TFMR: Now, I always try to be respectful of your time...and attention span.
Therefore, I try to keep these podcasts to something less than 30
minutes. However, visiting with The Jackass is something entirely
different and this baby clocks in at about an hour and ten. If you don't
have that much time or interest, then you are certainly entitled to
skip around and cut the thing short. However, we live in tumultuous
times and 2013 promises to be a year of significance, so I strongly
encourage you to listen to this entire interview. Maybe break it up into
20 minute intervals if you must. But, The Brain of The Jackass is large
and complex. If you skip around too much, you're likely to miss
something.
So, if you're ready...kick back, relax and hit the play button.
TF
Jim Willie is an original. If you want to be official about it,
you can call Jim a "statistical analyst" as Jim has a PhD in statistics
from Carnegie Mellon. Since 2004, however, he's simply been known as
"The Golden Jackass".
The Slog: Dutch Auction.
The Netherlands having just nationalised the fourth-largest Dutch
mortgage lender SNS minutes before it imploded, there is word from
mainland Europe that this could be the start of something big.
French lender Credit Agricole
announced a whopping impairment this morning, not long after Deutsche
Bank suffered a €2.2bn quarterly loss yesterday. CreditAg says it’ll
write down the value of goodwill on its balance sheet by €2.7bn.
Much of this vindicates the predictions of distinguished author Gary B. Gorton.
He argues that most post-mortems of the recent financial crisis failed
to recognise the culpability of what he calls “the shadow banking
system”, and new-fangled forms of debt.
Ace US trader Butch writes on this one, “If the Dutch had had
derivatives and the ECB back during Tulip mania, no losses would have
been realized, and we would still be kicking the can”. Quite so.
Scamming the DWP. There may yet be life after all
among the mainstream meeja hacks. Word reaches Slogger’s Roost that the
private sector’s outrageous ripping off of the taxpayers’ attempts to
get desperate people back to work is to be full-frontally exposed by a
major media provider this weekend. Think McAlpine victims, and you shall
not be far wrong.
The Slog: There’s a bit of a catastrophe fest going on in the EU at the moment,
but not much of it makes sense. Predictably, Brussels and its UK Fifth
Columnists are arguing that the effect of a British exit from the Union
would be catastrophic for London, because mainland financial centers
would simply regulate the City out of the game. They couldn’t and (more
to the point) they wouldn’t even if they could, but the bollocks will
continue until enough people are frightened, or simply stop listening
entirely.
What beats me however is how this catastrophe is going to square with
the other one now on the horizon: the collapse of Cyprus. This time,
the agenda is “we need another bailout”, and so Olli Rehn is leading the
charge on how the sky would fall in without one. Now clearly, the sky
can’t fall in on the eurozone if Cyprus defaults and on Britain because it leaves
the eurozone. Nobody should listen to the ezoners anyway, but if
they’ve all been blown over by Cypriot debt, the credibility of their
“you’ll be destroyed” shtick is pretty seriously scuppered.
There’s another option hanging around in my mind, although it isn’t
in the air just yet, as such: if the EU decides to take action against
the UK banking system, we should default, and thus destroy theirs. I
mean blimey, if little Cyprus can deliver a eurozone belly-up, Britain
could destroy the entire Western world, couldn’t it? Once this sadistic
kamikaze mentality takes off, there’s no saying where it could lead.
So we need to nip the entire thing in the bud right now, today. I propose, not a truce, but a truth.
Submitted by Tyler Durden: Amid the euphoria of today's crossing of the
Dow's Maginot Line at 14,000, Kyle Bass provided a few minutes of sanity
this morning in an interview with CNBC's Gary Kaminsky. Bass starts by
reflecting on the ongoing (and escalating) money-printing (or balance sheet expansion as we noted here)
as the driver of stock movements currently and would not be surprised
to see them move higher still (given the ongoing printing expected).
However, he caveats that nominally bullish statement with a critical
point, "Zimbabwe's stock market was the best performer this decade - but your entire portfolio now buys you 3 eggs"
as purchasing power is crushed. Investors, he says, are "too focused on
nominal prices" as the rate of growth of the monetary base is
destroying true wealth. Bass is convinced that cost-push inflation is
coming (as the velocity of money will move once psychology shifts) and investors must not take their eye off the insidious nature of underlying inflation - no matter what we are told by the government (as they will always lie when its critical). Own 'productive assets', finance them at low fixed rates (thank you Ben), and finally, on HLF, don't bet against Dan Loeb.
Georgous George Galloway talks about support for dictators, and how the
British government (like most others) pick sides, especially when they
have something to gain like selling weapons. Source
RT: Ten years ago, the idea of the US government spying on its citizens,
intercepting their emails or killing them with drones was unthinkable.
But now it’s business as usual, says John Kiriakou, a former CIA agent
and torture whistleblower.
Kiriakou is now awaiting a summons to start a prison sentence. One of
the first to confirm the existence of Washington's waterboarding
program, he was sentenced last week to two-and-a-half years in jail for
revealing the name of an undercover agent. But even if he had another
chance, he would have done the same thing again, Kiriakou told RT.
RT: The judge, and your critics all seem to believe you got off lightly. Would you say you got off lightly?
JK:
No, I would not say I got off lightly for a couple of very specific
reasons. First of all, my case was not about leaking, my case was about
torture. When I blew the whistle on torture in December 2007 the justice
department here in the US began investigating me and never stopped
investigating me until they were able to patch together a charge and
force me into taking a plea agreement. And I’ll add another thing too,
when I took the plea in October of last year, the judge said that she
thought the plea was fair and appropriate. But once the courtroom was
packed full of reporters last Friday she decided that it was not long
enough and if she had had the ability to she would have given me ten
years.
Over 1000 Green Berets have signed a letter re-asserting their oath to
support and defend the Constitution by protecting the second amendment
rights of American citizens.
The letter, which originally
featured at ProfessionalSoldiers.com, was written by "current or former
Army Reserve, National Guard, and active duty US Army Special Forces
soldiers."
By Dean Walsh: On Wednesday, January 30th the mainstream media reported that Israeli jets had launched air strikes against a target on the border between Syria and Lebanon.
This story was reasonably prominent in the world news sections of the
press. The Israeli government refused to comment, but ‘anonymous
sources’ inside Israel told several major media organization that the
attack had targeted a convoy of trucks traveling from Syria to Lebanon,
which were carrying anti-aircraft missiles to Hezbollah.
This version of events – being the only version in the public domain at the time – was widely reported across the media.
Today the Syrian government disputed that version of events, saying that the strike had actually hit a military research facility
just outside Damascus. This story has not received anywhere near the
same attention from the mainstream media as the original reports
including the information gained from anonymous Israeli sources.
I have no idea which version of events is true – it is impossible to
tell. But this whole saga does serve to show how anonymous sources can
be used by governments to manipulate the media narrative.
Former Ambassador Edward Peck identifies with critics of US foreign policy.
This
week the US was put in the spotlight for its unabashed support of
Israel despite settlement building and the hypocrisy of assassination
drone attacks in areas of Pakistan and potentially parts of Sub-Saharan
Africa.
UK Respect party's "Gorgeous" George Galloway gets a slapping down on the issue of dictators by ruling lame stream party, the conservatives, chief bullshit artist "Pants on fire, MIC and bankster shill" David Cameron. Source
By John Rubino: In this week’s talk with National Numismatics’ Tom Cloud, he explains
why Germany’s gold repatriation is just the beginning, the US Mint’s
silver shortage will continue, and the big money is right about precious
metals.
DollarCollapse: Hi Tom. It’s been an eventful few
weeks in precious metals, though you wouldn’t know from the price action
alone. Hit the high points for us.
Tom Cloud: Germany’s gold repatriation is obviously a
game changer. They got all their gold back from France right away. But
the US government put them off for 7 years, probably by offering them
some kind of premium to take their gold back slowly. More gold,
Treasuries, no one knows what exactly but clearly it was a big
inducement. It’s also clear that Germany won’t be the last country to
bring its gold home. The Netherlands is next and then probably
Switzerland. It’s become a game of musical chairs. No one wants to be
caught when the music stops. And make no mistake, it will stop.
Everybody in the industry knows the US doesn’t have the gold and can’t
deliver it. They’ve leased it all out.
It’s important to understand that there are two big stashes of gold
in the US. Fort Knox supposedly holds the gold that belongs to us. And
the New York Fed holds gold that has been deposited by other countries
for safe keeping. That’s where Germany’s gold would be if the US hadn’t
leased it out.
DC: Then there’s the US Mint running out of silver eagles.
TC: They sold out in the first three weeks of the
year and had to stop taking orders.
Want China Times: China has seen its money supply surpass that
of developed countries since 2009 and has emerged as the world's biggest
"money printing machine."
In 2008, the country added 7.1 trillion yuan (US$1.13 trillion) to
the currency market, while the United States added 5.08 trillion yuan
(US$815 billion) and Europe 5.7 trillion yuan (US$915 billion).
In 2009, China added 13.5 trillion yuan (US$2.1 trillion), while the
US, Japan and the eurozone significantly scaled back their supplies.
China has been steadily adding 12 trillion yuan (US$1.9 trillion) each
year since 2009.
Following the global financial crisis of 2008, major economies in the
world have been "printing money." Examples include the quantitative
easing measures adopted by the United States and the European Central
Bank's "unlimited" bond-buying program. Most recently, Japan launched
its own version of quantitative easing on Jan. 22 by raising its
inflation target and announcing open-ended purchases of government
bonds.
The amount of newly increased money supply peaked in 2012, totaling
over 26 trillion yuan (US$4.1 trillion), with China accounting for
nearly half of it.
China also saw record surplus money in 2012, with its money supply
pegged at 1.88 times that of its GDP. The global average in 2011 was
126% of GDP.
A jump in China's consumer price index in December last year had
further fueled concerns about the surplus supply of money printed by the
central bank and its potential risks.