Trump vs. The Deep State
Once a phrase generally eschewed in the legacy media, the term “Deep State” has now gone quite mainstream. In February, for example, Salon defined ”Deep State” as:
Ending the Federal Reserve from the Bottom Up: Re-Introducing Competitive Currency by State Adherence to Article I, Section 10
[This article was presented at the Austrian Scholars Conference, March 13, 2010.]
Arizona Challenges the Fed’s Money Monopoly
History shows that, if individuals have the freedom to choose what to use as money, they will likely opt for gold or silver.
Of course, modern politicians and their Keynesian enablers despise the gold or silver standard. This is because linking a currency to a precious metal limits the ability of central banks to finance the growth of the welfare-warfare state via the inflation tax. This forces politicians to finance big government much more with direct means of taxation.
How the Market Creates Jobs and How the Government Destroys Them
The Creation of Jobs
If the media tell us that “the opening of XYZ mill has created 1,000 new jobs,” we give a cheer. When the ABC company closes and 500 jobs are lost, we’re sad. The politician who can provide a subsidy to save ABC is almost assured of wide spread public support for his work in preserving jobs.
Watergate Redux?
We would seem to be experiencing a pretty close duplicate of the almost fifty year old scandal that rocked the world and brought down President Nixon. But this time the Washington Post is trying to cover up the scandal, not bring it to light.
Week in Review: March 4, 2017
Donald Trump addressed his first joint session of Congress this week. During the speech, one subject was almost entirely ignored: the national debt. Though Trump did take a moment to bash the spending of Obama’s administration — ignoring his own political party’s legacy on the subject — he did little to address the very real threat posed by the nation’s current debt levels. Further, there seems to be no end in sight.
Trump’s Speech: a Budget-Busting Spending Spree
Fed Ready to Hike Rates? Where They Stand.
Talk of the Fed’s upcoming FOMC meeting, which takes place March 14–15, has largely been centered around the prospects of a rate hike — with a plethora of Fed members coming out with a hard “hawkish” push. Here is a round up of their recent comments.
We currently judge that it will be appropriate to gradually increase the federal funds rate if the economic data continue to come in about as we expect.