Monday, November 7, 2011

Morning Update/ Market Thread 11/7 - Amazon of Answers Flow Outside the Walls Edition…

Good Morning,

Equities are slightly lower this morning, but regaining losses incurred over the weekend. The dollar is slightly higher, bonds are a little higher, oil is pushing the ridiculous and economy destroying $95 level, gold is racing back towards the unbelievable level of $1,800, silver is higher, and food commodities refuse to break down to reasonable levels due to the obvious speculation and money explosion where people look for anything real, even if doing so literally chokes the life out of people.

No economic releases today and a very light week for economic disinformation – it’ll be nice to take a break from the lies.

Just got my home’s tax assessment in the mail, according to the county, my house lost about 10% of its value since I bought this one last year – yippee! That’s exactly what I told the real estate agents, and the person I bought it from, would happen and steadfastly refused to buy anywhere near asking price knowing that I needed to buy at a price a year or two down the road – had I not gotten that price, I was serious in that I would not have purchased. King County just reported home prices down 15% year over year. No, it’s not over, but the downward pressure should begin to ease over time now that we’re past the peak in Option-ARM resets.

The really terrible aspect of property taxes is that even though home values go down 10% across the county, the county still collects the same amount of taxes (or more)! This is because they manipulate the rate of tax by working backwards from their bloated budgets to calculate how much they need to collect. The only thing your property value does is to apportion the tax relative to all the other property! This is sick as it fails to limit growth in government and during waves of property deflation further pressures the 99%.

Of course what we have now is the worst of both worlds – deflation in the things we hold as “investments,” and rampant inflation in the things we need. The deflation is caused by the debt as money scheme foisted on us by the bankers, and the inflation is caused by the money explosion that only benefits the bankers who create it and then use it to speculate commodity prices higher. Everyone else is caught in the middle, with very few safe places to hide.

Gold has certainly been the place to be for the past decade, below is a one year daily chart of gold where you can see that the first up sloping trendline held and now prices are zooming again:



There’s been a lot of speculation about how the failure of MF Global will impact the markets. I liken it to the failure in 2006 of New Century Financial, the first subprime lender to go under. At the time I mentioned that it probably marked the beginning of the end for the housing bubble, and boy, was I right. Of course it took well over a year for the stock market to get it, but get it it did.

Now I think the same thing about the derivatives bubble – the failure of MF Global probably marks the beginning of the end for that bubble. I liken derivatives to margin – while neither are considered money by most, they act like money because they allow people to have more of an underlying asset than they would otherwise, and that equals leverage. This is why I say that derivatives are “moneyness,” that add to the overall amount of money in existence.

Of course a derivative is anything the maker says it is – it is a complete fantasy construct of the imagination. In my opinion there are very few legitimate uses of derivatives, they are nothing but both a form of gambling and they give the creator the effective ability to make money(ness) from nothing.

To those who believe derivatives should be allowed to act as a “hedge,” my response is that a hedge is nothing but a form of insurance, right? So, if you need insurance, then there is a regulated insurance industry just for that purpose. And it should be regulated, because if you don’t, then people like Warren Buffett will turn their “insurance” into the same game as derivatives which leads to “moneyness,” which again is something that individuals should only possess under strict license, a privilege issued to them by the people – a privilege that can be easily revoked should it be abused.

And I don’t buy the airline/oil hedge argument either – here’s why. Because the way an airline hedges the cost of fuel is to buy oil futures. What does buying oil futures (moneyness) do to the price of oil? Uh huh, and there you have it, they don’t even realize that their gambling in the markets is making the very thing they are “hedging” against happen.

One particularly damaging form of derivative I want to address again is the explosion of ETFs. An ETF is a derivative – one that is being sold to common people as a good way to “invest.” BEWARE, ETFs are designed to take your money and to enrich those who produce this form of “moneyness!” They fail to track the underlying derived item and slippage makes long term holding of these theft devises a guaranteed lose proposition for those who buy them – DO NOT BUY ETFs, THEY ARE A DERIVATIVE DESIGNED TO TRANSFER YOUR MONEY TO THOSE WHO MAKE THEM.

Because derivates are a form of moneyness, they absolutely should be heavily regulated by government – again, producing our money and controlling the quantity thereof is THE most important responsibility of government, of your representative. A nation’s money must be sovereign, that is to carry no debt to anyone, and it must be created in a way that favors no one. A responsibility Congress unbelievably relented to private individuals with the creation of the phony and traitorous “Federal Reserve Act.”

On that day, our nation surrendered our sovereignty and ceded control to the “1%.” And ever since that day they have used the power of money creation to capture laws and our political system for their gain.

I participated in the local “Occupy” demonstration again this weekend where again I attempted to keep people focused on this key issue because I know that all the other issues revolve around WHO it is that produces our money. The people are pissed – and they want to take action. But the truth is that they are so easily pulled off target that it’s obvious we are a long way from taking the appropriate action.

Many people want to pick a key issue or two and work on that – for example one nice lady got really focused on the fact that our judicial system and government now treat corporations like people – she feels that fixing that is the key.

No, that is a symptom – it is but one of many symptoms that to me are like spokes on a wheel… all those spokes emanate from the hub. The hub is WHO controls the production of money! Fix that, and then the issues that emanate from it can be fixed. Fail to address the hub, and you will forever be chasing the symptoms.

Another in the crowd spoke strongly that the Occupy movement should ally ourselves with one of the two major political parties! After all, he reasoned, we stand no real chance of creating change if we don’t get one of the parties to back our cause! Of course I spoke out strongly against this thinking, reminding everyone that both parties are corrupted by the key issue and therefore real change will not occur from the inside in that manner. Just look at what happened to the Tea Party to see what happens when you sell out the primary issue. If that happens to Occupy, then the movement will die and it will be up to the next movement to get closer to the target.

My feeling is that while a lot of people get what I’m saying, those who have not gone through the learning process for themselves have a difficult time being catapulted to the root problem. I think it’s like anything else – it’s a process. The beginning of the process is to recognize and acknowledge that something isn’t right. That recognition then opens your mind to begin to look for answers and solutions. But it’s a journey, one where you must cast aside a lifetime of walls built to box your mind in, those walls are built upon lies and meant to control you. You must free your mind to step outside the walls; there you will find a river of answers.

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Weekend Open Thread...





Weekend Funnies...





























Friday, November 4, 2011

Morning Update/ Market Thread 11/4 - Lies, Damn Lies, and Unemployment Statistics Edition…

Good Morning,

Equity futures are falling this morning following a miss on both the headline Nonfarm Payrolls and Private Payrolls which came in respectively at 80,000 and 104,000 on expectations of 90,000 and 120,000. The Household Survey rate, however, supposedly fell from 9.1% to 9.0%, cough, cough, wink, wink. The dollar is higher, bonds are flat, oil is down slightly, gold & silver are down slightly, and food commodities remain in their tight range of late.

Of course it is the Unemployment Rate that the media always quotes to permeate the American psyche, now they get to say 9.0% while acting ignorant of the manipulation that causes this figure to be less than half of reality. And yes, I’m going to say it, we’re getting closer to election time, and no, I do not put manipulation of the data past anyone at any of the .gov data agencies. In fact, I now consider .gov to be an extension of .fed.

There were several fairly large adjustments in this report, the Birth/Death model all by itself added more jobs than were reported here, there were large upward revisions to the past two months, and there were large changes to the numbers of “discouraged” and part-time workers. Also, the number of people counted “not in labor force” rose, and that makes their math appear better, the opposite occurs on months it falls. Here’s Econospin doing their best pump-monkey, note that with the higher previous month revision how they didn’t come out and say that, “Payroll jobs fell by 78,000 from the month prior.” Watch what I’m saying here, you will see that when it can be spun positively it will be, but it is never spun negatively, and thus the positive bias to keep their self-interest central banker box alive:
Highlights
The headline number for October payrolls was a little disappointing but upward revisions were more than offsetting. Payroll jobs in October posted a gain of 80,000 after rising a revised 158,000 in September (originally 103,000) and increased a revised 104,000 in August (previously 57,000). Market expectations were for a 90,000 boost for the latest month. Revisions for August and September were up net 102,000.

As in recent months, greater strength was seen in private nonfarm payrolls which advanced 104,000, following a 191,000 rise in September and a 72,000 increase in August. The October increase was lower than the market median forecast for a 120,000 increase.

In the private sector, goods-producing jobs were tugged down by construction but with manufacturing and mining partially offsetting. Goods-producing jobs declined 10,000 after a 29,000 boost in September. Construction jobs fell 20,000 in October after rebounding 27,000 the month before. Manufacturing employment gained 5,000 after a 3,000 dip in September. Mining advanced 6,000, following a 4,000 gain the prior month.

Private service-providing jobs rose 114,000 in October, following a 162,000 boost the prior month. The October increase was led by professional & business services (up 32,000) and trade & transportation (up 35,000). The temp help subcomponent of professional & business services rose 15,000 after a 21,000 gain.

The public sector contracted as government employment fell 24,000, following a 33,000 decline in September. Most of the October decrease was in the non-educational component of state government.

Earnings were moderately healthy as average hourly earnings in October rose 0.2 percent, following an upwardly revised 0.3 percent the month before. Analysts had forecast a 0.2 percent increase. The average workweek for all workers in October was unchanged at 34.3 hours. Analysts called for 34.3 hours.

From the household survey, the unemployment rate edged down to 9.0 percent from 9.1 percent in September. The consensus expected 9.1 percent. The unemployment rate declined largely on a sizeable 277,000 boost in household employment which has posted significant increases for three months in a row.

The October employment report is about as expected net. The best news was the upward revisions to payroll employment and the continued gains in household employment. These suggest that there might be a little more momentum than seen in the headline payroll number for October. The upward revisions might also help explain moderate strength in retail sales in recent months.

On the news, equity futures rose somewhat but slipped later.



Note that construction took another hit, month after month, years now of contracting construction and manufacturing. What we now manufacture is money and false statistics.

Below is the entire report from the BLS:
Employment Situation November 2011

On the Alternate table we can see that unadjusted U-6, that most closely resembling how it was calculated in the past, fell to 15.3%, while the adjusted data fell to 16.2%. These numbers can shift based on underlying counts and categorizations:



The small business “Birth/Death Model” created 102,000 phony jobs, up from last year’s 71,000 phony jobs in October, and up 145,000 jobs from the month prior!



Without that one manipulation alone, the headline numbers would have been negative. My take is that the economy continues to lose jobs, in fact has not produced a single job in years despite the population continuing to grow. We are currently just like Japan in that we foolishly continue to print debt money which destroys real production and real jobs while we manipulate the data to create apparent “growth” so that politicians and “Fed” monsters can continue their snow jobs.

Of course the people are wising up to the disconnect between the false statistics and the spin, thus we are beginning to see more of them on the streets as unemployment checks and food stamps won’t keep the population happy forever. That’s simply not the future I want for my children, no one does.

If you want to see reality, John Williams is still tracking the unemployment numbers without all the manipulations – try 23%:



The stock market has created a Head & Shoulder’s pattern where it looks like the right shoulder has completed. This pattern is seen throughout the markets, especially in the financials. Below is a 20 day, 30 minute chart of the SPX (S&P 500) where you can see the neckline at the 1,215 level. If that level is broken in the next few days, then the target on this pattern will be in the vicinity of 1,140ish, manipulation in Europe, the U.S., Japan, the bond market, the currency market, false flags, and “QE” announcements excluded:


All “investments” carry some risk, please consult your investment advisor who will tell you that there’s never been a better time to buy, dollar cost average, buy the dips, and oh, look at the shiny new ETF derivative that loses 3% a month even though you bet in the correct direction.

In other news, Nobel Prize winning economist, Paul Krugman, says that, “more debt is needed to cure our debt problem.”

Meanwhile in Japan, you can see children glowing in the dark, yet our captured “regulators” are too narcissistic to take even a modicum of action. Good thing the Japanese government knows what to do:
Tokyo Electric Power Co. won approval for a 900 billion yen ($11.5 billion) bailout from the government after the Fukushima nuclear catastrophe to avert bankruptcy and start paying compensation for the crisis.

Trade and Industry Minister Yukio Edano approved the support after the company known as Tepco committed to cutting 7,400 jobs and 2.5 trillion yen in costs. The utility forecast an annual loss of 600 billion yen, its second since the March earthquake and tsunami wrecked its Fukushima nuclear plant.

Now there’s some proactive regulating right there! Arnie Gunderson comes at us again with the hot particle good news/ bad news scenario, don’t think I’ll be traveling to Japan anytime soon, and I can only wish that our government and “regulators” weren’t as captured as they are:

Scientist Marco Kaltofen Presents Data Confirming Hot Particles from Fairewinds Associates

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Morning Update/ Market Thread 11/3 - Productivity Baloney. Tell Me Where Do the Children Play Edition…

Good Morning,

Equities are zooming higher this morning on hopes that the Greek government is falling apart and that the vote by the people on the crazy austerity measures will not happen! Nuts, as in literally insane. Buckle up, because the money explosion is happening in spades right now, the criminals are hell bent on creating money from nothing that benefits them, while simultaneously forcing austerity and inflation on the masses. The ECB CUT interest rates by .25% this morning, also fueling the money explosion – this will NOT help the situation, it will only make it worse. Rising inflation is the very worst thing that can happen for the economy at this point, the results will be far more painful for the masses, but it will take longer to realize just how painful it is.

Stocks were down 200 points, but then zoomed straight up 300 points on the continuation of the ridiculous Greek tragedy. The dollar is down, bonds are down, oil is higher, gold & silver are higher, and food commodities are higher but still within the range of the past few weeks.

Weekly Jobless Claims came in at 397,000, down from last week’s 402,000 which was revised up, of course, to 406k. For the past week the DOL reports that for unadjusted data, “The total number of people claiming benefits in all programs for the week ending October 15 was 6,781,960, an increase of 103,117 from the previous week.” The truth is that jobs are still being shed, as numbers need to be below 350k to reflect any sort of job growth, especially in relation to population growth. Here’s Econospin:
Highlights
Jobless claims continue to come down but ever so slowly. Initial claims fell 9,000 in the October 29 week to 397,000, a decline partly offset by a 4,000 upward revision to the prior week to 406,000. The four-week average is slowly approaching the 400,000 level, down 2,000 in the week to 404,500. This level is more than 10,000 lower than the month-ago comparison and offers a moderately positive indication for the October employment report.

Continuing claims in data for the October 22 week fell 15,000 to 3.683 million with the four-week average down 10,000 to 3.704 million. A month-to-month comparison shows a roughly 40,000 improvement though declines in continuing claims reflect an uncertain mix of new hiring and benefit expiration. The unemployment rate for insured workers is unchanged at 2.9 percent.

There are no special factors in the data which point to improvement, however slow, in the jobs market. This report, coming ahead of tomorrow's monthly employment report, is likely to be a positive for the stock market through the session.



This morning’s Productivity & Labor Costs report shows the trend – lower costs for labor, combined with supposedly higher “Productivity.” Again, they are not measuring “productivity,” they are measuring cost of goods produced measured in dollars! When you are producing massive quantities of dollars, then “productivity” measured in dollars goes up. Yet, fewer and fewer people have any money to afford the higher prices created from money production that benefits only those who are closest to that money production while harming those furthest from it. Here’s Econoblind on the report:
Highlights
Productivity picked up strength in the third quarter on healthier output. Nonfarm business productivity rebounded an annualized 3.1 percent in the third quarter after dipping 0.1 percent in the previous quarter. The market expectation was for a 2.5 boost for the third quarter. The output component improved to 3.8 percent from 1.8 percent in the second quarter. Hours worked increased an annualized 0.6 percent after a 2.0 percent rise the prior quarter. Unit labor costs fell an annualized 2.4 percent, following a 2.8 percent increase in the second quarter. The consensus forecast was for a 0.7 percent dip.

Compensation growth was soft, rising an annualized 0.6 percent, following a 2.7 percent increase in the second quarter.

Year-on-year, productivity was up 1.1 percent in the third quarter-up from 0.9 percent in the second quarter. Year-ago unit labor costs came in at up 1.2 percent in the second quarter, compared to a rise of 1.8 percent in the prior period.

Today's productivity report is favorable toward a continuation of growth in corporate profits with output up and labor costs down. But the negative is that businesses are still reluctant to hire.

To even attempt to spin this economy into a positive is a crime against humanity. Yes, money printing leads to higher “profits,” as measured in dollars, but measured any other way, it is a total loser of a proposition. And because our money is debt, more debt money will only work to kill real productivity and any velocity that our money had – witness our supposed GDP divided by the MZM money supply, M2 Velocity, and M1 money supply:

GDP Divided by MZM (Diminishing Productivity):


M2 Velocity:


M1:


Just look at the parabolic nature of your money! Here’s a clue for you, that trajectory is not sustainable! Those charts are THE reason why you are seeing protests on the streets, and they are becoming violent. “Other events,” major league events, are coming our way. It’s our fault for not putting an end to it sooner, but change, and very likely violence on a global scale, is now coming weather you like it or not.

Since we’re talking phony “productivity,” let’s revisit that great Kennedy quote to keep us focused:
“Too much and too long, we seem to have surrendered community excellence and community values in the mere accumulation of material things. Our gross national product...if we should judge the United States of America by that - counts air pollution and cigarette advertising, and ambulances to clear our highways of carnage. It counts special locks for our doors and the jails for those who break them. It counts the destruction of our redwoods and the loss of our natural wonder in chaotic sprawl. It counts napalm and the cost of a nuclear warhead, and armored cars for police who fight riots in our streets. It counts Whitman's rifle and Speck's knife, and the television programs which glorify violence in order to sell toys to our children.

Yet the gross national product does not allow for the health of our children, the quality of their education, or the joy of their play. It does not include the beauty of our poetry or the strength of our marriages; the intelligence of our public debate or the integrity of our public officials. It measures neither our wit nor our courage; neither our wisdom nor our learning; neither our compassion nor our devotion to our country; it measures everything, in short, except that which makes life worthwhile. And it tells us everything about America except why we are proud that we are Americans.”
― Robert F. Kennedy

And just to underscore that sentiment, look at how Food Stamp use just rose to yet another all-time record of 45.8 million Americans:
Nov. 1 (Bloomberg) -- The number of Americans receiving food stamps reached a record 45.8 million in August, the government said.

The figure was 1.1 percent higher than the previous month and 8.1 percent more than a year earlier, the U.S. Department of Agriculture said today in a report on its website. Assistance rolls are increasing as joblessness remains at 9.1 percent of the workforce.

That equals 14.7% of all Americans on food stamps! There are your bread lines, and it is impacting our children very unequally. Note the Jobless 9.1% lie and how it is carried into the psyche by the media.

The good news is that when presented with a true solution outside of the central banker’s box, people seem to get it. Bill Still came out of nowhere, and thanks to your help, completely blew the field away in that recent Tennessee straw poll that just ended:



Any hope for a sane future for our children, America, and the world, rests on the people’s shoulders – your shoulders. The root of the problem is in the way private individuals have been granted the right to control the production of money – all other problems stem from that, and it is here where the people need to focus their energy.

"Productivity" my rear, nothing but money printing for the benefit of a few...

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Morning Update/ Market Thread 11/2 - Don’t Feed the Animals Edition…

Good Morning,

Click here to listen to some great mood music while you’re reading today’s report: Bank of America, Home of the Fee…

Yes, moving your money to your local credit union is a great idea, and just one step in depriving the rabid animals of food.

After losing nearly 600 DOW points in the past two days, equity futures are higher ahead of today’s manipulate you some more FOMC “Fedspeak,” designed to impress you with lies and manure, while giving HFT operators the movement in the markets necessary to rob that portion of the population who remains unaware of just how unreal the markets are. Just to be clear, those who are creating money from nothing in this society are the very same people who own the stock exchanges and also own the HFTs. The dollar is down, bonds are down, oil is back above $93, gold & silver are higher, and food commodities are trading higher within their recent range.

The very conflicted and definitely hypocritical Mortgage Banker’s Association (MBA) reports that Purchase Applications rose by 1.8% in the past week – hey, at least it’s getting close to the range of a believable figure for a change:
Highlights
Purchase applications for home mortgages rose for a second week, up 1.8 percent in the October 28 week on top of the 6.4 percent gain in the October 21 week to nearly reverse the prior week's 8.8 percent drop. The refinance index is down 0.2 percent in the latest week. Rates in the week were little changed with 30-year conforming loans ($417,500 or less) down two basis points to 4.31 percent and 30-year jumbo loans (greater than $417,500) up one basis point to 4.69 percent.

The Challenger number of mass layoff announcements fell significantly last month from 115,730 back down to 42,759:
Highlights
Layoff announcements eased in October to 42,759 from an outsized 115,730 in September that included a big cut in the US Army. The October level is near the low end of trend and offers a mildly positive indication for Friday's employment report. Government layoffs fell to 2,785 from September's 54,182 though the report notes the pending risk of big cuts in the postal service. Consumer products show the heaviest layoffs in September with 7,169 followed by retail at 4,254.



The ADP Payroll report rose from September’s 91,000 to 110,000 supposed private payroll jobs “created.” ADP revised the 91,000 from September higher to 116k. This report, from my perspective, is notoriously inaccurate but it is used to set expectations for this Friday’s Employment Situation Report where the consensus is looking for a 90k nonfarm payrolls number (manipulation no extra charge unless you play with their HFT machines).

The MF Global debacle is looking very much like a Ponzi scheme was in progress where they were using customer funds to speculate in the market to fuel their “returns” (losses). This morning their lawyer is claiming that all the money is there, but Interactive Brokers who backed out of a deal to buy MF Global seems to think otherwise. Just go to Bloomberg and you will read about one fraud after another. Most of the frauds during the boom years are just overlooked, regulators and politicians captured, everyone simply looks the other way while carrying on with their own fraud. But when the easy money tide goes out, we now have accusations flying, it seems the accounting wasn’t quite up to snuff and now only the attorneys are going to profit.

Speaking of fraud, we’ll get to hear the FOMC drivel at 12:30 Eastern today. Hey, don’t feed the animals.

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Morning Update/ Market Thread 11/1/11 - One Edition…

Good Morning,

My, that’s a lot of ones, and the eleventh will be here soon! The markets are choking on European debt today as the Greeks put the “bailout” and its austerity to a sudden vote – of course anyone would be out of their minds to vote for IMF enslavement, and thus we can expect it to go nowhere, not that it was anything but a circular joke and Ponzi scheme to begin with. I think I can see Bernie blushing from here. Stocks are tanking, the dollar is shooting the waxing crescent, bonds are zooming, oil is finally back below the $90 mark, gold & silver are retreating, and food commodities are just a little more palatable.

The silly and planet ravaging FOMC meeting begins today, the Bernanke will spew forth tomorrow as the world’s narcissists (1%) hang on his worthless utterances, waiting to see how their HFTs will react to all the other HFTs. Meanwhile the wannabes will watch their money get stolen from them, and the 99% who are far away from the production of money will lose, and lose, and lose… that is until they force a change that gets rid of the phony “Fed” and allows our nation to produce debt-free sovereign money. And no thank you, we don’t want to repeat the other mistake of history, gold as or behind our money.

The Manufacturing ISM and Construction Spending will be released at 10:00 Eastern this morning and will be reported inside of today’s Daily Thread.

Yesterday a judge in Tennessee ordered the police to stop arresting Occupy protesters. Good for her, at least there is one honorable person still sitting on the bench.
"Political expression deserves the highest level of protection and it was unacceptable for the state to suddenly shut down protesters' speech and forcibly oust them from Legislative Plaza that has long been used as a place for peaceful expression," said Hedy Weinberg, executive director at the ACLU of Tennessee.

I certainly call on all other authorities, police, judges, mayors, everyone, to do likewise. Good for you, U.S. District Judge Aleta Trauger, sometimes all it takes is one!

Time to turn to the one that I would immediately appoint as special prosecutor to rout out the systemic financial Fraud, Bill Black. Here he is meeting up with the Occupy movement talking about the Savings & Loan crisis. Pay attention to the numbers, here he says that the fraud is more than 70 times the size. I would say that the scope of the fraud is even larger than that. And while Mr. Black certainly understands the fraud, he falls short of getting on the true roots of the problem – it’s not just the regulators, the root stems from giving private individuals the right to control the production of money... for it is those who produce the money from nothing that use it to capture the regulators:



Now here’s Bill Black again explaining the corporate shell game that Bank of America is playing. I’ve been talking about this for years now, it’s not just BAC, it’s all the big banks, the mortgage insurers, and many more. Again, our government has turned their backs on the shell game, it is a crime, it’s completely illegal:



Freedom Vision's number one...
1. Restore and maintain the proper rule of law by prosecuting systemic financial fraud. Create checks and balances to keep it from happening again.

You know that I harp on how we measure our “productivity” in dollars, not in real things, and that leads us to measure the production of money and debt, not the production of anything real. Well, yesterday I ran across a wonderful quote on productivity by Robert F. Kennedy that I want to share. When was the last time you heard a politician talk like that? This quote deserves reflection, I think I’ll include it whenever the “Fed” releases their phony GDP numbers:
“Too much and too long, we seem to have surrendered community excellence and community values in the mere accumulation of material things. Our gross national product...if we should judge the United States of America by that - counts air pollution and cigarette advertising, and ambulances to clear our highways of carnage. It counts special locks for our doors and the jails for those who break them. It counts the destruction of our redwoods and the loss of our natural wonder in chaotic sprawl. It counts napalm and the cost of a nuclear warhead, and armored cars for police who fight riots in our streets. It counts Whitman's rifle and Speck's knife, and the television programs which glorify violence in order to sell toys to our children.

Yet the gross national product does not allow for the health of our children, the quality of their education, or the joy of their play. It does not include the beauty of our poetry or the strength of our marriages; the intelligence of our public debate or the integrity of our public officials. It measures neither our wit nor our courage; neither our wisdom nor our learning; neither our compassion nor our devotion to our country; it measures everything, in short, except that which makes life worthwhile. And it tells us everything about America except why we are proud that we are Americans.”
― Robert F. Kennedy