In These New Times

A new paradigm for a post-imperial world

Archive for June, 2009

Afghanistan: Stop the War Supplemental

Posted by smeddum on June 13, 2009

AfterDowningStreet

June 13th: New tool will connect your phone to each key office and even let you leave a message after hours. Ask all the fence-sitting congress members to vote No on the war supplemental with this virtual phonebank.

June 12 super late night update: How funding wars “supports duh troops”: Fifteen Months After Bloodbath in Iraq, Young Veteran Takes His Life. Read the rest of this entry »

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“The Enemy is Humanity Itself”

Posted by seumasach on June 13, 2009

Crisis Creation – The Club of Rome – Think Tanks and the big connect-up – Making humanity the problem.

Click on this link to hear audio:

Alan_Watt_Blurb_CrisisCreationClubOfRome_May302007.mp3

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: | 1 Comment »

Cell Phone War

Posted by seumasach on June 13, 2009

Posted in Ecological and Public Health Crisis | Tagged: , , , | Leave a Comment »

Coca Cola Zero banned in Venezuela

Posted by smeddum on June 12, 2009

Coca Cola Zero banned in Venezuela
scoop.co.nz

 

Friday, 12 June 2009, 12:25 pm
Press Release: Mission Possible International

 

http://kopyme.com/2009/06/coke-zero-banned-as-a-health-threat-by-venezuela/comment-page-1/#comment-27

Coca Cola Zero banned in Venezuela due to aspartame. I would be nice if the US thought as much about its consumers. Millions of pages on the Internet tell the story of this deadly addictive genetically engineered excitoneurotoxic carcinogenic drug that interacts with drugs and vaccines. Resources below. Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Ecological and Public Health Crisis | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

The shipping index shows most stocks are heading down

Posted by smeddum on June 12, 2009

By Associate Editor David Stevenson Jun 12, 2009

Moneyweek


Have you been watching the Baltic Dry Index lately?

It may sound a bit dull. But it’s a key barometer of global freight activity – in other words, it measures the cost of ferrying raw materials around the planet.

The message it’s starting to send is very clear: shipping rates and commodity prices are set to tumble. And that means the share prices of many cyclical stocks – which have led the recent rally – will be heading south, too… Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Financial crisis | Tagged: , | 1 Comment »

Russia insists on halt to US missile shield

Posted by seumasach on June 12, 2009

PressTV

11th June, 2009

Russia says that the US must halt its plans to deploy a missile shield in Eastern Europe before the two countries can start a dialogue on missile defense.

Read the rest of this entry »

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Mandelson Praises Euro

Posted by seumasach on June 12, 2009

As we predicted at the time, the return of Mandelson has reopened the question of joining the Euro. Recent events tend to confirm that Mandelson has influential backing within the British elite: his coming out on the euro seems to indicate, therefore, a deep division within them. We could posit that Mandelson represents a “realist” element, who recognise the game is up for the pound. It will be interesting to look for the reaction to this statement.

Daily Mail

12th June, 2009

Lord Mandelson has reopened the divisive issue of joining the single currency.

The Business Secretary described it as an “important objective” for Britain during a trip to Berlin, hailing the euro as “a great success”.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Battle for Europe, Financial crisis | Tagged: , , , | Leave a Comment »

Quantitative easing- cure or kill?

Posted by smeddum on June 12, 2009

Inside investment: Quantitative easing – Kill or cure?
Monday, June 08, 2009
Andrew Capon
Euromoney
Quantitative easing is being hailed as a policy panacea. The problem is that it sounds a lot like a prescription that causes the very problems it is designed to treat.
When the world was a happier place, before economists annexed the lexicon of forensic pathologists, there was much talk about global imbalances. In the final quarter of 2005 the US current account deficit peaked at 6.4% of GDP. Some thought this was a bad thing, although few pinned down exactly why. Others thought it was a “stable disequilibrium”. Export-driven economies, principally in Asia, could in effect provide vendor financing to the US via their high savings rates, foreign exchange reserves and sovereign wealth funds.
We now know that this stable disequilibrium did not beget stability. Instead, it inflated bubbles everywhere. Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke presciently called the rise in current account surpluses in Asia and oil-exporting economies a “global savings glut”. By contrast the US household savings rate as a share of disposable income gradually declined from 10% in the early 1980s and tipped into negative territory in 2003. The reason US savings went negative was that people were using their houses as ATMs. As house prices soared so did equity withdrawal.
Ultimately, like a Ponzi scheme, debt-fuelled demand will collapse under its own weight. Many point to Bernanke’s predecessor at the Fed, Alan Greenspan, as bubble-blower-in-chief. It is now received wisdom that after the TMT bust Greenspan kept interest rates too low for too long. However, Greenspan could only keep rates so low with the complicity of foreign investors, many of them other central banks and official institutions, which were needed to plug the gap in US savings and fund the current account deficit. By 2007 the US absorbed 65% of global capital imports. Read the rest of this entry »

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China overtakes US as world’s no.1 car market

Posted by smeddum on June 12, 2009

 
The risk in China’s brisk car market

This goes some way to explaining oil price increases

16:46, June 10, 2009
People’s Daily
If someone asks what kind of commodity market is most brisk in China this year, the ready answer would definitely be car market.

Against a backdrop of slump car markets worldwide from January to May this year, car market in China is the first to warm up, and car sales have grown for five months in a row. So, the country has overtaken the United States as the world’s No. 1 car market. If nothing goes wrong in the year, China’s auto sales will breach the 10 million target. Read the rest of this entry »

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Obama’s “prolonged detention” shocks civil libertarians

Posted by smeddum on June 12, 2009

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What’s Next For The US Economy, or What’s Left of It?

Posted by smeddum on June 12, 2009

 

 Blogs  Bob O’Brien’s Sanity Check Blog     
  6/11/2009 
It’s ugly, folks. About as ugly as one could imagine. 

For starters, the entire global meltdown looks like it was engineered by the large mercantilist influences on Wall Street. That’s correct. The whole thing, engineered, as in deliberate. Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Financial crisis | Leave a Comment »