Monday, July 21, 2025

The Pre-Genocide of the Palestinians Era and the Post-Genocide of the Palestinians Era

 


Canada has always been one of the apartheid state of Israel's biggest supporters.  Canada is, itself, a colonial project.  A country built upon stolen lands.  It has been a delusional lackey to the imperialists of Britain and the United States.  Under stephen harper I saw that, collectively, Canadians are unconcerned about complicity in torture.  Most of us are completely indifferent to whether there's any sort of democratic elements in our political system.  There's no push for greater democracy and we shrugged in indifference and apathy when the vestiges of democratic oversight were spat upon by the harper regime.

Sunday, July 20, 2025

Twenty-Five Years of Cannibalism

 

Jack Rasmus has an excellent summing-up of the costs of over two decades of idiotic tax-cuts to the oligarchy and reckless war spending.

That bigger picture is the looming fiscal crisis driven by the growing convergence of runaway tax cutting since 2001, chronic escalating defense and war spending, more frequent deeper crashes of the economy with slower economic growth between, and now since 2022 accelerating trillion dollar annual interest costs on the US national debt.

The US national debt is on track to reach $38 trillion by year end 2025. Interest payments to bondholders are already exceeding $1 trillion a year. The Congressional Budget Office, research arm of the US Congress, estimates the national debt will reach $56 trillion by 2034 with interest payments of $1.7 trillion — and all that before Trump just passed $5 trillion tax cuts.

Tuesday, July 15, 2025

Thieving Oligarchs


 Two consecutive essays at Ian Welsh both contribute to an understanding of the collapse of the West, morally, intellectually, economically and militarily.

"The Best Short Summary of Why China is Winning & the West Fading"

Monday, July 14, 2025

Ford-Calandra School Board Take-overs are Land-grabs

 

From Education Action:

For years, this government has starved public education of funding. They’ve ripped $6 billion out of our schools since 2018. They’ve forced larger class sizes, stripped special education supports, and left students and staff to deal with unsafe, crumbling learning environments.

Now, rather than admit the damage they’ve caused, Ford and Education Minister Paul Calandra are grabbing more power — rewriting the rules so they can take control of school boards, muzzle parents and trustees, and force through their own agenda.

Let’s be clear: their agenda has nothing to do with student success. This is about money and control — and, most of all, real estate. The Ministry has given the job of supervising the TDSB to Rohit Gupta, someone with no known experience managing anything related to public education. He is the senior managing partner of Harrington Place Advisors.  Harrington Place describes itself as “bridging public and private sector priorities” by “unearthing latent demand and identifying high value opportunities for public sector assets. He has a background in working with the federal government regarding public-private-partnerships as well as in mergers and acquisitions for Scotiabank. Prior to working at Harrington Place, he led transaction negotiations with Metrolinx for Boxfish Infrastructure Group. This doesn’t mean that the Ministry plans to sell the TDSB to the lowest bidder, but it is interesting that it has chosen a supervisor with so much experience in real estate transactions. 

Sunday, July 13, 2025

The Multi-Polar World

 


A lot of people are trying to see something greater in the emergence of the multi-polar world than is actually the case.  Obviously this includes those online geo-political analysts who see in countries like Russia an alternative to the godless, decadent, feminist, emasculated West. [With this subset of people including "Jewish controlled" in their list of the West's deformities.]

But there are also decent people, appalled at the murderous brutality and the shameless hypocrisy and the dangerous hubris and the titanic incompetence of the West's ruling classes who have convinced themselves that countries like Russia, China, India, Iran, are not themselves ruled by oligarchs, anti-democratic, often authoritarian, often religious bigots.

Saturday, July 12, 2025

Trump's Gestapo & Leftist Failure

 


It's might be all over in the USA.  Trump's Triple-B bill, "Big Beautiful Bill" passed.  It included billions in funding for ICE, the agency that can grab anyone off the street for any reason and send them to some hell-hole overseas or within the USA itself, without any sort of legal oversight or rescue.  Trump now has his own personal police force.  His Gestapo.

Friday, July 4, 2025

Happy [Belated] Canada Day!!!

 


I've done a couple of posts in the past wherein I've written about my lack of enthusiasm for Canada Day.  You can look for them if you want to.  Obviously, my disaffection was even greater this year.  I'm going to share a quote from a CounterPunch article put up on the site today, July 4th:

The Israeli military forced us into displacement. We ended up in Gaza City on the streets. I have a family. I have children who are all under the age of 15. My wife is pregnant. My financial situation is not easy. A few weeks ago I had to sell some of my belongings. I had a stroller that I used to push the gallons of water on. I had a bicycle too and other things I had to sell to buy flour. We have no food, no water. We don’t have anything. I went to the US aid distribution sites and to the aid trucks. I went there seven or eight times to get food. About 20,000 people gather at the distribution sites along the Netzarim corridor early in the morning, but only 2,000 manage to get any food parcels. Why? Because of the overcrowding. Because of the number of people creating chaos. The food parcels they put in front of us are not enough compared to the number of aid seekers. The American site is a dead end. They told me that there is American aid in Netzarim. I went there. I walked 15 kilometers to look for some flour, rice or lentils. I couldn’t get anything. I went to the Netzarim aid site three or four times. All in vain. We go there only to find death in front of us. There was no food or water. There was only death. People were lying dead in the sand in front of us. I don’t know what to say. This situation is very hard. They told us there is aid in the trucks. Then, we went to the trucks. The trucks move very fast, running over people. The trucks were running on top of people! Today, I am unable to do anything. I used to weigh 90 kilos. Now I weigh only 58 kilos. Things are hard, really hard in Gaza. We are subjected to the worst torture in the world.

THIS is what Mark Carney, Justin Trudeau, Crystia Freeland, Anthony Housefather, etc., plus Pierre Poilievre and his team of troglodytes, all ENTHUSIASTICALLY support.

This is what the management of CBC News deliberately continues to enable and what Canada's mainstream journalists cowardly concede to allow their paymasters to enable.  It's what the fascist, rancid "newspaper" The National Post champions and celebrates.

Meanwhile, some "progressives" are mollified with token sanctions against a couple of particulary egregious nazis in Naziyahoo's cabinet (But heaven forbid sanctions against Naziyahoo himself!)  Whereas the more "radical" and "activist" among us dislocate their shoulders from patting themselves on the back for wandering around in large groups in public chanting like shit-heads.

I've joined those crowds.  I've written letters.  I joined Independent Jewish Voices (as a supporter) and suggested things.  But I had been in a serious financial/personal crisis in 2023 all the way til about this time last year.  But the full-time activists.  The academics and scholars.  The union movement activists.  They've watched this holocaust being live-streamed for almost two years.  For some of them, going to work for eight hours a day, five days a week, pretty much entails that they're supposed to be thinking about how to respond to this.  And, so far, what they've come up with is NOTHING.

So, with this complete moral failure, PLUS Carney's using Trump's threats as an excuse to [again] trample the rights of the First Nations, to "stand up" ["Elbows Up!!!"] to Trump by promising to buy billions of more in US-American weapons and trap refugees at the border and all the other stupid bullshit that Canada's servile politicians do, ... and the significant proportion of this country's population which supports all of this vile garbage, and all the other stuff that makes me depressed and misanthropic, ... fuck it.

Friday, June 27, 2025

How To Get Canada To End Its Support For Israel's Genocide of the Palestinians

 


We already know the answer.  It's the same answer for any and all revolutions.  Meet up in large (or small!) numbers somewhere, and chant moronically for a couple of hours.  Make sure not to damage any property or anything.  Then go home and await the fruits of your victory.  And if doing that once didn't have any impact, then keep doing it.  And doing it.  And doing it.  As people die and die and die and die.

Never stop to reflect that your "activism" hasn't stopped Canada from continuing to ship weapons to the Israeli nazi regime.  Or to stop Canada from continuing to disgrace us all by providing diplomatic cover for Israel's nazi war criminals.  The only thing keeping Palestinians alive is the material limitations of Israel's ability to slaughter them.

Don't open your eyes to the reality that your strategy and tactics are garbage.  Because that might cause you to have to actually THINK about possible alternatives.  And, since we're all brain-dead, that's a non-starter.

At least you can pat yourself on the back that you "did something."

Monday, June 23, 2025

Canada's Disgusting Culture

 


Look at it this way.  The Israelis are insane.  And they're very thin-skinned.  Even though they've been openly conducting a live-streamed genocide for over a year, they refuse to accept criticism for their nazi-level barbarism.  I'd say that anywhere between 80 to 98 percent of them are sincere when they label criticism of their racist sadism as "antisemitism."  These self-pitying, coddled idiots can't see that it's the genocide that has turned the world against them.  It's "antigenocidism" not "antisemitism."

The whole time though, the "rules-based international order" has aided and abetted them.  The USA has funded them and gone into overdrive to re-supply them with weapons.  The vermin occupying power in the UK, France, Germany, Greece, etc., attack pro-Palestine protesters and keep the trade and weapons and funding going for Israel's murder machine.  Canada assisted in punishing the Ansar Allah in Yemen for their defense of the Palestinians' humanity by assisting in the USA's "Operation Rough Rider."  Canada has also been instrumental in "training" the kapos in the "Palestinian Authority" in the West Bank to beat-down protests against the racist brutality of the Israeli occupiers.

That's what we do.  That's who we Canadians are.  Perhaps half of Canadians gleefully support the slaughter of Palestinians, Arabs, Muslims, because of decades of brainwashing by a propaganda system that masquerades as "journamalism."  Most of us don't care one way or another.  It's happening to people out of their immediate zone of interest and so it might as well not be happening at all.  But the decent, sane minority are becoming increasingly disgusted and and then angry.

And so that's when our idiot leaders decided to pretend to visit an "aid site" (where starving Palestinians are shot by US and Israeli nazis for showing up to get food) and the Israeli Child-Killing Force ICKF supposedly fired "warning shots" over their heads.  And it was this shooting at privileged foreigners (rather than the mass slaughter of innocent Palestinian civilians) that empowered the cynical stooges in the West to issue strong words criticizing the Israelis and to implement token sanctions against Israeli inviduals.

And this weak sauce was apparently enough for a significant number of Canadian progressives who desperately want to believe that their culture isn't entirely irredeemable.

Sunday, June 8, 2025

 Addendum to my last post: Biden would say he was "working tirelessly" to get the hostages returned.  He was lying because 1) He didn't give a fuck about the hostages because Netanyahu didn't (and doesn't) give a fuck about the hostages.  and, also 2) Because he was VERY tired and he gave in to his weariness by taking multiple naps and sleeping 10 or 11 hours a night and all the other things that a dying, senile man does.

But when he was AWAKE he did (to the degree that he was able) try to do all of the racist, imperialist, scum-bag/shit-for-brains stuff that he'd dedicated his life to.  Like destroying Social Security, exploding the prison population (especially with Blacks and Latinos), and approving wars and illegal sanctions thereby killing millions around the planet.

I guess I finally understand where Hitler's fans come from.  The same sort of filth who would feel a twinge upon hearing of Biden's cancer diagnoses.  "Except for the mass murders of entire peoples of innocent men, women and children, he was a good guy!"

Not the Brilliant Argument They Think It Is

 


I'm in a weird mood this morning so I looked at Driftglass and then Lawyers, Guns & Money.  

"Evil and Stupid" Driftglass refers to those "centrists" and "moderates" who advocate for a third political party between the extremists of the left and the right as "grifters."  As opposed to his preferred Democratic Party USA, comprised of  vermin who sell-out the lives of their countrymen to oligarchic parasites (most notably private health insurance, Wall Street and the military-industrial-coplex) and who traumatize and slaughter millions around the world, and earn a pretty penny for it.  (Clinton's net worth:  $120 million.  Obama's net worth: $70 million.)

But don't call THEM "grifters"!

But the L, G & M post is about people (like the stupid Jake Tapper) talking about Joe Biden's infirmity.

I've noticed a few Democratic Party cult sites working this meme recently; "Why are people talking about Joe Biden when the fascist threat of Donald Trump is standing right before us?????"

It's astonishing how fucking stupid these assholes are.  Let me try to explain it to them.

You see, a couple of books have come out about the last presidential election.  (One of them by Jake Tapper.)  The one that Donald Trump actually won.  They've come out NOW because now is most likely the best time for such books to come out.  Timely.  Recent history.  So, whatever one thinks of Jake Tapper, it's understandable that he would want to talk about the book he's trying to sell.

And, if you'll remember, the Democrats, seeing the FASCIST threat of Donald Trump, in their infinite wisdom decided to put Joe Biden up against him as the incumbent rival.  They did that even though they'd had been deliberately hiding Joe Biden from everyone due to his advancing senile dementia.  They'd been doing that for pretty much his entire presidency.

So, they had FOUR FUCKING YEARS to anticipate the fascist threat of Donald Trump and they decided that Biden was going to be their (and everyone else opposed to Trump) man.

Well, okay, ... Biden probably wouldn't have been their first choice.  But if the Democratic Party of the United States of America's power-brokers had really pushed for someone else, the increasingly addled octogenarian Biden would've gotten VERY UPSET.  And, for four years I guess, the power-brokers inside the Democratic Party of the United States of America felt that if there was ANYTHING worse than fascist Donald Trump, it would be the ire of a befuddled, 80-something-year old narcissist being turned on them.

Here's some further levity:

BTW one thing that isn’t appreciated nearly enough is that the Democrats handled an absolutely horrible situation last July basically flawlessly under the terrible circumstances.

So, in other words, when their disastrous decision to go with the senile incumbent inevitably blew-up in their faces, they anointed the senile incumbent's unpopular, untalented, insincere, air-head VP to carry their banner.  And when she lost against the monstrosity of Trump due primarily to her own lack of appeal, including her disgusting adherence to the Biden policy of GENOCIDE, zombie-like Democratic Party hacks like the LG&M blog say that the whole thing was handled flawlessly.

[Much of that post is quoting someone else who decries the ignorance of US-Americans about Trump's perfidy.  And the LG&M writers blames "journalists" like Tapper, and right-wing propaganda outlets like "FOX News" for that.  Conveniently forgetting their own discrediting of themselves with the "Russiagate" conspiracy theory.  And their continued discrediting of themselves by continuing with the absurd denialism and covering-up of Biden's infirmities that they started in 2019 and are still at it as of today.]


Saturday, May 17, 2025

2025 Readings II

 Some formatting issues occurred in the original 2025 Readings post and I don't know html so I can't fix it.  So I'm gonna make this post the place where I try and start again.  Stuff will follow ...


I read most of This Idea Must Die: Scientific Theories That Are Blocking Progress.

The first few essays all pretty much said the same thing: there is no Theory of Everything. After reading the first essay, the following essays fell flat-- the point had already been made.  ...  And the redundancy of essay topics truly blunted the edginess of any attempt at a novel argument.  ...  I will spare you my frustration about the jargon-filled and ego-laden, pseudo-arguments made in most of the essays – at least for now. On a positive note, a few of the essays did teach us something new, and made us think deeper, drawing us to lines of thought far-removed from our typical work and interests. Like Infinity by Max Tegmark! Who knew there is more than one type of infinity?! The essay on Entropy by Bruce Parker was similarly notable. It tackled a complex problem and was able to put in words the typical confusion many have when grappling with the concept of entropy, which measures the amount of disorder in a system. The idea also actually seems radical, and it is one of which I have never before heard.  ... Notice that you don't need to own the book to read the essays, they are all freely available on edge.org

The book had some good stuff.  Apparently there's nothing to the idea that the language you speak molds your brain differently from people who speak a different language.  I'm going to have to dig deeper into the ideas presented in Ross Anderson's "Some Questions Are Too Hard For Young Scientists To Tackle."  But this is the sort of book you read when you have a lot of time to sit and think and read further.  At least some of the essays, the interesting ones.

 2025/07/01

I got 500 pages into The Thirty Years War: Europe's Tragedy by Peter H. Wilson.  Somebody else requested it from the library so I had to return it.


Wilson really knows how to convey a mass of information clearly and eloquently.  Great book.

From the Defenestration of Prague in 1618 until the Peace of Westphalia in 1648, brutal warfare swept across Europe. In his monumental study of the causes and the consequences of the Thirty Years War, Wilson, a professor of history at the University of Hull in England, challenges traditional interpretations of the war as primarily religious. He explores instead the political, social, economic as well as religious forces behind the conflict—for example, an Ottoman incursion left the Hapsburg Empire considerably weakened and overshadowed by the Spanish empire. ... Wilson's scholarship and attention to both the details and the larger picture make his the definitive history of the Thirty Years War. 


Next I hope to insert a quote from a Reddit review that I saw a couple of days ago:

One of the tricky things that bedevil the social sciences in pop culture is that a little knowledge about a topic can often be worse than no knowledge at all. Humans and the societies they build are mind-bogglingly complex; surface-level understandings are inherently reductive. OK, that’s by necessity. But then you throw in human tendencies to pattern-match, or frame things through their own ideological lens, or replace a foreign context with their own, and things get warped even further.

This isn’t just a problem with laymen: Wilson himself notes that much of the history of the 30 Years War was written in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, an age of nationalism and centralized nation-states, in which a multi-ethnic/linguistic/confessional entity that looked to have been vomited onto a map of Central Europe seemed hopelessly obsolete to historians. German historians in particular blamed the Holy Roman Empire for all the then-current ills of Germany at the time of writing.

The great success of this book is the way it unravels the overarching narratives and simplifications of popular memory of the 30 Years War. Principally this is done through very liberal doses of context; the book takes up more than a quarter of its massive length in addressing both its causes (while stressing its non-inevitability), as well as investing time in the periphery (if you would like to know more about the metallurgy and export of Dutch cannons, this is the book for you). Thanks to engaging writing it rarely drags though, and the drama is compelling.

There you go.

2025-07-19

I read  The Three Musketeers by Aleandre Dumas.


This book (or stories based on it, including a cartoon series) had been a big part of my childhood.  Also, when I got around to watching "Django Unchained" and being surprised to find out that Dumas was Black.  So, when I saw a copy of it for sale at BMV I picked it up.  I glanced at the back cover.  "All for one! And one for all!"  I remember hearing that pretty frequently as a kid.

It was funny how my last book about the Thirty Years War included events mentioned in Dumas' book.  I hadn't planned that.

Anyway, I agreed pretty much with the sentiments expressed in the review I linked to.  I was surprised to read how much Dumas celebrated the aristocratic ethos of violent braggarts who thought nothing of not paying for what they took if they had no money, of killing someone over an insult, fucking other men's wives, and etcetera.

I was kind of hoping that Milady DeWinter would have a reconciliation with Athos.  But when she poisoned D'Artagnan's girlfriend I knew it was all over.

Saturday, May 10, 2025

Um, well, ... you see ...

 


First I read this: "Dear Generation Z, Where Are You?" by Michael Albert of "Z" fame.  In this essay he asks why they aren't out protesting:

Great. But Gen Z, you are 70 million strong. 70 million. Where are you? First one, then another.

I tell myself you are preparing yourselves. You are meeting to get your arguments in order.  You will soon burst amorously onto the activist scene. Trump to savages education. Trump exiles students. Did Trump’s troops grab you? Grab a classmate? Grab someone across town? Trump commands whole universities to bend a thousand knees and some rush to do so. Are you at one of those? Are you applying to attend? Are you at work wondering who gets fired next? You must be minutes away from boiling over, mustn’t you?

Monday, May 5, 2025

How Far We've Come

 


Thom Hartman at "Common Dreams" has an editorial about the truly dangerous territory that Trump is taking the USA into:

Opinion | Do You Understand How Dangerous This Moment Is — How Far We've Drifted? | Common Dreams

He insisted that justice must be blind to nationality or legal status; that due process, as encoded in the Constitution, must apply to persons, not just citizens. If the government could arbitrarily decide who deserved rights and who didn’t, then no rights were truly secure.

It was a radical argument for the time, but the Supreme Court agreed. Adams won. And in doing so, he helped define a cornerstone of American jurisprudence: that the rule of law exists to constrain the state, not to be selectively applied at the whim of those in power.

Fast forward to 2025, and that principle is now under direct assault.

The Trump administration, enabled by allies in Congress and the judiciary, has weaponized immigration law and executive authority in ways that Adams would have recognized and condemned. They are now detaining legal permanent residents, like Mahmoud Khalil, not for crimes, but for speech. They are targeting foreign students and legal residents — often young people of color — for deportation based on political views, often under the thinnest pretexts of “national security.”

...

Because once the government claims the right to strip anyone of due process, rights cease to be rights and become privileges, granted or revoked at the whim of those in power. That is not a constitutional democracy. That is the scaffolding of fascism.

And sure enough, what began with undocumented immigrants is now creeping toward legal residents, foreign students, and even American citizens. The Trump administration recently floated the idea — with a straight face — of deporting certain American citizens to El Salvador.

Let that sink in.

So far as it goes it is an accurate summary of the openly fascist, dictatorial Trump regime.  But Hartmann fails to mention the contributions of the Democrats to this nightmare.  Biden wrote the pre-cursor to the PATRIOT Act.  Hillary Clinton normalized bush II's moving government communications to private servers.  Obama chose not to prosecute the previous bush II regime's use of torture.  (Because Democrats had approved of it at the time.)  And he expanded the state's surveillance of the populace.  And he arrogated for himself a supposed legal right to murder US citizens overseas.  

There's more, but we don't need more evidence that the USA's slide into fascism has been a bipartisan effort.

Tuesday, April 29, 2025

First-Past-the-Post Did It's Job

 


First, read Ian Welsh:

Five months ago I would have said, and did say, that the Conservatives would form the next government, with Poilievre (a Trump figure) as Prime Minister.

Monday, April 28, 2025

Going To Vote NDP Today

 


I wasn't going to vote because in my riding it's only a contest between the pro-genocide Conservatives and the pro-Genocide Liberals.  And I can't put the Liberal enabling of Israeli genocide of the Palestinians into isolation and imagine that I'm voting "lesser evil."  Too much "evil," not enough "lesser."

I wasn't going to go through the bullshit exercise of voting for a third party to have my vote rendered null and void by our archaic "first-past-the-post" electoral.

But then I saw the "Vote Palestine -dot-ca" website and my local NDP candidate checks off all their boxes and I thought that deserved my making the effort to go and expresss my support.  I also gave them some money.  

Then my dentist's office emailed me to tell me that as of May 1st I can apply for the Canadian Dental Care Plan, which is great because I need to put a crown on one of my teeth and I don't have insurance.  And that program exists because of the NDP.  

So, ... my vote is a statement and nothing more.

Saturday, April 26, 2025

My Last Post on Trump's Tariffs

 This video from Adam Something mentions the Yanis Varoufakis article I mentioned the other day:

And here's an article from Jacobin's Branko Marcetic: "Trump's Tariffs Have Done What No US Adversary Could":

Thursday, April 24, 2025

Yanis Varoufakis on Trump's Tariff Tactic

 


I read this yesterday.  I didn't expect to find Varoufakis talking about Trump's tariffs, but that was what I found and it ties into some recent posts.

For when US deficits exceed some threshold, foreigners will panic. They will sell their dollar-denominated assets and find some other currency to hoard. Americans will be left amid international chaos with a wrecked manufacturing sector, derelict financial markets and an insolvent government. This nightmare scenario has convinced Trump that he is on a mission to save America: that he has a duty to usher in a new international order. And that’s the gist of his plan: to effect in 2025 a decisive anti-Nixon Shock — a global shock that cancels out the work of his predecessor by terminating the Bretton Woods system in 1971 which spearheaded the era of financialisation.

Wednesday, April 23, 2025

Who Does Trump Work For?

 

Liberal anti-Trumpers have this fixation of having to believe that Trump must be somebody's servant.  For some of them it was, and remains the case, that he is the butt-bitch of Vladimir Putin.  Despite the fact that "Russiagate" turned out to be a sad fabrication, and despite the fact that Trump's actions towards Russia were often antagonistic, these "progressive" shit-heads continue to clamour for nuclear war based on their stupid conspiracy theory.

Tuesday, April 22, 2025

I'll Be Voting NDP This Election

 


I live in a riding where it's only between the Liberals and the Conservatives.  Since Justin Trudeau's disgraceful premiership I've decided that I will never engage in that empty farce again.  And now, with both of those parties signalling their craven and inhuman support for Israel's genocide of the Palestinians, I feel it would be personally defiling to vote for either of them.

But "First-Past-the-Post" renders my vote for anyone else null and void.  And, besides, I'm not all that crazy about the NDP anyway.

But the NDP candidate in my has checked all the boxes for Vote Palestine.Ca and the party has spoken out against Israel's monstrous behaviour, so I think they've earned my vote. 

Saturday, April 19, 2025

Two Articles (or whatever) About Leftist Failure

 


Back in 2020, as the COVID pandemic was starting to take hold, Jacobin magazine featured an article by someone describing the state of the USA's working class as the worst in fifty years.  The mass unemployment caused by the need to quarantine might prove devastating to people with less resources to weather a storm than ever.

Monday, April 7, 2025

Views on Trump's Tarrifs

 


Ian Welsh says the whole thing has been done as stupidly as possible and will only wreck the USA's economy and accelerate its overall decline:

So, Trump’s tariffs are out. He claims they’re half of what each country tariffs the US, but in fact they appear to have been determined by dividing how much the US sells to a country by how much that country sells to the US.

In other words, the more your trade surplus is, proportionally, the higher the tariffs.

This isn’t, on the face of it, necessarily stupid. But… it’s being done very stupidly.

...

So this means that there’s going to be a massive economic shock: prices will go up and/or profits will go down and the US government will need to provide massive subsidies to some industries at the same time as Trump’s budget plan massively cuts revenue due to tax cuts for the rich.

...

Additional add-ons to all of this include the probability of a lot of free capital flows going away. Countries that want to re-industrialize with domestically controlled supply chains, and many now will, need to keep capital at home and the retaliation against the US is going to be against a capital flow/investment system which has, with a few exceptions like Japan, mostly favored the US.

I can’t even imagine how much US property in other countries is likely to wind up forced to sell to locals, or even nationalized outright.

All of this leads to the fact that this will speed up the loss of dollar privilege, and with the loss of dollar privilege and everyone reluctant to sell to America, well, there’s no way that the US standard of living doesn’t get hit hard.

...

Long story short: the US is going to be hit by a huge inflationary shock, a decline in standard of living and, unless other countries are stupid, lose most of its overseas rentier monopoly income. The EU is in for a world of hurt, but has options. China will feel it, but they’ll be fine, they don’t need the US as a market any more.

Dominik A. Leusder at Jacobin says that Trump's tariffs will cause stagflation; they are based on flawed historical political-economic analysis, but that nonetheless, they represent a coherent theory that has been around right-wing economic thinkers for a long time and which therefore needs to be taken seriously:

He began his speech with what amounted to a fever dream of American victimhood. Lamenting the “unilateral economic surrender” of his predecessors in the Oval Office, he decried being “looted, pillaged, and raped by friend and foe alike,” who “got rich at [America’s] expense” by way of “undervalued currencies,” “stealing our intellectual property,” and instituting “unfair rules and technical rules.” These trade barriers, whether tariff-based or not, were to be broken down. This effort would “supercharge the domestic industrial base,” while allowing the United States to pay down its national debt and reduce taxes.

The historical record, of course, begs to differ, though economic history does not seem to be Trump’s forte. At one point during his address, the president opined that the United States was “proportionally the richest” between 1789 and 1913, when trade barriers were in place, and that the Great Depression of the 1930s would have not occurred as it had if the ultraprotectionist 1930 Smoot Hawley Tariff Act had stayed in place longer.

Economic historians generally agree that the disastrous set of tariffs on over 20,000 imported goods worsened the Depression. And according to ad hoc estimates done by Evercore ISI, a prominent advisory firm for investment banks, the weighted average tariff rate of the “Liberation Day” measures were just under 30 percent, compared to the 20 percent of Smoot Hawley. All this in an economy in which imports are 14 percent of GPD, compared to 4.5 percent in 1930.

...

If anything, Trump has been consistent in his stance on trade since the 1980s, when Japanese (and to a lesser extent German) surpluses with the United States were the focus of his ire. He has been consistent in his (false) belief that bilateral trade is what determines the US trade balance, and that (as is equally false) bilateral deficits are “subsidies” to surplus countries. His belief that tariffs are a remedy for “unfair” trade is misguided.

But these moves are not the ravings of a power-crazed madman. They have emerged out of an internally coherent and consistent strain of thinking within American policy circles stretching back at least into the 1990s. This should give pause to anyone looking to dismiss Trump’s actions as thoughtless.

A right-wing (or whatever) writer "Simplicius" --- who I read for a more reality-based survey of the NATO-Ukraine/Russia War (since mainstream and many leftwards sources have turned their brains to shit on that topic) --- provides some useful information stating that Trump's tariffs aren't just some stupid shit that he pulled out of his stinking asshole.  They are, rather, based on the theories of some other dude:

It turns out Trump’s entire game plan may have been taken from economic advisor Stephen Miran’s playbook. In November, Miran wrote A User’s Guide to Restructuring the Global Trading System, which according to experts precisely parallels what Trump is now attempting to carry out. One of the core tenets of the document is the deliberate devaluation of the US dollar in order to make US exports favorable again to reignite American manufacturing.

...

To summarize the above for the laymen, a country which holds the world’s reserve currency faces a significant dilemma wherein its national trade policy and monetary policy are effectively at odds against each other. In order to keep its currency as reserve status—and reap all the geopolitical benefits this creates—the country must hamstring its own economic output by running a huge trade deficit, which means the country imports far more than it exports, which hurts—or in the case of the US, kills—domestic manufacturing.

Why must a country run a trade deficit to retain its global reserve currency status? Because when your currency is the global reserve currency, the entire world constantly hungers for it in order to use it in all the various countries’ international trade between each other. The only way to keep those countries constantly supplied with dollars is for Americans to buy tons of foreign imports, which effectively sends dollars to those countries, since these purchases are made with dollars. If the countries instead bought a ton of US exports, they would be paying for those exports with dollars, which means all the dollars would be sent back to the US, and global nations would have a severe lack of US dollars. What would happen then? They would have no choice but to trade with their own currencies, which would mean the collapse of the dollar reserve system.

A simpler example: if a French person buys a $50,000 Ford truck and imports it to France, that’s $50,000 USD that leaves France and goes back to the US, lowering France’s dollar holdings. If an American buys a $50,000 French Peugeot to import it to the US, he sends his $50,000 USD to France, which increases its dollar holdings.

As seen, the only way to maintain the dollar’s reserve status is to make sure US dollars are constantly flooding the world, which can only be done by running a massive trade deficit where imports of foreign goods (outflow of USD) far outweigh exports of domestic goods (inflow of USD).

This contextualizes the Miran paper’s focus on the ‘overvaluation of the dollar’, particularly from the aspect of national security. Miran rightly notes that US national security is degraded in the current circumstances, by the erosion of manufacturing potential which leaves the US incapable of producing its defense imperatives. Miran’s thesis further provides for the tariffs being a tool not merely as some quick-and-cheap form of ‘revenue’, as some assume, but for the purpose of favorably rebalancing global currency valuations.

Personally, I think that regardless of whatever logic is behind this, it's all quite reckless and almost guaranteed to cause short-term disaster and pain from which it might be impossible for the USA to extricate itself from.  (Also, I don't know that the USA has needed to run a trade deficit in goods to keep the world satiated with US dollars.  There's been decades for which the USA has had trade deficits, weapons sales, and etc., from which other countries could build up dollar reserves.)

Finally, another right-wing site, "SONAR" hosted by former CIA analyst Larry Johnson, has this post saying that Trump is actually trying to lower the cost of servicing the USA's national debt:

Today, April 4, 2025, yields on U.S. long-term Treasuries experienced a significant decline as a result of the tariffs:

  • 10-Year Treasury Yield: Fell below 4%, closing at 3.97%, marking its lowest level since October 2024
  • This drop was driven by heightened recession fears following President Donald Trump’s announcement of aggressive tariffs on imports, which led investors to seek safety in government bonds
  • .The decline reflects concerns about potential global economic downturns and increased demand for safe-haven assets like U.S. Treasuries.

In other words, the US Government received more money for a bond today than it did yesterday, and the US Government obligation to pay interest has shrunk. I had lunch with a good friend today, who has access to Trump financial officials, and he said this is the real purpose of the tariffs — i.e., restructure the US balance sheet, shrink the deficit and reduce the amount of short-term debt owed by the US Government.

...

While the tariff scheme is being attacked — correctly in my view — as a misguided trade policy, I have come to believe that is not Trump’s true objective.

Let me use a crude, oversimplified example, to explain what I thinkTrump is trying to do. Imagine that you are buying a home, and you have a 10-year $500,000 dollar interest only loan at 4.5%. At this rate, your monthly payment is $1,875. Now, what happens if that rate falls to 2.5%? Your new payment would be $1,041.67. You would have gained almost $10,000 dollars in your pocket by the end of the year (assuming you did not spend the savings). In other words, Trump is using tariffs in a bid to refinance the US debt at a lower rate. Remains to be seen if this works.

What happens if you are paying 4.5% interest on 8 trillion dollars in one year? You will pay $360 billion in interest. Let’s drop the rate to 2.5% for one year. You are now paying $200 billion in interest. Hell, with savings like that, Trump can buy a fleet of new aircraft carriers (kidding). That is what Trump is trying to accomplish


Of course, another option to lightening the debt burden would be to tax the wealthy.  But Trump is a wealthy man himself and he would find that sort of thing distasteful.

I reads another piece somewhere saying that a Russian politician compares the immediate future for the USA to the period of painful readjustment as a sanctioned Russia was forced to develop its own industry again which turned out to be a successful project.

Wednesday, April 2, 2025

William Munny From Out of Missouri

 


Just putting out my speculation about the imaginary past of the imaginary character in Clint Eastwood's "Unforgiven."  William Munny was a man with a violently intemperant disposition.  As a young man he was frequently drunk and he shot and killed several men.  I believe that he deliberately pursued acts of robbery and one time he blew up a train or a bank and unintentionally killed women and children.  And it was THAT that made him change his ways.  Somehow he found a good woman who helped him become a sober, peaceful man.  And then she died.  And then the movie started.