposed to work. Markets are signaling that the Fed has lost credibility. Monetary easing is being drowned out by structural deficits and runaway debt issuance.

Trump’s 90-day tariff pause with every country but China gave markets the second-best rally in history. But it also gave the bond market another reason to panic. A sugar rush that ends in a crash. Every walk-back in the trade war weakens the only leverage he had to rein in the deficit without touching sacred entitlements. Now, there’s no stick left. Only carrots and IOUs.

DOGE’s original goal to slash $2 trillion from the deficit has now shrunk to a meager $150 billion in cuts projected for 2026. It’s a rounding error. And yet even with this, projections show that debt growth under Trump 2.0 may still outpace the Biden era. The difference is that Biden didn’t pretend there was a way out. Trump is still pretending.

Foreigners are not stupid. They’re watching U.S. Treasuries lose their cash equivalent status in real time. A 30-year bond yielding 5 percent today could lose 15 percent of its value in just months if the panic accelerates. High yields mean Treasury prices are falling. That means U.S. debt isn’t a safe haven anymore. It’s a trap.

And so we arrive at a moment where Trump can’t cut, can’t spend, can’t tax, and can’t borrow without consequences. The Fed can’t print without igniting more inflation. The fiscal crisis is no longer in the future. It’s here. This is the endgame of decades of kicking the can.

An international bank has now warned of a crisis of confidence in U.S. dollar assets. That’s not a small warning. That’s an alarm bell echoing through the vaults of the global monetary system. If trust goes, so goes everything. The fiat system is naked. The mask has fallen. And the world is watching."

"Typical Moscow Shopping Mall Under Sanctions"

Full screen recommended.
Scottish Guy In Moscow, 4/13/25
"Typical Moscow Shopping Mall Under Sanctions"
"Today we are in Paveletskaya Plaza, my favorite mall. It’s located next to Paveletskaya Metro Station. Its is my favorite mall because it has Lime, my favorite clothing store. Sweet Lavka, the best place for non-Russian snacks. I’ll take you around and show you which shops are still here during sanctions."
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Finance Flow, 4/13/25
"15 American Shopping Malls 
That Are Shutting Down Forever"
Comments here:

"Doug Casey On Trump’s Tariffs and the Coming Economic Fallout"

"Doug Casey On Trump’s Tariffs 
and the Coming Economic Fallout"
by International Man

"International Man: President Trump recently imposed sweeping tariffs on much of the world, dubbing it Liberation Day. Trump declared: “It will forever be remembered as the day American industry was reborn, the day America’s destiny was reclaimed, and the day we began to make America wealthy again.” What’s your take?

Doug Casey: The left constantly calls Trump a liar. And frankly, things like this are why. It’s not that he lies more than a typical politician, or even lies intentionally. It’s that his use of words is so hyperbolic, so estranged from reality, that it makes him seem like a liar. It’s intellectually dishonest - dishonest, period - to falsely label something. It’s bizarre that Trump thinks his potentially catastrophic tariffs should be called Liberation Day.

The fact is that tariffs are taxes paid by the importer of goods. The money mostly goes out of the pockets of the buyers and, perhaps, to some limited degree, the sellers. It’s 100% certain that tariffs are a tax, and the money goes 100% into the pocket of the State.

Supply chains between countries have become so complex that there are very few items that are - or even could be - manufactured completely within any one country. Production of everything will drop worldwide.

Trump’s tariffs will both increase prices and cause shortages. They don’t, however, cause inflation. Inflation is caused strictly by an increase in the money supply. Tariffs don’t increase the money supply, but they do cause higher prices and a lower standard of living for both the buyer and the seller. Just as bad, as a tax, tariffs result in more dollars in the hands of the State.

The US imports something on the order of $3 trillion annually. Perhaps Trump thinks that a 10% tax will result in $300 billion of revenue for the government, and a 20% tariff will yield $600 billion. But this is incorrect because the higher costs will reduce the amount of trade proportionately. Not only can’t tariffs solve the government’s deficit problem, they’ll make it worse.

He says that the main object of the tariffs is to force investment in the US. And, of course, that may happen to some degree. He’s forgotten that when the US was prosperous before 1971, it never needed foreign investment. But it’s as if we trade Cadillacs to Guatemala in exchange for their bananas. Since they sell more bananas to us than we sell Cadillacs to them, it causes a huge deficit in their favor.

So let’s put a 100% duty on bananas. Problem solved. Guatemalans sell many fewer bananas, but now they can’t afford to buy any Cadillacs at all. Everybody gets hurt - banana producers, Cadillac producers, and most particularly, the people who use those products.

Trumpers will counter: “Well, the tariffs that we threatened to put on Colombian coffee forced their government to accept some refugees.” True, that worked. You can push around a small country, but you can’t push the world around. You can’t even push China around because China is the producer, and the US is the consumer. In the real world, those who produce things are in the driver’s seat, not a country that prints up fiat currency to enable its consumption.

I can’t be sure what Trump is really trying to do. He says things one week, then contradicts himself the next. And he does it constantly. Perhaps he wants to see the whole world go to zero tariffs, but I doubt it. He’s essentially a mercantilist; he seems to believe he can force the whole world to run a trade deficit with the US. He thinks trade is a “win-lose” proposition, and the whole world is “ripping off” the US. He must feel the Guatemalans are ripping off the US on bananas, for sure.

If his object is to get the world to zero tariffs, that would be great. But that’s not his object. And it won’t solve the huge and growing trade deficits that the US has had since about 1980. He might ask himself why the US had huge trade surpluses in the decades before 1980 when, coincidentally, the dollar was very strong. But he won’t. He’s not an introspective guy.

More likely, as the world’s economy declines, burdened by government debt, currency debasement, regulations, and taxes, Trump’s gigantic tariffs will make things much worse. The Smoot-Hawley Tariffs of 1929 made things much worse, causing unemployment both here and abroad. Trump’s tariffs are much higher, and trade is vastly more important than it was in the 1930s. They’re very, very bad news.

International Man: The Trump administration views the dollar as dangerously overvalued, blaming it for America’s deepening economic imbalances. Is weakening the US dollar a path to prosperity?

Doug Casey: This is further proof of Trump’s economic ignorance. Although I hasten to add that whatever he does, it’s almost certainly not as bad as what would’ve happened if Kamala had been elected.

Since 1971, the German mark, which basically was transformed into the Euro, has risen from 25 cents to 1.25 to the dollar and Germany’s trade surplus increased even as their currency quintupled in value. The same thing happened with the Yen, which increased in value from 360 to about 100 to the dollar. So much for “currency manipulation.”

The immediate and direct effect of devaluing your currency is that it reduces prices to foreigners so they can buy more. The profit of manufacturers, therefore, seems to go up. But it’s an illusion since profits only go up in terms of devalued currency.

Every country should want a strong currency. A strong currency allows it to buy foreign technology and raw materials, which it can’t do with a weak currency. A strong currency encourages saving, and the building of capital. A strong currency makes for a stable country, which makes for the confidence you need to invest domestically. It also allows foreign investment on advantageous terms.

A weak currency is not worth saving. It hurts domestic savers, makes capital accumulation difficult, makes the import of foreign tech unaffordable, leads to social instability, and discourages business and investment. A weak currency encourages debt and speculation. Keynesian and Marxist economists have these things completely backward.

Trump says he wants a weak dollar. One reason why is that the US is buried under many trillions of debt, and a weak dollar might appear to help the situation. But it won’t. Trying to inflate it away subtly amounts to theft. If a weak currency led to prosperity, then Zimbabwe and Argentina would be the most prosperous countries in the world.

International Man: What lessons can the US draw from Argentina’s experience with tariffs, protectionism, and a weakened currency?

Doug Casey: It’s well known that Argentina went from being one of the most prosperous and wealthiest countries in the world a hundred years ago, to turning into a total economic disaster with Peronist policies - which prominently included a weak currency and high tariffs.

The Argentine government put on tariffs to protect domestic industries. The result was that domestic industries were able to get away with crappy and overpriced products that were uncompetitive in the world market. Argentines suffered a much lower standard of living for many years as a result of the tariffs put on by their government. They put themselves under embargo with high tariffs, and that’s what Trump is promising to do with the US.

Furthermore, investors tend to stay away from countries where the rules can change arbitrarily, which was a major reason why Argentina got little investment. The same could happen to the US. The US has historically been better than most countries, but Trump’s protectionist and weak dollar policies could change that. Worse, if the economy goes sideways, the Democrats could be re-elected. That’s a scary but real prospect. Hopefully, Trump’s efforts at domestic deregulation will succeed as a counterbalance.

International Man: If Trump truly wanted to revive American industry and boost the economy, what could he actually do?

Doug Casey: Trump would radically and permanently reduce the size of the State. DOGE is great, but you don’t want to just make government more efficient. DOGE needs to pull most of it out by the roots and sow Agent Orange where it grew.

He would radically cut taxes, but that can only be done if he radically cuts spending - which seems unlikely. He would radically cut government borrowing because when the government borrows in the market, it only drives interest rates higher or sells its debt to the Fed, which debases the currency. But since spending is unlikely to be cut - especially as the Greater Depression unfolds - neither will borrowing. A gold currency would kill inflation - but that’s impossible unless gold reprices to $30,000 or more.

He should stop threatening foreigners. Trump has this strange idea that foreigners are ripping off America. Saying and believing things like that only creates antagonism. He’d do well to follow Thomas Jefferson’s dictum - be a friend to all but an ally of none. It doesn’t matter if Israel wants the US to bomb the Houthis and Iran; it’s not in our interest.

Trump has said, “We are going to charge countries for doing business in our country, taking our jobs, wealth, and a lot of things that they have been taking over the years.” It’s just factually untrue and goes a long way toward turning the world into an antagonist or even an enemy.

International Man: The stock market has tanked since Trump introduced his tariffs. What are the investment implications of what comes next?

Doug Casey: Small countries selling to the US can be intimidated and will do as they’re told. But large countries like China will put on counter tariffs. He can expect that the shelves of Walmart and other retailers in the US will be emptied as Chinese goods no longer enter the US.

The funny thing about this is that at the same time as Trump is creating more distortions by putting on tariffs, which always make things worse, DOGE is getting rid of distortions. While DOGE is excellent, it will necessarily hurt businesses that were profiting from those distortions. So businesses can expect bad news coming and going, as it were.

I can’t help but be very pessimistic about the stock market as the Trump regime creates chaos. Some of that chaos is wonderful and intentional, like destroying DEI, ESG, Wokism, and the WEF-approved world order. Other things will be collateral damage. What things? Those are what Donald Rumsfeld - if anyone remembers him - called unknown unknowns. And two things that markets don’t like are chaos and lots of unknown unknowns, which is why I continue holding gold."

Saturday, April 12, 2025

"Scott Ritter & Larry C. Johnson: Ignore Iran at Your Peril: Bone-Chilling Lessons For Russia & Yemen"

Dialogue Works, 4/12/25
"Scott Ritter & Larry C. Johnson: Ignore Iran at Your Peril: 
Bone-Chilling Lessons For Russia & Yemen"
Comments here:

Jeremiah Babe, "Is The World About To Sell America? This Could Get Ugly"

Jeremiah Babe, 4/12/25
"Is The World About To Sell America? 
This Could Get Ugly"
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Musical Interlude: Deuter, "Sea and Silence"

Deuter, "Sea and Silence"

"A Look to the Heavens"

"Would the Rosette Nebula by any other name look as sweet? The bland New General Catalog designation of NGC 2237 doesn't appear to diminish the appearance of this flowery emission nebula, at the top of the image, atop a long stem of glowing hydrogen gas. Inside the nebula lies an open cluster of bright young stars designated NGC 2244.
These stars formed about four million years ago from the nebular material and their stellar winds are clearing a hole in the nebula's center, insulated by a layer of dust and hot gas. Ultraviolet light from the hot cluster stars causes the surrounding nebula to glow. The Rosette Nebula spans about 100 light-years across, lies about 5000 light-years away, and can be seen with a small telescope towards the constellation of the Unicorn (Monoceros)."