Is It Too Late?

Note: Behind the green door, there is a post about Russell Brand and what his case suggests about the state of the law, a post about using AI as an editorial team for the posts on this site, and the Sunday podcast. Subscribe here or here.


One of the questions rarely asked regarding the ongoing American crisis is whether we have passed the point where reform is possible. Few want to consider that possibility for obvious reasons. If reform through the regular political process is no longer possible, then only unpleasant alternatives remain. One of those alternatives is some form of collapse. Like Gorbachev’s Soviet Union, America may be headed over the cliff with nothing to prevent it.

Last week, we caught a possible glimpse of the answer. Trump rolled out his tariff regime, and the stock markets went wild. It was not just a global selloff; volatility was off the charts, which is worse than the decline itself. A steady selloff occurs during a correction when markets are overbought. A chaotic, erratic decline signals panic setting in among the algorithms. It means their code cannot interpret the conditions they are programmed to use for trading.

Just as things began to stabilize, the bond market started to “get the yips”, as Trump noted on Thursday. No one in the mass media understands this, so they kept claiming the bond market crashed, which is far from accurate. The issue was that market players were dumping treasuries. It is unclear why, for instance, the Japanese central bank was selling treasuries. This uncertainty is just as worrisome as the actual dumping, so everyone was spooked.

Typically, the reason for dumping treasuries is a liquidity issue, either in the system as a whole or in a segment of it. In this case, the consensus is that hedge funds were raising cash due to the market decline. That could be true, but it is also possible the basis trade was unraveling. This is when hedge funds bet on tiny changes in treasury yields—a major way they generate profits within the system.

Here is how it works: Imagine you believe the value of an asset like a treasury will decline over the next six months. You hold this asset, but it is collateral for another transaction. You cannot sell it now, so you agree to sell it in the future at the current price rather than the market price at that time. If the price surges, you lose potential profits when the contract expires, but if the price drops as expected, you are protected from those losses.

There is much more to it, but that is the gist, and this happens across markets for everything, even treasuries, which have been very stable. Even earning a tiny percentage on these transactions can net millions for a fund handling tens of billions in trades. In fact, the financial system relies on clever quants coding models to exploit these small discrepancies between current and future prices to generate wealth.

When Trump’s tariffs caused this system to go haywire, triggering a panicked demand for cash, he had no choice but to back off. It was not that the bond market revolted due to a philosophical disagreement with the policy. Rather, this massive system is a house of cards that cannot tolerate even minor disruptions. Trump’s tariff regime should not have caused chaos, but the fact that it did suggests even small changes are no longer viable.

That is not the end of it. The central bank could mitigate this by injecting enough cash to resolve the liquidity issue. In fact, it can inject enough to counter deliberate revolts. You cannot beat the Fed. This should have happened last week, but Jerome Powell either refused to act or was too inept to grasp the situation. He has been the worst Fed chair since Arthur Burns, so incompetence is a strong possibility.

That said, the Fed held an emergency meeting just before Trump announced his tariff plan last week, likely in response to it. Given the Federal Reserve’s composition and its attitudes toward the American public, it is possible they intended to undermine the process. The Bank of England toppled Liz Truss’s Tory government, so it is not unthinkable. The head of the Bank of England at the time was Mark Carney, who is now the dictator of Canada.

This would imply that normalizing the American economy is no longer possible, at least not through standard political processes, because the entrenched interests profiting from the system will not allow it. That is what we will discover in the next ninety days as the Trump team navigates this challenge. Bessent has suggested they will use this time to strike individual deals with countries rather than unilaterally imposing a tariff schedule.

Of course, they could also have Jerome Powell killed, thus sending a message to the parasite class that they must fall in line or else. They never take no for an answer, so this approach never works. The Russians had to execute a lot of oligarchs before the rest finally fell in line with the new program. Falling in line usually meant fleeing the country with their cash. Maybe it does not have to come to that with the bankers, but last week was not a positive sign.

What the events of last week show is that normalizing American economic policy is not going to be easy within the current process. It also suggests it may not be possible without radical approaches to implementation. We may have reached the point where even with enough coercion, the system cannot be reformed. We may have blown past the point of no return as far as the political and economic order, so what lies ahead is chaos no matter what is done.


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G Lordon Giddy
G Lordon Giddy
Reply to  thezman
1 day ago

I look forward to that podcast. Christian Zionism is a pestilence upon the United States, say no more than Mike Huckabee as ambassador to Israel.
Then the traditional mainline churches counter Zionism with rainbow flags and female ministers.
It’s tough being a christian now days.

george 1
george 1
Reply to  G Lordon Giddy
1 day ago

Ain’t it the truth!

Dutchboy
Dutchboy
Reply to  G Lordon Giddy
1 day ago

On the other hand, it is a good example of how bad theology has bad real world implications. The thought is the father to the deed.

NoName
NoName
Reply to  Dutchboy
21 hours ago

I’ve got a serious question here; I’m not trying to muddy the waters; I’m honestly curious. We know that the s0d0mites have controlled the RC monasteries for decades now [and arguably for upwards of a millennium or more], but I never hear anything about the question of bulldykery in the RC nunneries. It strikes me that maybe 2 or 3 out of 1000 White females in the 21st Century might walk away from Cluster B and instead embrace the cloistered lifestyle of the nunnery. And it could be more like 2 or 3 out of 1,000,000. Obviously the priests are… Read more »

Last edited 21 hours ago by NoName
Miforest
Miforest
Reply to  NoName
15 hours ago

Frankie is trying but running out of time to ordain women. The arc also will not bless same same sex weddings either.

NoName
NoName
Reply to  Miforest
13 hours ago

If the s0d0mites in the monasteries are fisting one another on a regular basis, then would it not stand to reason that the bulldykes in the nunneries would also be fisting one another on a regular basis? I hate to be so dadgum almost nihilistically cynical about this stuff, but knowing what I know about Cluster B, it’s very very difficult for me to imagine hardly any moderin women whomsoever voluntarily walking away from the Cluster B Pandemic and choosing instead a classical [i.e. utterly asexual] lifestyle in a nunnery. My gut instinct is that, at this point, Modernity [particularly… Read more »

TempoNick
TempoNick
Reply to  NoName
9 hours ago

I was once at a baptism, sat through the service beforehand. I almost burst out in laughter whenever I heard the falsetto-voiced closet case priest speak. Then when my parents sold their house 30 years ago, they sold it to who they believed to be were two sisters. Unbeknownst to my parents, the two sisters also brought along their defrocked pedo priest brother to live with them. Oh and there was this story about a Greek Orthodox congregation in Mansfield, Ohio. I guess they hired a former Catholic priest who was also a pedo. What were they thinking? (In his… Read more »

roo_ster
Member
Reply to  thezman
1 day ago

Funny thing is, folks decry how pozzed religious orgs have become, but it has been the traditionalist/right-est denominations that held out the longest. Much longer than govt, academia, corporations, etc. Funny that they are now capitulating to the PWC just as their most rock-ribbed parishioners are turning hard(er) right. RW prots will come out OK, forming new orgs out of the ashes. LW prots will die out. RCath may keep on zombie-walking.

Luther's Turd
Reply to  roo_ster
1 day ago

Pretty narrow view Mr. Rooster. Our Trad Cath community continues to grow because it rejects being forced to conform with trends. Some things are universal.
You may disagree with our apologetics, but it’s difficult to ignore our long view of healthy, homogeneous societies not smitten with the latest fashion.

Luther’s Turd

roo_ster
Member
Reply to  Luther's Turd
1 day ago

I have experience with RC organizations, to include current day. To include some trad-caths. I will stand by my evaluation. The most lively portions are those trad-cath bits. They will more or less split or be expelled, draining what little life is left. I wish it were otherwise, but that is how see it playing out.

NoName
NoName
Reply to  roo_ster
22 hours ago

Serious question here; we know the monasteries are 100% s0d0mite, and have been for decades now, but are the nunneries also 100% bulldyke? It’s a serious question; I’m not trying to start a fight with anyone. I’m just trying to imagine grown women in the 21st Century living a completely cloistered lifestyle, with no Cluster B adulteration of their personalities whatsoever. I can’t imagine that there are more than vanishingly small percentages of 21st Century wahmen who would willingly sign up for a life in the absence of Cluster B. I would guess maybe 2 or 3 out of 1000… Read more »

Miforest
Miforest
Reply to  roo_ster
15 hours ago

Keep praying for us

NoName
NoName
Reply to  roo_ster
1 day ago

“PWC” == ?????

Thanks.

roo_ster
Member
Reply to  NoName
1 day ago

Post WW2 Consensus, goes by several names.

Bilejones
Member
Reply to  roo_ster
21 hours ago

Is one of those names Price-Waterhouse-Coopers?

David Wright
Member
Reply to  thezman
1 day ago

As far as Catholicism goes just attend a few on a irregular basis and you will get a pretty good idea of where we are at. Sponsoring a family member for Confirmation and did a six hour retreat. Statistics show none or few will return after ceremony. Average age is thirteen which means their parents don’t go now.

Dr_Mantis_Tobbogan_MD
Member
Reply to  David Wright
1 day ago

What a shame. Much of that can be blamed on the Antipope Bergoglio, who has desecrated altars with graven idols such as Pachamama and his gravely erroneous statements on the faith. Pope Benedict didn’t properly resign and without a resignation or death of a pontiff, you can’t have a legitimate conclave. The odd thing is the antichurch and the real church exist in the same liturgical space. It’s up to the laity, not the bishops or priests, to let the hierarchy know that going against scripture and canon law being changed on a whim to conform to the “modern” day… Read more »

ray
ray
Reply to  Dr_Mantis_Tobbogan_MD
1 day ago

Pachamama lol. People just gots to have them their goddess woman worship, no matter what. Might as well be on Near East mountaintops three millennia past, sowing the groves with idols.

‘the Lord didn’t want us all mixed together in an unhappy conglomeration of a country’

Yep. He’s a nationalist. A Christian Nationalist! so no wonder the Regime hates Him and his.

The Tower of Babel on the Shinar Plains was a hi-tech contraption that got rapidly decommissioned . . . so now it’s Musk and Thiel contacting the stars, round ‘n around, nothing new under the sun.

ray
ray
Reply to  thezman
1 day ago

State of Christian churches in the U.S. is no mystery. Although it is a Mystery. :O) Largely gone the way of surrounding culture, because that’s how most folks do, in every age. Women and ducats running the show. Meaning homos good, Diversity good, guitars and bands, no hair coverings, no modest dress, charismatic and personality-cult preechers etc. More like going to the fair, really. Speaking of Carneys and Marks. As far as spiritual entities overshadowing the nation, that’d be the ‘female adversary’ or ‘female rival wife’ [Strong’s Hebrew 6869] cited in the first passage of Daniel 12 and commonly called… Read more »

Dr_Mantis_Tobbogan_MD
Member
Reply to  ray
1 day ago

It’s feminized, what I call “happy-clappy-rock-band-Jesus church” that has neither the Gospel or any redemption. It’s just a useless multi-purpose center with no Eucharist and ridiculous “praise” music that is trite and silly. And the preaching. Oh, Jesus is love. No condemnation of sin. Just love and acceptance and all that. And oh, by the way, don’t dare be a racist. And love the 30-member family of Indians who worship 30 “deities” or the Musloids with their burkas as your neighbors. Love the disgusting sodomite or the weirdo dude wearing a dress because of Jesus. Never mind that Jesus would’ve… Read more »

usNthem
usNthem
Reply to  thezman
1 day ago

Oh, the good old “Judeo-Christian” moralities – how awesome is that?

Gideon
Gideon
1 day ago

The real problem for Trump’s proposed reforms may be that they are simply be too little, too late. A border wall would have fixed immigration in the 1980s. It’s mostly irrelevant in a country with a majority foreign school-age population. Tax cuts, which were good for the economy in the Kennedy era, merely worsen the fiscal overhang we have now. Deciding China is our primary adversary could have been viable in the 1990s. Launching a trade war against them after we’ve shipped all our manufacturing over there is just plain dumb. Increased defense spending was at worst superfluous in the… Read more »

Dutchboy
Dutchboy
Reply to  Gideon
1 day ago

“a Brazilian population relying on Argentinian finances.” Ouch, ouch, ouch……

3g4me
3g4me
Reply to  Gideon
1 day ago

Well said. Agree x 1000. It’s way too late to ‘fix’ the system, and will (unfortunately) require sterner medicine if Western Civililzation is to survive.

Steve
Steve
Reply to  3g4me
1 day ago

True. Unless you consider the “sterner medicine” to be a part of the needed reform, c.f., Pinochet’s Helicopter Rides.

Gideon
Gideon
Reply to  Steve
1 day ago

Paradoxically, Pinochet did little to inoculate his country from the wokeness of its current politics. But then he also shut down the antisemitic press in Chile, so there’s that, as well.

Range Front Fault
Range Front Fault
Reply to  3g4me
1 day ago

“Well said. Agree x 1000. It’s way too late to ‘fix’ the system.” Period! All of the above, AND: “We are evolved to be group-oriented, but Darwinian selection pressures have collapsed since the Industrial Revolution, and so a significant component of the Woke are high in mutational load. This is congruent with Woke being, on average, both mentally and physically unhealthy, and they display various specific markers of mutation. “ –Ed Dutton This applies to much greater numbers than just the Woke. Women are at war with their own bodies. Tons of people are so mentally ill they believe they… Read more »

Mr. House
Mr. House
Reply to  Gideon
1 day ago

Right you are with everything you stated, so when they state they’re doing something for x reason, well you have to read between the lines. Ford and GM stopped manufacturing cars in the US a bit less then a decade ago. They stated it was due to cars being to expensive and not making enough profit, that could be partially true, but i think it has to do more with giving more market share to our asian allies and european friends. That is why you see joe bob and every other chud driving a Mercedes these days. If information is… Read more »

Steve
Steve
Reply to  Mr. House
1 day ago

The median US-made car is pushing $50k now. It costs, what, $12K to step up to an E-class Mercedes? If you have the income for one note, you have the income for the other.

Ben the Layabout
Ben the Layabout
Reply to  Steve
22 hours ago

It’s out of my price range, but for the economically minded many super Luxe cars have awful depreciation. Haven’t checked lately but a BMW 700 series loses like 70% in just a couple years. Used EVs are available at very reasonable prices for some reason 🙂

The Wild Geese Howard
The Wild Geese Howard
Reply to  Ben the Layabout
17 hours ago

Because for the past 15 years the German cars have been designed to last for the first two lease periods and no longer. This has been achieved with all our wonderful computer-aided design and simulation tools.

Hokkoda
Member
Reply to  Gideon
21 hours ago

Trump giving tariff relief on the IT sector tells you how badly our manufacturing base has been gutted.

Like the realization about Pharmaceuticals and microchips, I think last week – and the response to it – will serve as a wake up call. Repatriating drug making and chip making is a bipartisan effort. When the car manufacturers almost collapsed in 2023 due to chip shortages, many things started to change.

MysteriousOrca
MysteriousOrca
1 day ago

Interesting economic analysis as always. Don’t have much more to comment. So, hey, totally off topic, but – I wonder if anyone else was annoyed by the interracial romance in the Alien Romulus movie (he was a robot and her programmed “brother” but it was basically a romance). It one more movie where a self-disciplined competent black man makes sacrifices for the greater community, acts for the common good, places their honor above their comfort or desires (or even survival), and is in general the noble protector of white community and specifically white women, while white men are self-indulgent childish conniving… Read more »

MysteriousOrca
MysteriousOrca
Reply to  MysteriousOrca
1 day ago

Also, I forget the name, but there was some stupid horror movie a while back where a white couple went on vacation to some amusement park. The park turned out to be evil, and characters started being killed. It gets revealed that the white boyfriend/husband guy was the evil mastermind behind it all. When there were only two survivors left from the victims, the black guy heroically defended the white lady from her now ex, bravely and nobly almost dying the process. Then, at the end, after killing the white guy, the white girl sweetly falls in love with black… Read more »

Last edited 1 day ago by MysteriousOrca
fakeemail
fakeemail
Reply to  RealityRules
1 day ago

i love wyatt stagg videos. they are hypnotic

Mycale
Mycale
Reply to  MysteriousOrca
1 day ago

Every TV show and movie tries to randomly insert interracial relationships and it almost always is one particular composition. I also noticed that shows on the streaming services generally don’t introduce this type of stuff until the 2nd, 3rd, 4th show – almost like they are trying to get you hooked then they drop the propaganda. It’s actually gotten more ham-fisted and clumsy as time goes on, I watched a show on Netflix that had a black character in it that had NO place in the story and disappeared immediately after he got with the white girl, almost like the… Read more »

MysteriousOrca
MysteriousOrca
Reply to  Mycale
1 day ago

Agreed. My liberal ex was so uncomfortable by all the annoyed comments I made as we watched Ted Lasso season 2 and Zoe’s Extraordinary Playlist about the interracial love affairs being pushed that she didn’t want to watch them with me any more. I think I would be more OK with interracial relationships in movies and TVs if, after the initial romance and sexual excitement fades, the black guy lies to the white woman with complete conviction, runs up her credit card and drains her bank account, uses her car at times she needed it, gets her into a destructive… Read more »

Last edited 1 day ago by MysteriousOrca
RealityRules
RealityRules
Reply to  MysteriousOrca
1 day ago

I have told my lady about TGR, white cultural genocide and white genocide. It helped her figure out why I would get so upset or just turn abruptly turn off a TV series. The latter went on for a while. The final straw was season 2 of Netflix Barbarien. It is the story of Arminius. In episode 2 they introduced a black female whose first scene, aside from being a negress east of the Rhine in ~50 AD, was girl boss explaining the Germanic heroic character exiled and giving up his love to support Arminius and the cause of his… Read more »

MysteriousOrca
MysteriousOrca
Reply to  RealityRules
1 day ago

That’s great that your lady eventually understood your point. That Barbarien and White Lotus stuff indeed sounds gross.

Last edited 1 day ago by MysteriousOrca
ray
ray
Reply to  RealityRules
1 day ago

Essentially all modern tv and film is pozzed. The artistic merit of the project is subjugated to the Regime Ideology of girlboss and white hate.

RealityRules
RealityRules
Reply to  ray
1 day ago

Right on. Sad to say, I don’t know what Pozzed means. Care to inform me? 🙂

Templar
Templar
Reply to  RealityRules
1 day ago

“Pozzed” = HIV-Positive

Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Reply to  Templar
21 hours ago

Egads, Templar. Judas priest, that’s, that’s…

Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Reply to  ray
21 hours ago

“The true source of Jewish power is neither money nor gold but women’s suffrage.

Women will happily vote for every nation-wrecking idea theat Jews invented or will invent.”

~the Internet

Ostei Kozelskii
Member
Reply to  Mycale
1 day ago

You subscribe to Netflix?

roo_ster
Member
Reply to  Ostei Kozelskii
1 day ago

There are ways to get your dose of degenerate teevee without a subscription to Netflix.

Mycale
Mycale
Reply to  Ostei Kozelskii
1 day ago

Not anymore, no, the show I am referring to is years-old at this point.

Compsci
Compsci
Reply to  Mycale
1 day ago

The interesting aspect of Netflix to me is that they buy a lot of media from foreign nations, particularly Asian. The “poz” is world-wide!. No, you won’t see a Black man often in a Korean TV series or movie, but you will see effeminate men with makeup, women who kick the crap out of male opponents, and of course normalized homosexuality.

john smyth
john smyth
Reply to  Compsci
1 day ago

You sometimes do see blacks in Netflix Korean dramas . . . it is very strange when they do show up and their role is to say a few words and highlight Korean “racism” against blacks. After that, they promptly disappear. Mostly the shows have all Asian casts, making them far better than the typical diverse Netflix show if only because they seem natural. A Korean show has a Korean cast, duh. In all but one case that I know of, overt Homos are a no go in K dramas, though yes Korean dudes are into skin care in ways… Read more »

Ostei Kozelskii
Member
Reply to  Compsci
1 day ago

Relatedly, one of my favorite Mexican restaurants has several TV screens that are always tuned in to some Mexican sports channel. Naturally, soccer is always on. Anyhow, it’s amusing to note that even in corporate advertising targeting actual Mexicans, there is a wealth of nuggras in the ads. AINO’s Power Structure demands that not only whites but also Mexicans worship and adore the sainted savants from the Dark Continent.

RealityRules
RealityRules
Reply to  Ostei Kozelskii
21 hours ago

Interesting. That sounds like silver lining. The entire world is going to be sick of them and probably sympathize with us. Once they are brow beaten for slavery and oppression they’ll know the extent of the psy-op.

Anne Arkie
Anne Arkie
Reply to  Mycale
1 day ago

The instant a n$$$er appears I switch channels..

ray
ray
Reply to  Mycale
1 day ago

Manufacturing consensus. Mostly done thru tv and film, but also music as we see with the Taylor Swift and Disney Princesses op. Miley Cyrus, Selena Gomez, Lindsey Lohan et al.

fakeemail
fakeemail
Reply to  Mycale
1 day ago

what’s curious is that media never features the most common IR pairing in the US: white male with asian female. why would that be?

ray
ray
Reply to  fakeemail
1 day ago

Because the American Woman rules, and she does not approve of her males going foreign to get the sensible, faithful and loving wives and girlfriends that (feminist) American females cannot be. Or refuse to be, whatever.

That tactic executes an effective end-run around collective female power and control in the U.S.

Men don’t want a competitor or a supervisor or a ‘partner’, they want a wife. Don’t have ’em at home? Gotta look elsewhere.

fakeemail
fakeemail
Reply to  ray
23 hours ago

that makes sense. white women don’t like the idea that other women out-women them in some ways. Probably why white man/asian woman pairings are not depicted. And if they are discussed, it’s in terms of the creepy white guys yellow fever and wanting a “weak” woman for oppressive colonial mindset perversions and whatnot.

ray
ray
Reply to  fakeemail
19 hours ago

Yes. That’s the mentality exactly.

Pozymandias
Reply to  fakeemail
16 hours ago

White men must be kept demoralized and prevented from thinking they can find a woman who isn’t a fat, tatted up hyper-slut with blue hair. White women can’t be shamed out of being gross, trashy whores who look like they just walked out of a Ricky Lake** show audience. Our media worked hard to get White culture down to the circus freakshow level it’s at. They’re not going to let a bunch of petite slant-eyes drag White guys out of the gay bars and divorce courts. ** Yeah Ricky Lake is a dated reference. Forgive me for not keeping up… Read more »

Ben the Layabout
Ben the Layabout
Reply to  Mycale
22 hours ago

I watch little video, but read UK news. One amusing/annoying video I did catch was something set in (say) 19th century London, everybody in period costume. In one scene is seen a well-dressed Negro gentleman, complete with top hat. No, this wasn’t Monty Python, but it might as well have been. If UK’s society is as screwed up as the admittedly right-leaning press I read makes it out to be, it makes America’s society positively look like the 1950s in comparison.
 

Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Reply to  Ben the Layabout
21 hours ago

And yet, there were American Indians in top hats, in London, by the score. For gosh sakes, Pocahontas is buried in England as the wife of John Smith.

ray
ray
Reply to  Alzaebo
19 hours ago

More evidence of the Ebil Ebil White man oppressing wimmin and degrading the noble Red Man. I mean Native Americans ah injuns.

Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Reply to  MysteriousOrca
1 day ago

Every movie in any genre now has the Black Savior Complex.
So when those evil Klan Nazi rednecks come to steal your preps, your only hope is some noble savage and his posse come to save your daughters!

Last edited 1 day ago by Alzaebo
BigJimSportCamper
BigJimSportCamper
Reply to  Alzaebo
1 day ago

This BSC has been going on for a long time. Witness ‘Night of the Living Dead’ way back in 1968.

ray
ray
Reply to  MysteriousOrca
1 day ago

Manufacturing consensus. Mostly done thru tv and film, but also music as we see with the Taylor Swift op.

Templar
Templar
Reply to  MysteriousOrca
1 day ago

Yeah, that garbage is all over the place these days, but it goes back a long ways, professional shithead George Romero’s Night of the Living Dead being an early example.

Vizzini
Member
Reply to  MysteriousOrca
1 day ago

I don’t watch franchise movies or movies starring negroes anymore. Why waste my time?

ETA: Looked at the cast for that film. It looks like a United Colors of Benetton ad. Hard pass.

Last edited 1 day ago by Vizzini
MysteriousOrca
MysteriousOrca
Reply to  Vizzini
1 day ago

What you say makes sense. And, I have a perception that the disproportionately Jewish folks in Hollywood in charge of stories, dialog, plot, characters, and casting have gotten increasingly worse at their jobs as the decades go on, while the disproportionately gentile technical folks in charge of special effects, CGI, historically accurate backgrounds and props, etc have gotten better and better at what they do. I watch many movies to see what the latter group have created. Alien Romulus had some strikingly beautiful scenes, like for example (minor spoiler) the wow at the end when the space station disintegrated in… Read more »

Last edited 1 day ago by MysteriousOrca
Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Reply to  MysteriousOrca
1 day ago

Most of it is a change in the union rules; the writers now have to have certain racial percentages represented in film and broadcast.

Mycale
Mycale
Reply to  Alzaebo
1 day ago

That and awards – you literally cannot submit your film for consideration unless you meet their quotas in the cast or crew or both.

Pozymandias
Reply to  Alzaebo
1 day ago

Sounds like a good place to employ “malicious compliance”. Cast 13% blacks as criminals, 15% (or whatever) latinos as hired help in the homes of rich Joos, some % Asians as computer nerds… Actually, you could just do a story about a smart young White guy who likes computers as he stumbles around trying to get a job and endlessly faces hiring committees made up of AWFL HR bitches who keep asking him “Please tell us what diversity means to you”. Eventually, he gets frustrated and just starts selling meth – sort of a fresh take on Breaking Bad. I… Read more »

Beobachter
Beobachter
Reply to  MysteriousOrca
1 day ago

But this was an unusually race realistic article recently on the just slightly to the right of the Overton Window zerohedge:

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/austin-metcalf-and-endless-race-war

Comments are interesting too!

3g4me
3g4me
Reply to  Beobachter
1 day ago

Watch Leonarda Jonie’s take on the murder (assuming YT hasn’t taken it down) – she’s a first gen White immigrant, born to Albanian parents. Pulls no punches.

Jack Dodson
Jack Dodson
Reply to  3g4me
1 day ago

She’s great. I was able to find it, but comments were disabled.

Jack Dodson
Jack Dodson
Reply to  Beobachter
1 day ago

Thanks. It was worth the read for learning a new acronym, “AAFS,” and it was heartening that he mentioned anti-White discrimination has been policy since at least the Seventies, and black crime an issue forever.

Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Reply to  Jack Dodson
21 hours ago

Ah! Now I see the reason for the (ineffably cool) pairing of Snoop Dogg and Martha Stewart.

Yo Gangsta and blonde Soccer Mommy, what could be more natural?

ray
ray
Reply to  Alzaebo
18 hours ago

Insidious. Effective.

Ostei Kozelskii
Member
Reply to  Vizzini
1 day ago

Every movie stars negroes. Even ones set in northern Russia in the 12th century. It is a given.

Last edited 1 day ago by Ostei Kozelskii
Compsci
Compsci
Reply to  Ostei Kozelskii
1 day ago

Yeah, but the opposite—Whites playing Blacks—never. I will pay money to see the life story of MLK played by a White male…. 😉

Ostei Kozelskii
Member
Reply to  Compsci
1 day ago

I could see Mel Gibson pulling off MLK…

Robbo
Robbo
Reply to  Ostei Kozelskii
21 hours ago

Seth Rogan’s probably up for it.

Horace
Horace
Reply to  Compsci
1 day ago

I’ll know the tide has turned, culturally, when an African transvestite has the leading role in a remake of “The Diary of Anne Frank.”

3g4me
3g4me
Reply to  Horace
1 day ago

Not an African, but a Jewish tranny. Won’t let me copy the link (claims it’s invalid) – the postmillenial dotcom portland ann frank.

Ostei Kozelskii
Member
Reply to  MysteriousOrca
1 day ago

Methinks they doth protest too much. At any rate, since Trump’s miraculous return to the White House, the cultural negrophilia has only worsened. It is to the point now that almost literally every single person one sees in any cultural format is an African savage. And it’s not just at the corporate level. This sickness is now taking hold at the local level as well. When will the collective gorge rise from this glut of negroid imagery and provoke a recoil? I know, I know–not until bellies begin rumbling and the lightbulbs begin flickering and dimming. But I swan to… Read more »

Zulu Juliet
Zulu Juliet
Reply to  Ostei Kozelskii
1 day ago

I am not so sure about the negrophilia on the rise. I actually get a few catalogues in the mail nowadays with no black faces on the cover. During the not-so-great cultural revolution 2020-2023 that was unheard of.

Pozymandias
Reply to  Zulu Juliet
1 day ago

I agree. People seem to be experimenting with race realism. I’m seeing job ads that actually have normal clean-cut (non-faggy) looking young White men!

Ostei Kozelskii
Member
Reply to  Zulu Juliet
1 day ago

You are a lucky man.

Compsci
Compsci
Reply to  Ostei Kozelskii
1 day ago

There are glimmers of hope. Movies being remade or sequels specifically to cast to be “inclusive” or make such a point too blatantly have failed spectacularly. Comes to mind: Snow White, Star Wars sequels, Ghost Busters (all female cast).

To me, this shows there really isn’t a large enough “die hard” audience for DIE in entertainment, but rather an all too complacent White audience that puts up with such in small amounts.

We here are more sensitive to these things and assume every one else is, or should be.

ray
ray
Reply to  Compsci
1 day ago

Yes. The savaging of the Diverse version of Snow White was loud. And pleasant.

Ostei Kozelskii
Member
Reply to  Compsci
1 day ago

If the demand side is unwilling, how come the supply side doubles down?

ray
ray
Reply to  Ostei Kozelskii
18 hours ago

Because disseminating propaganda is more important even than profit.

Bilejones
Member
Reply to  Ostei Kozelskii
11 hours ago

Because it’s not a decision they make based on economics, is it?

Robbo
Robbo
Reply to  Compsci
21 hours ago

There’s also a thing called Reality knocking on the door. Racial switching in films can’t change that fact.

Lineman
Lineman
Reply to  Ostei Kozelskii
1 day ago

If you do not defend what you believe in before it’s required then there will be nothing left to defend by the time it is required…

Zulu Juliet
Zulu Juliet
Reply to  MysteriousOrca
1 day ago

A good rule of thumb is if you see a black person on the TV, change the channel. If you see one in a magazine, turn the page. If you see one on a catalogue, throw it out. You won’t be missing anything. I tried a mini-series on Moby Dick. The first scene starts with Pip being beaten by his white master…That was all it took for me to change the channel.

Ostei Kozelskii
Member
Reply to  Zulu Juliet
1 day ago

Good advice as far as it goes. However, anybody following it might as well just burn his TV, melt his computer, shatter his receiver and go live on a mountaintop. Not that there’s anything wrong with that!

Compsci
Compsci
Reply to  Ostei Kozelskii
1 day ago

That’s the problem isn’t it. On the other hand, cable tv allows some of the old stuff to be “recycled”. Wife watches with grandchildren “Little House on the Prairie”. Where else you find such readily?

Ostei Kozelskii
Member
Reply to  Compsci
23 hours ago

For Christmas I got the entire Gunsmoke series on DVD. I’m currently plowing through all 480 episodes. What a great gift. James Arness as Matt Dillon is one of the greatest cultural icons America ever produced.

Luther's Turd
Reply to  MysteriousOrca
1 day ago

Love to read the credits for that gargage. Bet it’s similar to the first page of the Tel Aviv phonebook.

Luther’s Turd

Hi-ya!
Hi-ya!
Reply to  MysteriousOrca
1 day ago

I just watched terminator 2. The stem guy was a black. . The rad kid, the future leader of the resistance , John Connor , wore a public enemy shirt.

public enemy is as anti white as you can get

but thank Juno there were no interracial relationships.

Ostei Kozelskii
Member
Reply to  Hi-ya!
1 day ago

Diehard was bad, too. The one good cop on the outside of Nakatomi was a nuggra, John McClain’s ultra-hip cabby was a spook, and the terrorists’ technological wiz-kid was a coon. With the exception of McClain, all the bad and contemptible characters were white, and the terrorist organization itself seemed to be an offshoot of the Nazis, dontchaknow. Too bad because it’s a good flick.

Robbo
Robbo
Reply to  Hi-ya!
21 hours ago

Why do you watch that crap?

Hi-ya!
Hi-ya!
Reply to  MysteriousOrca
20 hours ago

In Tommy boy, 1995, during Tommy boys dads wedding, there’s an interracial couple dancing together in the background. just noticed it dag gone it

David Wright
Member
1 day ago

Trump said a lot of his friends got richer last week. Gee, I take some solace in that in my personal decline. It feels like the meme that the stock market is a jewish casino. we now have an excess of card counters in our midst.

Zorro, the lesser 'Z' Man
Zorro, the lesser 'Z' Man
Reply to  David Wright
1 day ago

We’re watching the last season of “Shysters Gone Wild”.
Except instead of T & A, it’s an increasingly debauched train wreck of noses and derivatives.

Steve
Steve
Reply to  David Wright
1 day ago

That might have been what Trump was getting at, but given his ham-handed way of expressing himself, I doubt it. Anyone who took Buffett’s advice and had a cash position had an opportunity to buy the dip. Looking at the numbers, I don’t think the bond jitters were about unseating Trump. They were just people who figured they would have a little more notice before the equity markets gave them a dip to buy into, so weren’t sitting on liquid cash, but were sitting on bonds, which were basically flat. Give it a couple months and we’ll know better whether… Read more »

Jeffrey Zoar
Jeffrey Zoar
Reply to  Steve
1 day ago

Buffett didn’t build a cash position for a dip like that

Xman
Xman
1 day ago

Yes, it IS too late to fix it. When I taught American Politics, I used to devote a week or so per semester to macroeconomics, government debt, budgeting, etc. Years ago I concluded that it was impossible to actually make sense out of it. Keneysianism ruled from the 1930s to the 1970s, but by the 1980s deficits had become chronic whether the business cycle was in recession or growth, so monetarism became dominant while the deficits continued to balloon. From 1961 to the present there have only been six years when the government has not run a deficit. The national… Read more »

Citizen of a Silly Country
Citizen of a Silly Country
Reply to  Xman
1 day ago

Because the dollar is the global reserve currency, the US has to run trade deficits and a budget deficit, both of which eventually weaken the US to the point that whole Eurodollar system will collapse.

The Eurodollar system is inherently contradictory and guaranteed to fail – spectacularly. But, for now, there’s nothing to replace it with. That’s where we find ourselves. Quite the mess.

Jack Dodson
Jack Dodson
Reply to  Citizen of a Silly Country
1 day ago

Generally agreed, but the fly in the ointment is growing disillusionment with American markets, which have become highly politicized. That very well may accelerate the expected failure.

Citizen of a Silly Country
Citizen of a Silly Country
Reply to  Jack Dodson
1 day ago

Trump has signaled that the US won’t continue to be the consumer of last resort. The RoW has to increase their domestic consumption to reduce exports to the US and increase imports from the US. The RoW needs to stimulate in a major way.

More domestic consumption (tax cuts, infrastructure spending, etc.) in other countries and a weaker dollar. Of course, that means lots of borrowing, which normally would increase interest rates, but govts can’t afford those higher rates, so central banks step in to provide funding.

Inflation ensues. Too bad. It melts away the debt and balances trade.

Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Reply to  Citizen of a Silly Country
1 day ago

The turbulence will continue from the ensuing dollar crunch amongst foreign banks, as the Euro is having real problems of its own. Those guys’ hair is always on fire anyways.

Again, the Great Taking is designed for sudden collapse in both the Euro and the dollar, necessitating a Reset, that is, a “recollateralizion” using private assets (a bail in, a confiscation); that’s what the Euro was really designed for, not to smooth Schengen Zone trade like they said. Thus the continued insistence of the EU on Ukraine failure policy and Net Zero scams. Supposed to hit by 2029.

Last edited 1 day ago by Alzaebo
RealityRules
RealityRules
Reply to  Jack Dodson
1 day ago

I also think that the hyper-looting phase that took place after the Revolution of 2020 was deeply disconcerting to anyone sane. Anyone with eyes saw the US had degenerated into a seething cauldron of racial resentment, hatred and rivalry. Moreover, the ruling regime was using it to attack its core population and take it to its demise. I think Covid was merely a cover for handling a massive bond market dislocation when huge amounts of treasury and private debt needed turnover but had no buyer. At the same time, the anti-reformers Z discusses saw the opportunity to bury Trump and… Read more »

Jack Dodson
Jack Dodson
Reply to  RealityRules
1 day ago

Much of this is chicken and the egg. Does corruption cause a state to become thuggish and dictatorial, or does a thuggish and dictatorial state lead to corruption? When systems collapse there are tells along the way, some seemingly unrelated to the outcome but inevitably a key part of it. Corruption certainly is present, but whether it was a cause or effect depends on interpretation. As an example of the consequences of corruption, after the seizure of Russian assets, foreign investors are faced with a Hobbesian choice: continue to play in what amounts to the only game in town or… Read more »

Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Reply to  Citizen of a Silly Country
1 day ago

My understanding of the eurodollar is that it is the engine oil that lubricates the global trade engine. That’s the main product we sell, and why our “debt” could expand from $1 trillion in 1980 to $36 trillion today with no crash- the amount of oil used simply depends on the size of the engine. What made it dicey this week is China’s rollout of the digital RMB for trade settlement with 10 ASEAN nations and six Mideast nations. SWIFT takes 3 days and 6 bank clearinghouses to settle, the blockchain RMB is purported to take seven seconds, with a… Read more »

Last edited 1 day ago by Alzaebo
Compsci
Compsci
Reply to  Alzaebo
1 day ago

The Fed’s are testing for rollout digital settlement between client banks. Doubtful the Chinese have any long-term advantage.

Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Reply to  Compsci
21 hours ago

Thanks, I didn’t know what to make of it, being a newbie cramming.
So the unending Cold War will revert to the 70s, the big dogs duking it out in small Dirt World proxy battlefields?

Looks like a sort of multipolar Oceania/Eurasia scenario still. We’ve got to bring the digital dollar to Vietnam! A tiny monthly surcharge on your e-ration card is a small price to pay for freedom.

Last edited 21 hours ago by Alzaebo
Steve
Steve
Reply to  Citizen of a Silly Country
1 day ago

Because the dollar is the global reserve currency”

It’s not that its the reserve currency, but rather that it’s the transaction clearing currency. Reserves don’t change much. Transactions are constant churn. Being the clearing currency means that the US has to run a trade deficit to keep injecting dollars, which they then borrow back at interest to keep the flow going.

That’s the real reason for trade barriers against American goods. To keep Uncle Sucker on the “borrow from the world, put the consequences on Americans, particularly American industries and manufacturers” hamster wheel.

Citizen of a Silly Country
Citizen of a Silly Country
Reply to  Steve
1 day ago

Yeah, rest of the world is full of shit when they talk about the dollar being GFC (or clearing currency) giving us the exorbitant privilege. Sure, it has advantages, but the disadvantages eventually destroy your country.

There’s a reason that no other country is lining up to take over the dollar. No one wants to do that to themselves.

Captain Willard
Captain Willard
Reply to  Xman
1 day ago

Or we can work harder, save more and piss away less money on welfare and warfare. If we do all this and can grow the economy, we have a decent chance of success. If DOGE taught us anything, it’s that we can cut government spending massively without impacting services. Hegseth just unveiled a $1 Trillion Pentagon budget ffs! And the Pentagon cannot pass a basic audit lol…

Xman
Xman
Reply to  Captain Willard
1 day ago

We can (and will) piss away less on warfare, but not welfare. We are in the same situation as the British in 1945. We no longer have the money for war, but we have a population that both needs and wants social services. Churchill did not hold elections during the war while he indulged his lifelong elite fetish for warfare and imperialism. As soon as elections were called in 1945, the public voted for Attlee, for socialism, and to end imperialism. Social Security and Medicare is the single biggest budgetary expense. When people are forced to choose between running a… Read more »

Steve
Steve
Reply to  Xman
1 day ago

Social Security and Medicare is the single biggest budgetary expense.”

True, and they are also the single biggest source of revenue. So far as revenue to expense ratio, there has rarely been anything as sweet a gig for the Feds as SS.

Xman
Xman
Reply to  Steve
1 day ago

No. Personal income taxes are. But they are only 35% of revenue. Social Security taxes are 26%… and the deficit is 28% of revenue.

Steve
Steve
Reply to  Xman
1 day ago

Could be. It’s been a decade since I looked it up, and at that time, the lines had crossed. Probably all the boomers paying into the system who have since retired. 😉

Last edited 1 day ago by Steve
Xman
Xman
Reply to  Steve
1 day ago

It’s all right here on p. 108.

These numbers should keep you awake at night…

2024 Instruction 1040

fakeemail
fakeemail
Reply to  Xman
1 day ago

We no longer have the money for war, but we have a population that both needs and wants social services.”

That what happens when you have corporations that opened the border for infinite cheap labor and they privatize the profits and socialize the costs.

I was perfectly happy with an American population of about 200 million. Now we’re at 340mill and I’m sure the oligarchs wouldn’t mind if were india style over a billion.

Jay Fink
Jay Fink
Reply to  Xman
21 hours ago

We shouldn’t touch SS and Medicare but should destroy welfare for the young and able bodied (including single others) this would including Medicaid, TANF, food stamp, Section 8, WIC etc.

Dutchboy
Dutchboy
Reply to  Captain Willard
1 day ago

The $1 trillion thing was my biggest disappointment with Trump so far. I had hoped we were going to pull back on the empire and de-militarize but it seems presidents can’t live without their military toys.

Steve
Steve
Reply to  Xman
1 day ago

Which monetarists do you think were involved? Chicago School couldn’t get any traction in the US, so they had to take their show on the road to Pinochet. Not even St. Ronnie was a monetarist.

You are absolutely spot on about the deficit. Spending absolutely has to be reined in. It’s not that you can’t get out of debt without inflating. People do that all the time. They have no effective way of inflating their way out of debt, so they live under their means and pay off debt.

It’s rather that you can’t get out of debt by borrowing.

Compsci
Compsci
Reply to  Steve
1 day ago

Paths developing have two options it would seem. One, endure short term pain for long term gain. The other the opposite. People, being well—people, never choose pain and ironically that’s what they will eventually wind up with.

Steve
Steve
Reply to  Compsci
1 day ago

Or, the current approach, which is short term pain for long term pain.

Compsci
Compsci
Reply to  Steve
1 day ago

We shall see, but the admonition is well taken.

Xman
Xman
Reply to  Steve
1 day ago

The Fed has been pursuing Friedman’s monetary policies since 1980.

Neoliberal Feudalism
1 day ago

Well, we have a $35 trillion national debt and a $2 trillion deficit; if you cut all non-entitlement, non-military spending to zero the government still runs a massive deficit (which is why, in part, DOGE was always smoke and mirrors). The government also printed $11 trillion during fraudvirus (“COVID”) and gave most of it to the ultra-rich, causing the 30% annual inflation we all suffer from now. So even radical tariff changes are not going to change this underlying picture. From another angle, though, the tariff stuff has *also* been smoke and mirrors. Trump has been feeding what he is… Read more »

Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Reply to  Neoliberal Feudalism
20 hours ago

“Neoliberal feudalism” wouldn’t have any relation to Emmanuel Goldstein’s “Oligarchical Socialism”, now would it?

Hi-ya!
Hi-ya!
1 day ago

Why does corruption in government always surprise us? Why do we expect anything else from it? Government is organized force. It takes our wealth and makes war. And we think honest men would do that work?  Well, honest men have sincerely tried, but look at the results and ask yourself whether honesty has any inherent tendency to prevail in politics. War, taxation, waste, debt, inflation, hatred, hypocrisy, cynicism, social disorder. And also — amazingly enough! — corruption.  As I often say, expecting government to produce good results is like expecting a tiger to pull a plow. After the twentieth century,… Read more »

Last edited 1 day ago by Hi-ya!
Ostei Kozelskii
Member
Reply to  Hi-ya!
1 day ago

Saaaaaaay, this Sobran bloke should start his own blog. He certainly has the chops!

Jack Dodson
Jack Dodson
Reply to  Ostei Kozelskii
1 day ago

Damn shame he predated digital samizdat.

Let a thousand Sobrans bloom!

Vizzini
Member
Reply to  Hi-ya!
1 day ago

Sobran cribbed from the best: So Samuel spoke all the words of the Lord to the people who had asked him for a king. And he said, “This will be the practice of the king who will reign over you: he will take your sons and put them in his chariots for himself and among his horsemen, and they will run before his chariots. He will appoint for himself commanders of thousands and commanders of fifties, and some to do his plowing and to gather in his harvest, and to make his weapons of war and equipment for his chariots. He… Read more »

Tykebomb
Tykebomb
1 day ago

A thalassocracy, or empire built on control of the seas, cannot survive without shipyards or another power having more shipyards. Which describes Britain in 1919 and America in 2019. China has more naval ships in any metric besides aircraft carriers. The correct response would be for Congress to create a five, ten, twenty year plan to correct this. Congress as a whole is too corrupt. The Democrats would turn it into an anti-white pogrom. Republicans are too stupid, caught between unfettered capitalism and national security being an innate contradiction. So Trump, or any President, has four years to create change.… Read more »

Bilejones
Member
Reply to  Tykebomb
11 hours ago

The correct response would be for Congress to create a five, ten, twenty year plan to correct this

Bollocks, The correct response would be to stop pissing money away on the Empire.

Mow Noname
Mow Noname
1 day ago

It hasn’t gotten nearly enough press, but stealing Russia’s $300 billion in foreign reserves will loom large in the collapse of the western financial system.

Jack Dodson
Jack Dodson
Reply to  Mow Noname
1 day ago

This. It may end up having the biggest impact of the Ukraine debacle.

Evil Sandmich
Evil Sandmich
Reply to  Mow Noname
1 day ago

Yes; even if Trump wanted to maintain the system he wouldn’t be able to since the previous administration put such a hurt on the existing global financial system, and all for a pointless vanity war.

george 1
george 1
1 day ago

Yes. We are at that point IMHO. The economy has not been real for a long time. You can’t go on forever with a mafia system and no real production of wealth. It is amazing that we have not crashed hard before this.

Vizzini
Member
1 day ago

I really don’t think the system can be saved. The current state of electoral politics is like going to Medieval Times and thinking that if you cheer for the Blue Knight it will cause Medieval Times to be run better.

Bitter reactionary
Bitter reactionary
1 day ago

Sadly I’m in the ‘too late’ camp. The idea of reshoring would have been great in the dim past, but now I have a hard time seeing how the US can take up the slack. I work in manufacturing, with experience across the automotive, medical device, packaging, and consumer electronics industries. The common factor among them – the availability of workers with an IQ over 85 and a generally positive attitude toward showing up to grind out finished goods is very, very thin below the age of 50. This is easily understood – whether pay is high or low, working… Read more »

Compsci
Compsci
Reply to  Bitter reactionary
1 day ago

The only thing my wife ever said to me, over 50 years of marriage, was that she always thought she’d marry a “tall guy”. 😉

Wyatt the Warner
Wyatt the Warner
Reply to  Bitter reactionary
21 hours ago

“Two guys competing for attention from young lady”
The female you describe wasn’t worth competing for in the first place; just sayin’.

Citizen of a Silly Country
Citizen of a Silly Country
1 day ago

100% The system has to change, but a lot of people and countries like the system as it is and are going to push back. Even if everyone was on board, upending the old system and replacing it with something was going to cause a huge amount of chaos. Trump and Bessent are attempting the biggest change in the global trade and finance system since Bretton Woods, except they don’t have the power, control and cooperation that the US had after WWII. It’s a monumental task, one that absolutely needs the help of fed chairman. But Powell won’t play ball.… Read more »

Jack Dodson
Jack Dodson
Reply to  Citizen of a Silly Country
1 day ago

Case in point: Fed members, obviously at the direction of Powell, immediately put out the word that the inflationary effects of the tariffs probably would chill expected rate cuts. Yes, the tariffs would be inflationary, but the point and timing of that announcement was to bring as much pain as possible as quickly as possible to reverse the policy. It seems to have worked, too. The system cannot be reformed.

Citizen of a Silly Country
Citizen of a Silly Country
Reply to  Jack Dodson
1 day ago

Powell wants to be Volcker. He wants to be the guy who tamed inflation. But what if inflation is what the system needs?

Bessent needs Powell to provide liquidity when needed and, frankly, to keep bond yields down via soft form of yield curve control. That means inflation. Powell is refusing to play ball, which is preventing Trump and Bessent from implementing their plan. Something has to give.

Compsci
Compsci
Reply to  Citizen of a Silly Country
1 day ago

Can Power be fired by Trump?

Jack Dodson
Jack Dodson
Reply to  Compsci
1 day ago

It is not known and there is not statutory authority. The answer probably is “no.” The vaunted political insulation of the Fed depends on that answer, too. If anyone ever wonders why the much threatened, never acted upon audit of the Fed is viewed as such a threat, that is because it is the only clearcut political action that can be taken against it.

DLS
DLS
Reply to  Citizen of a Silly Country
1 day ago

Exactly correct. The key is to temporarily flood the zone with monetary easing to eliminate the short-term volatility of the reforms. Powell is either in way over his head, or is actively undermining the reforms.

Citizen of a Silly Country
Citizen of a Silly Country
Reply to  DLS
1 day ago

Powell if terrified to be remembered as Arthur Burns. He wants to be Volcker, the inflation killer. But Bessent needs liquidity and, probably, some form of yield curve control, i.e., money into the system which, naturally, is inflationary.

So, yeah, Powell is undermining the reforms because he thinks that he’s protecting his legacy. Trump and Bessent need him to play ball, but I don’t think that he will. Not sure how this ends.

Jack Dodson
Jack Dodson
Reply to  Citizen of a Silly Country
1 day ago

Whether it is to burnish Powell’s legacy or otherwise (I think the point is to maintain the current system), this is exactly right. And the uncertainty about how it ends makes things extremely volatile.

LineInTheSand
LineInTheSand
Reply to  DLS
1 day ago

Tariffs are going to bring pain, like a surgery. The Feds need to inject money temporarily into the system like a pain killer.

Those reshored factories are going to take a few years to build, but until then there will be shortages and high prices.

Dutchboy
Dutchboy
Reply to  LineInTheSand
1 day ago

Can a “democracy” take any pain? It might if the pain were seen to be spread widely (including the oligarchs). If it seen to be just on the little guys, it will not be tolerated.

Steve
Steve
Reply to  LineInTheSand
1 day ago

Much as one might like to believe that, can you name any time, in any country, where that has worked?

Do you really believe that, for example, you will be able to buy a K-Car for 5 grand? Once Americans get used to paying $50k for the $40k imports, we are never seeing $40k again. Just like we are never again seeing $500 5-year old used cars for kids.

Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Reply to  LineInTheSand
1 day ago

Ya know, they found the head of Freddie Mac hanging in his basement at the the start of the Mortgage Meltdown…

Last edited 1 day ago by Alzaebo
Captain Willard
Captain Willard
Reply to  Citizen of a Silly Country
1 day ago

China ran a $1 Trillion trade surplus with the world last year. The Yuan is fixed (within a tight band) to the Dollar. This is obviously unsustainable. But an entire generation of US capitalists, bankers, traders and Chinese Elites is deeply wedded to the perpetuation of this system. Breaking it is a generational process and beyond the power of one President. Trump would be better off focusing all his energy on DOGE. If we got gov’t spending under control, we could position ourselves to tackle this monumental change.

Marko
Marko
Reply to  Captain Willard
1 day ago

Economic normies:

  1. Read WSJ, FT, The Economist, etc.
  2. Trade something
  3. ???
  4. Profit
Compsci
Compsci
Reply to  Captain Willard
1 day ago

We assume there can’t be both DOGE and Tariffs? Musk doesn’t see me to think so. He predicts a finish to DOGE within the 4 month timeline.

Compsci
Compsci
Reply to  Compsci
1 day ago

A recent DOGE anecdote. We have a friend who *has* a 104 yo mother on SSI. The mother received a notification for “proof of life” by DOGE (SSI). I kid you not! The notice was for her (104 yo) to send them a “photo” recently taken of herself holding a newspaper with the current date and headline visible! You can’t make this shit up. In reads like a movie I saw a while ago, Russel Crowe in “Proof of Life”. Anyway, the entire family got together and with great gram seated in the middle holding the newspaper—all smiling. The family… Read more »

Filthie
Filthie
Member
Reply to  Citizen of a Silly Country
1 day ago

I think if you throw the jews out of your financials… your systems will suddenly and mysteriously start working again.

It worked great for Hitler and Putler.

just sayin’…

Mycale
Mycale
1 day ago

I am not in favor of Trump’s blunderbuss approach here and I am not totally surprised it failed. But, the fact that he cucked on tariffs proves that the reform the system needs is impossible. The “broken-ness” is baked into the cake. The entire system is built on it being totally screwed up and the only action that can be done is to double down on it. In hindsight, the last time we had to truly fix it was 2008, if the government let the banks fail and eat the sh*t sandwich they made, then perhaps we could have emerged… Read more »

Last edited 1 day ago by Mycale
Jack Dodson
Jack Dodson
1 day ago

Given the Federal Reserve’s composition and its attitudes toward the American public, it is possible they intended to undermine the process. This has happened repeatedly. Case in point: shortly after the tariffs were announced, Powell and Co. made sure the sting would be felt even more by claiming the inflationary effect probably would preclude or chill rate cuts. This happened almost simultaneously with the change in policy. It was obvious why the cold water was thrown onto the expected cuts, and if you go back, this has been a pattern when the Fed has disagreed with any policy. Yes, the… Read more »

fakeemail
fakeemail
1 day ago

I may be a bit of simpleton, but I always glaze over at financial talk. It bores me and I simply don’t understand it and it terrifies me that somehow everything hangs in the balance based on this complex financial system that I cannot begin to comprehend. It’s times like these when I come back to Uncle Ted who implored us that we’ve made society so completely complicated and artificial. Heck, I even start having sympathy for the old American Indians. Not because they were “noble savages” because they weren’t. They were scalping each other long before the white man… Read more »

Jeffrey Zoar
Jeffrey Zoar
Reply to  fakeemail
1 day ago

It’s an interesting hypothetical tradeoff, being free from the cares of clown world, for the price of being too dumb not to shit in your own water supply

Ride-By Shooter
Ride-By Shooter
Reply to  fakeemail
1 day ago

The financial system(s) of the USA, UK, etc. and its (their) arcana are much less difficult to understand than what first meets the eye. Here in the USA, it has a scriptural basis in “this Constitution”, which begins with a pernicious lie. A relevant passage is found at I.8.2 where it reads that the Congress shall have the power To borrow money on the credit of the United States Take that away from the conservatards and other globalists, and suddenly their house will sway and shake alarmingly with every breeze. That day must come given the fact that governments and… Read more »

Ostei Kozelskii
Member
Reply to  fakeemail
23 hours ago

Over the last couple of years or so I’ve been watching a ton of Westerns. And I grind my teeth in envy when I see the lonesome cowboy loping his trusty horse through the plains, hills and mountains to the soaring strains of a Dmitri Tiomkin score.

Zulu Juliet
Zulu Juliet
1 day ago

Z-man may be right about this financial stuff, but it’s all inside baseball I don’t understand. I do understand a more obvious reason the system cannot be reformed: They don’t make Americans like they used to. They just import trash from around the globe to fill the slots. The smartest are Chinese shysters and Indian scammers. The best of the rest are Mestizos. The balance are dreck. America cannot be reformed or rebuilt with such raw material.

Compsci
Compsci
1 day ago

“The Russians had to execute a lot of oligarchs before the rest finally fell in line with the new program.” This! If one has followed such events around the world and compared them to here, one comes to this conclusion readily. China, Russia, hell even Saudi Arabia have led the way. China began the move to Party controlled capitalism with their “To be rich is glorious policy.” In short, they decided to split the profits with those budding capitalists who rose to prominence under this new policy. But such had its limits, get too greedy and bend the rules and… Read more »

Steve
Steve
Reply to  Compsci
1 day ago

Has any capitalist even been sentenced to prison for their corruption?

Define “corruption”. I keep getting a flashback to Inigo Montoya responding to Vizzini.

Compsci
Compsci
Reply to  Steve
1 day ago

You define such and tell me. I tire of your “games” in commentary. You think you’re clever, but you’re not. There are any number/examples of forms of corruption and criminality that can be cited/noted in our capitalistic system. Most are not pursued where it counts—the people making the decisions for the company. To this effect, I noted one example commonly known and currently in the news, Purdue Pharma’s introduction of OxyContin in 1996. . From ChatGPT: … The Sacklers reached a bankruptcy settlement requiring them to pay about $6 billion to fund addiction treatment and prevention programs — but controversially,… Read more »

Last edited 1 day ago by Compsci
Steve
Steve
Reply to  Compsci
1 day ago

It’s hardly corrupt to transfer money from one pocket to the other, or to even use deception to achieve some personal gain, so long as you are not using power you legitimately have to transfer something of value from those who entrusted you with that power for a personal (or corporate) gain. An essential element is conversion, that those stakeholders who authorized you were deprived access to that money, good or service. Bribery can be corrupt, but only if the person taking the bribe abuses his authority to deliver on the quo part of the quid pro quo. That’s why… Read more »

Last edited 1 day ago by Steve
ray
ray
Reply to  Compsci
23 hours ago

Hang a few Sad Sacklers and corporate officers on teevee and voila! a whole bunch less profiteering thereafter.

ray
ray
Reply to  Compsci
23 hours ago

Yes, eliminating personal civil and criminal liability from corporations has led to fearlessness amongst execs and major shareholders.

Fear needs to be introduced, very personally, to this pseud-nobility.

Puszczyk
Puszczyk
Reply to  Compsci
19 hours ago

That may be the Achilles’ Heel of the Anglo-Saxon predilection towards pirates and robber barons combined with relatively weak central authority. When push comes to shove there’s no strong man to rein in the oligarchs as both the system and dominant political culture discourage such person from arising, except for a civil war.

The great irony might come with the demographic descent of USA into a world of ethnicities that could produce such figure (like caudillo for South Americans). Those joking about the “helicopter rides” should remember that the Providence can be very cruel in fulfilling one’s wishes.

pyrrhus
pyrrhus
1 day ago

So the bottom line is “we can’t get there from here”!?
I agree that it is going to be a very difficult and painful process, but we will definitely get there…. These financial “wizards” and the DC criminal class have left actual Americans in a position where the average person can’t afford a house, can’t afford to marry, can’t afford to have kids even if they’re married, and is one or two paychecks away from homelessness..and these are the families and people who get their hands dirty making this country work…

DLS
DLS
1 day ago

Reforming the budget is not that difficult. First, pass a balanced budget amendment. Second, cut $500 billion from the military, $500 billion through DOGE elimination of fraud, $500 billion through across the board spending cuts, and then raise taxes/tariffs by $500 billion. The tax increases could only come with a balanced budget amendment, or congress would simply spend the extra money. This easily balances the budget. You could negotiate between the four categories, but eliminating the $2 trillion annual deficit would be very easy. This is what would happen in any company or family. But the politicians and their financiers… Read more »

karl von hungus
karl von hungus
Reply to  DLS
1 day ago

military budget of $100B is fine. also tell pentagon to procure ammo and ordinance, not wonder weapons. get the cost of 155 mm (or whatever we use) shell down to $100. and get rid of the carriers, they are obsolete.

DLS
DLS
Reply to  karl von hungus
1 day ago

Totally agree. Our current military budget is larger than the EU, China and Russia combined. We have over 400 million private firearms, and more hunters than all the world’s standing armies combined. We are impossible to invade. Thus, 90% of our military spending is for the benefit of other nations, and the grifters in our political class.

Ride-By Shooter
Ride-By Shooter
Reply to  DLS
1 day ago

“…400 million private firearms…We are impossible to invade.”

Dilbert guy said the same thing during one (or more) of his videos, but tens of millions of invaders have poured in since the 1960’s. Most of the private firearms must be in the hands of retards, cowards, or collaborators.

DLS
DLS
Reply to  Ride-By Shooter
1 day ago

That’s a different point, and a different type of invasion. But you inadvertently proved my point. How many illegal alien crossings did the trillions in military spending stop since the 1960s?

Ride-By Shooter
Ride-By Shooter
Reply to  DLS
23 hours ago

“How many…did the trillions…stop…? Of course the correct answer is ‘few’. I have no quarrel with an argument that virtually all of the military spending is wasteful or pernicious. Instead, I call attention to the mentality of the typical American gun owner and the wrongness of your narrow application of the word invasion. “That’s…a different type of invasion” How different could it be when the effect(s) is similar?? Invasions are usually about plundering or settling conquered land with one’s own people. It hardly matters if the plunderers (including business people) or settlers invade unarmed while traitors or fifth columnist hold… Read more »

Bitter reactionary
Bitter reactionary
Reply to  Ride-By Shooter
8 hours ago

The State ensures the gun owners can’t organize, and without organization there is no way to fight effectively. But even if they could organize, mobilizing the militia against migrants would mean fighting both the migrants and the Feds and maybe the US army sent by the State to protect the status quo. The state wants these invaders. If a foreign state invaded with an actual army, the powers that be would take a very different approach. Within days you’d have special forces guys helping train those same gun owners how to be insurgents, to protect the regime that hates them.… Read more »

Dutchboy
Dutchboy
Reply to  DLS
1 day ago

Congress would never go along with it.

Compsci
Compsci
Reply to  DLS
1 day ago

Reforming the budget is not that difficult.”

You confuse solution with process/implementation. Political will is not there. The family is a small hierarchical structure with no alternative except bankruptcy and homelessness in the face of inaction.

Perhaps a better analogy is the family with several credit cards, each one being used to support a lifestyle no longer affordable via earned income. Each credit card over time being maxed out and the end of such a lifestyle drawing near. The last credit card in the wallet is reaching its limit.

DLS
DLS
Reply to  Compsci
1 day ago

I thought I covered that with: “But the politicians and their financiers do not want it to happen for their own short-term selfish reasons.”

Compsci
Compsci
Reply to  DLS
1 day ago

So you did. My perception skills must have been lacking in the reading of your comment. But I still stick with the family analogy.

Casimir
Casimir
Reply to  DLS
1 day ago

My dream would be to nationalize the military contractors and then incarcerate (or worse, I would prefer worse) their executives, lobbyists and coterie of retired, war-cheerleader generals (Jack Keane at the top of the list). I would relish in their lamentations as they bitterly complain about all the innovation and greatness the US Military is forgoing by not having our military production based in the private sector. I would then say “Oh, you mean like the F-35 boondoggle?” or “how are the hypersonic missile programs going?” or “Any developments in air defenses or are we just going to use the… Read more »

Arshad Ali
Arshad Ali
1 day ago

“This would imply that normalizing the American economy is no longer possible, at least not through standard political processes, because the entrenched interests profiting from the system will not allow it.” Not sure about this. Team Trump could have handled this better, far better. They could have increased tariffs a bit — but not to the ridiculous level they did last week. They could have explained the rationale, and argued that is was part of a larger strategic plan to onshore manufacturing capability and as a consequence reduce unsustainable current account deficits. They did none of this. The only conclusion… Read more »

Last edited 1 day ago by Arshad Ali
Jeffrey Zoar
Jeffrey Zoar
Reply to  Arshad Ali
1 day ago

Fundamentally, economics, at bottom, is all about confidence. And a whole bunch of it was lost in the last week or two, which most likely cannot be regained (while the same people are in charge). They should have been able to recognize that and forge ahead, rather than back off after the damage had already been done.

Mr. House
Mr. House
Reply to  Jeffrey Zoar
22 hours ago

Fundamentally, economics, at bottom, is all about confidence.”

Is it? Or are you describing a con game, a ponzi scheme? If i need something, say a hammer, and you sell it, i’ll buy it and if it breaks within a week i won’t buy another from you. Try another vendor with the knowledge to test the handle of the hammer this time since yours broke in a week. Now if i’m running a scam based on ever higher prices and amounts of debt, then yeah, confidence is paramount.

Jack Dodson
Jack Dodson
Reply to  Arshad Ali
1 day ago

The lack of targeting was the tell.

DLS
DLS
Reply to  Arshad Ali
1 day ago

I have to disagree. Trump has a very short window. Slow reforms always run out of time, and partially completed reforms are quickly reversed by the next president. Slow is the worst of all worlds. You get upfront pain, but not enough time for the reforms to work. Stock market corrections of 20% happen quite frequently. Trump’s main problem is having a Fed chairman who is either stupid or devious.

Arshad Ali
Arshad Ali
Reply to  DLS
1 day ago

I have to agree with you on this. You have presidential elections every four years. An economic policy to onshore manufacturing will take decades.

Steve
Steve
Reply to  DLS
1 day ago

Like Dodson says, it needed to be more targeted. There was no chance we were going to be able to onshore electronics manufacturing in his probably 1.5 years left to effect change.

Ideally, he would have focused on making company and capital formation less onerous instead of picking a fight with the world. We really can scale up things like CNC mills to produce even more CNC mills, and we still have enough talented workers to compete. We just can’t do it with all the dead weight losses.

Last edited 1 day ago by Steve
DLS
DLS
Reply to  Steve
1 day ago

I agree it will take a long time to onshore manufacturing, if it can be done at all. But I don’t agree on being more targeted with the tariffs. The main target is China. All the rest is a lot of whining about nothing.

Steve
Steve
Reply to  DLS
1 day ago

That’s what I meant by targeted. Rather than goring everyone’s ox, he could have limited it to China, though I don’t know enough about that to say. It just bothers me that I’m ending up agreeing with neocons and especially Navarro. Any time we are on the same side of anything, I need to go back and check my work. I probably dropped a sign somewhere.

Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Reply to  DLS
1 day ago

Quite, this was Shock and Awe. No more rainbows, no girlboys, no puffers or bespectacled toffs, the Big Swingin’ D is back in town.

Last edited 1 day ago by Alzaebo
Dutchboy
Dutchboy
Reply to  Arshad Ali
1 day ago

The whole thing was handled in a ham-handed matter. Trump needs better PR people.

Arshad Ali
Arshad Ali
Reply to  Dutchboy
23 hours ago

Finesse and subtlety are not attributes of the great man.

Puszczyk
Puszczyk
Reply to  Dutchboy
19 hours ago

An actual diplomacy would’ve been more useful. One case after the other are showing that a PR-stunt foreign policy is severly limited in long-term effectivness and mostly acts as an opiate for the dopamine-starved supporters. The assumption that the USA can impose and lift sanctions/tariffs on a whim, without greater consequences (a major feature of the post-cold war US policy), appears to still captivate the American elite.

A good side effect of this drama might be a push for alternatives to the increasingly unreliable imperial system of Pax Americana.

FNC1A1
Member
1 day ago

Four boxes to maintain a republic

The soap box
The ballot box
The jury box
The cartridge box

Robbo
Robbo
Reply to  FNC1A1
21 hours ago

Remind me, which one are we at?

FNC1A1
Member
Reply to  Robbo
20 hours ago

The cartridge box

Tarl Cabot
Tarl Cabot
1 day ago

7/8ths of the budget is effectively off limits, being defense, entitlements or interest on the debt. That’s why I laughed out loud last week when Elon Trumpeted his “150 billion” in cuts (cue Dr. Evil meme). It’s a joke, and everyone sitting around that table had to pretend it wasn’t. That probably wasn’t hard for an ignorant slut like Kristi Noem, but Bessent was no doubt rolling his eyes. Half the country gets a government check, of one sort or another. The other half expects taxes to be only moderately extortionate. There is no squaring that circle in a liberal… Read more »

Dutchboy
Dutchboy
Reply to  Tarl Cabot
1 day ago

Then again, Franco put Spain on the road to liberal democracy (aka, suicide).

TomA
TomA
1 day ago

I say, embrace the fog of chaos, and wear that cloak with serious intent. And when the melee begins, make a difference. There is real joy in tangibly solving a problem. We stand on the shoulders of forefathers who proudly did what must be done. Frankly, the cure is way, way overdue. Be thankful that you are still alive to partake in the remedy.

Compsci
Compsci
Reply to  TomA
1 day ago

This seems to meld with my thinking. In short, we’ve tried everything else (or least what was possible given the politics of the day) and it has not worked, so why not try the “impossible/improbable”. I remember 9/11 and watching those people leap from the upper floors rather than stay put and endure self-immolation. Some say they committed suicide. I say they took a one in a million chance—their only chance.

Such is the situation we are now presented with.

Last edited 1 day ago by Compsci
Ostei Kozelskii
Member
Reply to  Compsci
23 hours ago

Well that’s a bloody grim way of framing our predicament. Not that I necessarily gainsay it…

ray
ray
Reply to  TomA
23 hours ago

Tom’s dreams are coming true!

roo_ster
Member
1 day ago

I am OK if Powell and a few oligarchs take one for the team _if they won’t get with the team._ Thing is, these wealthy folks will be OK if they get with the new program. Just diminished in absolute terms, not destroyed, and likely not diminished in relative terms. They will still be the most wealthy and most influential. Powell + Xnum of oligarchs sacrificed to ward off collapse or ensure a soft landing is a no-brainer. Get the toxins/auto accidents/”muggings gone bad”/”lost” Epstein video warmed up and ready to do the necessary. This 90 day window I see… Read more »

Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Reply to  roo_ster
1 day ago

Bladerunner 2026: hunting Federal Reserve staff down like replicants

ProZNoV
ProZNoV
1 day ago

James Carville, a political adviser to President Bill Clinton, famously said in 1994, “I used to think that if there was reincarnation, I wanted to come back as the president or the pope or as a .400 baseball hitter. But now I would like to come back as the bond market. You can intimidate everybody.”

(yes, he’s an awful human being. But he was right about this)

A Bad Man
Member
1 day ago

It may be ‘too late’ if one takes into accounts the people, instead of the financial data. Just yesterday, on a fairly short auto trip, the most insane, inane and dangerous behavior was in full view. I doubt I even need to describe it … one vignette. I am in left lane, doing about 75 with traffic. Range Rover, dark windows, ‘smoked’ license plate cover comes zooming up my ass. Weaving, flashing headlights, dangerously close. Now there is NOWHERE for me to go … middle lane cars. Eventually Nimrod makes swooping lane change, I slow down to let him get… Read more »

Tom K
Tom K
Reply to  A Bad Man
1 day ago

Ranger Rover is made in U.K. Place 200% tariffs on it.

Lucius Vorenus
Lucius Vorenus
Reply to  Tom K
1 day ago

Shines don’t buy new ones, they’re often nearly as old as the Dodge Nitros they briefly went all in on.

Tars Tarkas
Member
Reply to  A Bad Man
1 day ago

Well, at least Tucker can drive a stick, which is more than what 80% of “Americans” can say. How he hasn’t heard of dieselgate is a mystery.. How dieselgate even happened is a bit of a mystery. How in god’s name did they think they could get away with it? But it does put the theory to rest that conspiracies don’t exist because people cannot keep quiet.

rasqball
rasqball
Reply to  Tars Tarkas
23 hours ago

Dieselgate: Volkswagen was preparing to move its diesel emgine manufacturing to…RUSSIA!

ray
ray
Reply to  A Bad Man
23 hours ago

Cucker Tarlson. He’s the best rightie you got, America?

Ostei Kozelskii
Member
Reply to  ray
22 hours ago

I might prefer Tarl Cabot…

Zorro, the lesser 'Z' Man
Zorro, the lesser 'Z' Man
1 day ago

I suspect Jerome Powell is at the helm of the privately owned banking cartel presently because they want him to be the Fall Goy.

RealityRules
RealityRules
1 day ago

 In fact, the financial system relies on clever quants coding models to exploit these small discrepancies between current and future prices to generate wealth.”

If you are doing a transaction where only a financial instrument is exchanged and you make money, then the other side has lost money. No wealth is generated only exchanged. Equal parts gain for the winner, equal parts loss for the loser. That is why this system will fall.

On this topic Morgoth has the most insightful perspective I have seen.

https://morgoth.substack.com/p/western-perestroika-is-trump-the

Citizen of a Silly Country
Citizen of a Silly Country
Reply to  RealityRules
1 day ago

Actually, the carry trade can be a benefit to society. If a company or farmer or whoever wants to lock in a price for a good six months from now, you should be paid something for providing that money and taking the risk that the price might fall.

Naturally, Wall Street warps that service, levers it to the moon and makes a negative to society.

Mow Noname
Mow Noname
Reply to  RealityRules
1 day ago

Financial engineering is a lubricant and is necesary for an advanced society.

Like oil in an engine, fertilizer and middle management, it is an expense. Things which are designed well and are productive only use the minimum amount.

Too much and everything is gummed up. Too little and everything seizes up.

RealityRules
RealityRules
Reply to  RealityRules
1 day ago

CoaSC and Mow Noname. Excellent points. These instruments and techniques do provide value. However, they are easily exploited and it is encouraged when the people executing them not only don’t see themselves as a part of whom they benefit but who openly hate them. It is almost as if the ruling class needs to hate us and our former country to justify savagely looting it.

I should be and am grateful for those who on balance use these advanced tools for our benefit as many do.

Jack Boniface
Jack Boniface
Member
1 day ago

Now supposedly Musk and DOGE will cut only about $150 billion. Meaning the debt will continue rising at $2 trillion a year. Disaster soon.

george 1
george 1
Reply to  thezman
1 day ago

The media and the government. The statistics the government has put out for years are, to be kind, less than accurate.

MikeCLT
MikeCLT
Reply to  thezman
1 day ago

The 2024 GAO report stated that the US loses between $233 and $521 billion every year to fraud. DOGE should be leading with this.

Jeffrey Zoar
Jeffrey Zoar
Reply to  Jack Boniface
1 day ago

That’s because cutting spending isn’t their primary mission

Jack Dodson
Jack Dodson
Reply to  Jeffrey Zoar
1 day ago

Spot on.

Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Reply to  Jack Dodson
1 day ago

Privatizing the government databases to allocate Palantir social credit scores.
Gotta streamline that resource use, you wastrels!

Last edited 1 day ago by Alzaebo
george 1
george 1
Reply to  Jack Boniface
1 day ago

In the end I would wager that any actual savings we see with DOGE will be given to Israel. That is how the math is working out right now.

Dutchboy
Dutchboy
Reply to  george 1
1 day ago

The DOGE savings have evaporated and distilled into the military budget. Defending Israel is expensive.

Horace
Horace
Reply to  Dutchboy
1 day ago

I see economic collapse as inevitable anyway, so as long as “DOGE savings” and every other resource are bartered for removing aliens, I’m ok with that. The problem is that resources we are sending to the less noxious jewish faction of Zionism (as opposed to the internationalist predator factions) are not manifesting in cooperation with the most important pre-collapse battlefield preconditioning: alien removal from European soil.

Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Reply to  Horace
20 hours ago

“the less noxious jewish faction of Zionism (as opposed to the internationalist predator factions)”

I could not have put it better. How to meme this?

ProZNoV
ProZNoV
Reply to  Dutchboy
1 day ago

Defending Israel?

You mean “expanding it”.

Greater Israel isn’t going to create itself.

Steve
Steve
Reply to  george 1
1 day ago

Covered. Since this is a public venue, we can’t bet actual money, but a Ruth’s Chris gift card would be fine. Under $600, though.

DLS
DLS
Reply to  Jack Boniface
1 day ago

The DOGE figure of $150 billion ain’t bad for a small team volunteering for a few months. It’s almost 10% of the deficit. I have to agree it will probably just be spent elsewhere, but the real benefit was cutting off the Democratic money laundering operation from USAID to their NGOs.

Hemid
Hemid
Reply to  DLS
1 day ago

I don’t think that got defunded at all.

Challenge: Find a real thread on /pol/. Internet canary. It’s never been faker than it is today, and that fakeness is bought, almost entirely with American taxpayer dollars. Early DOGE activity coincided with a brief retreat of certain kinds of demoralization posts, but they’re back—with mass reinforcements.

All we really got was “USAID” added to the list of loser shibboleths. If you say it, they know you’re not one of them. That’s it.

Of course the system is unreformable. It’s people. So long as they live, this is how they live.

Evil Sandmich
Evil Sandmich
Reply to  Jack Boniface
1 day ago

It’s a “slowly, then all at once” type of thing. They won’t realize they’ve printed too much until it’s way too late.

karl von hungus
karl von hungus
1 day ago

the current system is dying now, and cannot be fixed because there are no people who know how to fix it. or replace it. or do anything that works as intended. not just here, but in literally every other country as well. IMO this is because so many systems are interconnected, and there is no real understanding of how they interact. spaghetti code writ large.

Hun
Hun
1 day ago

Last chance for reform was during the 2008 crisis and even then it would have been extremely painful.

Paintersforms
Paintersforms
1 day ago

OT: something from the podcast got me thinking.

Marxists thought they could reprogram people through economics. They did damage, but economics won.

Cultural Marxists (or whatever they’re called) thought culture was the answer. Likewise, but I’d say culture has won.

The current thing is biology, but my money is on biology. Thing is, they’ll probably try to genetically engineer utopians in the meantime. The whole trans thing is probably the beginning.

Each step is more repulsive, fails quicker, but does more damage. The dialectic goes on, needs to be done away with. It’s too ugly.

Mencken Libertarian
Mencken Libertarian
1 day ago

“When Trump’s tariffs caused this system to go haywire, triggering a panicked demand for cash, he had no choice but to back off.”

Well, perhaps.But if someone knows in advance of a steep drop in market value, followed by a sharp increase, one can make a poop load of money. I wonder if anybody did?

din c. nuffin
din c. nuffin
1 day ago

I’ve been wondering when China would use their best weapon, de-stabilizing markets by dumping some of their vast treasury bond holdings.

Jack Dodson
Jack Dodson
Reply to  thezman
1 day ago

China has been slowly selling US Treasuries for several years now, for reasons unrelated to the recent tariffs.

Evil Sandmich
Evil Sandmich
Reply to  thezman
1 day ago

Sell treasuries and they get…dollars, driving down treasury prices, but increasing the value of the dollar which is not what they want.

Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Reply to  Evil Sandmich
20 hours ago

Hasn’t China been selling Treasuries to buy gold?

Mr. House
Mr. House
Reply to  din c. nuffin
1 day ago

You have it backwards, the problem is that China is no longer buying treasury holdings at the rate and size of the past. I think Tariffs are a band aid. Not to bring manufacturing back, but to replace lost purchases of t bills and bonds. Though i might be spouting my “ideology” again 😉

Steve
Steve
Reply to  Mr. House
1 day ago

Of course they are not. Why buy Treasuries when you can get better rates just lending the money back to the States so they can give it back to you? Ka-ching…k

Alzaebo
Alzaebo
Reply to  Steve
20 hours ago

KA-chink! Imagine how much money their traders make for the Chinese ruling class on that volume.

Mr. House
Mr. House
Reply to  din c. nuffin
1 day ago

If BRICS are attempting to make a new bloc via trade and monetary system, and start evading your “tolls” you need to erect new toll booths. That is what tariffs are for, they tell you bring manufacturing back but they always lie.

SkepticMan
SkepticMan
23 hours ago

More economic advice from TheZman. But here are the facts. The Dow made its all-time high on Dec. 4 2024, the NASDAQ on Feb 19 2025, and the S&P on Jan 23 2025. The sell-off was well underway long before Trump announced his tariffs. The longest running joke in financial journalism is that news causes the market to go up and down. The news explanation is always complete nonsense. All my life I’ve been hearing “Dow up—on GOOD inflation numbers,” “S&P down-on BAD nonfarm payrolls,” “Nasdaq up-on GOOD Fed numbers,” “Dow down-on BAD energy numbers.” The chattering classes always have… Read more »

Sackerson
Sackerson
1 day ago

If you tear free from Dracula you’ll bleed but you may survive.

GunnerQ
1 day ago

I get the sense that Trump was trying to force the Fed to get involved. His faction is going heavy into stablecoins, which could be an alternative money machine to the Fed, but I don’t know enough about economics to be sure. Anyway, the tariffs are not tariffs. The formula used to calculate them was reverse-engineered, and it has nothing to do with taxing imports to protect domestic industries. It should have been horrible optics when Trump declared “I’m protecting the American economy with tariffs! oops never mind, they’re on hold now that I’m getting what I want out of… Read more »

Dutchboy
Dutchboy
1 day ago

Another example of why an “independent”(controlled by the oligarchs) Fed us a bad idea.

Tars Tarkas
Member
1 day ago

Trying to change such a large complex system like the US/global economy is bound to have unanticipated changes. It would be bad enough if it were a computer program following rules, but at the root of the system are human beings making individual decisions for various reasons, often known only to themselves.

Peter Piper
Peter Piper
Reply to  Tars Tarkas
1 day ago

I liken change in government to hitting a dinosaur in the tail, 2 weeks later he turns and says “ow”…yet Congress can vote itself a large raise on a Friday before a holiday with no more than a quorum. If it’s not being done, it’s because someone doesn’t want it done.

Danny 2.0
Danny 2.0
22 hours ago

FWIW – just read a good book: The Path Between the Seas: The Creation of the Panama Canal, 1870-1914 by David McCullough.
A turning point for the modern world. Toward the end, I was struck by the fact that actual opening of the canal to ship traffic was unremarkable. After all the years of toil resulting in successful creation, when it opened in 1914 the world’s attention was on – anyone? – WAR!

Nitroexpress455
Nitroexpress455
1 day ago

Oh, hell yes it’s too late. All that’s left is for the crying to begin. Trump may be stirring things up but he’s always been an afficianado of debt. He’s making ‘changes’ within the system…but he’s still part of it. The middle will not hold. There’ll be myriad attempts to save some sembelance of it, many in desperation towards the end, but in the end it all falls down. The only question is whether it goes kinetic in the process?

Last edited 1 day ago by Nitroexpress455
Alzaebo
Alzaebo
1 day ago

Stellar, quite simply stellar, as always. Explaining the basis trade that caused a eurodollar shortage due to margin calls on collateralized Treasury futures in clear, simple language is a remarkable gift. But then, to top it off with the political ramifications… You see, the Great Depression had nothing to do with Smoot-Hawley or any of the routine tariffs that had immediately preceded it; those myths were simply FDR Democrats blaming Republicans. The liquidity crunch the Zman described is exactly how the Federal Reserve deliberately triggered the Great Depression. It stole the cash, then the gold. And after, no one could… Read more »

Last edited 1 day ago by Alzaebo
Jeffrey Zoar
Jeffrey Zoar
Reply to  Alzaebo
1 day ago

Thanks for the link

Jeffrey Zoar
Jeffrey Zoar
1 day ago

Citizen correctly says that there is no alternative to the Eurodollar system, which Mycale correctly points out should have failed in 2008 but they printed their way out of it. Begging the question, is there any crisis that they can’t print their way out of? (Since there is no alternative). And we are then stuck in hyperfinancialized clown world for eternity. Since there is no alternative.

Jack Dodson
Jack Dodson
Reply to  Jeffrey Zoar
1 day ago

The lesson of 2008?

Too big to fail = too big to prosecute.

karl von hungus
karl von hungus
Reply to  Jack Dodson
1 day ago

keeping in mind trump doesn’t prosecute anyone, big or small

Jack Dodson
Jack Dodson
Reply to  karl von hungus
1 day ago

True. People are noticing, but, MAGA, etc.

eta: I wouldn’t be surprised at all, btw, that the billionaires who donated millions to the Trump campaign did so on the condition of no prosecutions. Bondi is a joke and was put there for a reason.

Last edited 1 day ago by Jack Dodson
TempoNick
TempoNick
1 day ago

Terminator 3: Rise Against the Machines – It runs everything, it is self aware. Nothing you can do to shut it off. If you try to shut it off, it turns around and attacks you.

Sounds a little like this is what is going on in the financial system.

Much like what passes for our “democracy” these days (or republic if you demand specificity), what passes for our financial system doesn’t really track with what they taught us in school about it.

Hokkoda
Member
21 hours ago

I also wonder how much of the bond yield growth last week was due to China and others weaponizing their treasuries. The flight to bonds by institutional investors wasn’t enough to offset the dumping (I think). America is vulnerable when it comes to debt service. Exploding borrowing costs might have been their return fire. “Knock it off with the tariffs or we explode your debt. It’s called a debt bomb for a reason. Watch for lawsuits challenging the legality of the tariffs and Trump’s authority to levy them. It doesn’t matter that he has the authority. The purpose of the… Read more »

Alzaebo
Alzaebo
21 hours ago

I want to know if China’s domestic consumption comes anywhere near to being:

1) self sufficient

2) approaching par with the US

That’s what the lefties like Howard Bloom were afraid of, that the RoW wouldn’t need us anymore.

3) how is that alliance between the EU Caliphate and China looking?
4) South America and the Panama Canal? Will the Chinese Navy take Cuba?

Hokkoda
Member
Reply to  Alzaebo
20 hours ago

Short answer is no, it doesn’t. Their per capita GDP is $12,900. Ours is $65,000. Granted, it’s a much larger country, but they don’t have widespread discretionary income like Americans do. Just like the 2018-19 tariffs, China will be able to fight for a time. But they cannot sustain it. And the longer they try, the more factories get moved out of China to either low-tariff allies or back to US soil. They lost the 2019 trade war. That’s why they unleashed covid, imo, with the help of their paid allies in the US. I read today that they stopped… Read more »

Last edited 20 hours ago by hokkoda
Jeffrey Zoar
Jeffrey Zoar
Reply to  Alzaebo
20 hours ago

Without oil imports, China would collapse

Hokkoda
Member
Reply to  Jeffrey Zoar
7 hours ago

To some extent, food, too. They’re the largest food-importing country in the world. Lack of farmland, poor climate, bad management. It’s the kind of place American farmers could make productive. But they’re not capable of it, and they have too many people. It’s a country that, in my lifetime, was a symbol of a country where people were starving to death regularly. The only reason we lose a trade war with China is ChiComm infiltrators on US soil sabotaging Pres Trump. That includes the industries suing over the tariffs and e-commerce sites like Amazon working to conceal country of origin… Read more »

Ben the Layabout
Ben the Layabout
21 hours ago

Jim Carrol [Band] said it was too late 45 years ago 🙂 For ca. 1980 new wave/punk rock, his social commentary still holds up. Given today’s comments, for damned sure the comment about being so decadent until Daddy’s money from home’s all spent.

https://genius.com/The-jim-carroll-band-its-too-late-lyrics

There’s an edgier live version with naughtier lyrics, like “It’s too soon, but a bullet’s gonna dance in the brain of Rev. Moon” (which fortunately did not come true.)

Catsup stained Griller
Catsup stained Griller
Reply to  Ben the Layabout
21 hours ago

Well Ben, There’ll be good times again for me and you. But we just can’t stay together don’t you feel it too.

Hemid
Hemid
Reply to  Ben the Layabout
17 hours ago

The circa ’80 punks were the last boomers, angry at the other boomers who went straight from hippie to yuppie without acknowledging their “hypocrisy” (because there really wasn’t any). As an SF kid who saw him run for dissident mayor way back when, it seems wrong what an absolute regime stooge Jello Biafra is now. But it isn’t wrong. He was just a nerd, and they always submit. Only Johnny Rotten was actually cool—for as long as truly civilized man exists, Metal Box and The Flowers of Romance will be regarded as the greatest albums of their time—and he remains… Read more »

chmi
chmi
23 hours ago

This is, sadly, much more in line with reality than was “Back to work” from days ago.

Durendal
Durendal
1 day ago

The alternatives are very scary.

Citizen of a Silly Country
Citizen of a Silly Country
Reply to  Durendal
1 day ago

No, what’s scary is that there is no alternative to the Eurodollar system.

Alzaebo
Alzaebo
1 day ago

Oh, great. “World’s largest lithium deposit discovered under American supervolcano”…yeah, sure, let’s get to digging under that one and see if we can light up another near extinction event. Perfect timing, just perfect!

(McDermitt Caldera, Thacker Pass, up the US 95 from Winnemucca to Boise.)

Hokkoda
Member
Reply to  Alzaebo
20 hours ago

What if doing so actually relieves the pressure like lancing a boil? It’s something scientists have studied to prevent the more explosive eruptions.

We’ll find lithium elsewhere.