Seniors, wake up
and call Janet Yellen. With an increase in interest rates next year, as Chair Yellen implied in her
press conference on Wednesday, she can restore your savings accounts to relevance.
The end for low rates might be in sight, and that is good news, despite the
initial reaction from markets. Chair
Yellen continued the taper, and suggested that she would start to raise rates
when the taper was over. The Fed has plenty of wiggle room, though, because it
will keep current policies “until the outlook for the labor market has improved
substantially in a context of price stability,” according to the Federal Open Market Committee statement . That is a
fuzzy goal that should not give much hope to those who want a sounder system. Back in
the 1970s or 1980s or 1990s, you might have expected a 5% interest rate or
higher on your savings to generate income for your golden years. Now, it is not
even 1%. Ten years
ago, in 2004, the federal funds rate was about 1%. Then, it temporarily climbed
to a plateau of about 5.25% between the summers of 2006 and 2007. However, from
the end of 2007 to the beginning of 2009, the rate declined to practically zero
and has remained there. Income
inequality is “the defining challenge of our time,” President Obama said last December, and a zero interest rate
for savers contributes to inequality. Those with stock portfolios gain because
asset prices are inflated as people look for higher returns. Seniors on fixed
incomes have to get returns somehow, and junk bonds and riskier stocks are the
answer for many. Economists
and politicians tend to believe in the greatest good for the greatest number.
But the idea of a system in which the returns to frugal saving are zero with
certainty, while the returns to investing money in risky high-yield stocks and
bonds — a form of gambling — often pays off, is troubling, to say the least. It
might pay for a senior to invest in riskier assets in the short run, but if
interest rates rise to historical levels and the stock markets adjust down,
such senior investors will suffer. Based
on new satellite images, the search for Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 has zeroed
in on an extremely deep area of the Indian Ocean. If this is where the plane
went down, the wreckage could be up to three miles deep. It is not
only gambling that pays off, it is also borrowing. With mortgage rates at
historic lows, people can take on a lot of debt. So winners
from low rates include those who want to borrow, and those who hold stocks and
commodities. Losers include those who save and lend because they receive less
in interest payments from their assets. This
situation disproportionately affects seniors. According to data from the Census Bureau, seniors ages 65 and over made an average of
$3,239 from interest in 2012, and an average of $32,849 in total income. Thus,
just under 10% of their income came from interest. In contrast, people ages 25
to 64 earned an average of $1,356 annually from interest, and $47,364 in total
income. Less than 3% of income came from interest for people ages 25 to 64. McKinsey
concluded in a November 2013 report that from 2007 to 2012, defined-benefit
pension plans and guaranteed-rate life insurance plans lost $270 billion of
income due to the Fed’s low-interest-rate policies because they have far more
interest bearing assets than liabilities. McKinsey estimated that American
households have lost $360 billion of income. On average, American households
are net savers. The big
winners of the Fed’s policies were the U.S. government, which gained about $900
billion, and non-financial corporations, which gained $310 billion. McKinsey
calculated that households headed by people under the age of 45 are net debtors
and so have benefitted from lower rates. In particular, those households with
heads ages 35 to 44 have gained $1,700 more in spending each year because of
lower rates. Those under 35 gained $1,500 a year. The losers
are the seniors, especially household heads aged 75 and over, who lost $2,700 a
year in income. Those aged between 65 and 74 lost $1,900. If markets
were perfectly liquid, seniors would be able to take advantage of falling
interest rates to refinance their mortgages. But many seniors have no mortgage.
Those that do are often unwilling to refinance. Others, even though they might
want to refinance, find that their houses are worth less than the mortgage, and
they cannot meet tighter credit standards. Keeping
interest rates low is not only bad for seniors and savers, it is bad for the
economy as a whole. In a global marketplace, low interest rates in the United
States discourage lending to the United States. The reason the Fed had to step
in to buy Treasury paper is that there is lower demand because of ultra-low
interest rates. When interest rates rise, and eventually they will, many parts
of our financial system will have a rude awakening and a difficult adjustment.
Our deficit will balloon with our high level of debt. Many businesses
predicated on low interest rates will fail. Small- and
mid-sized economies cannot pretend that easy money is a successful monetary
policy. Japan and Europe have tried easy money. It has not worked. The United
States has performed slightly better, not because easy money is a good policy,
but because people around the world still look to the dollar as a safe haven in
times of trouble. And the world today has more than its fair share of troubles.
All Americans,
and seniors in particular, will be better when the Fed abandons its
low-interest-rate policy, despite some initial turbulence. Almost five years
into the recovery, economic growth is stunted, and labor force participation
rates are at 1978 levels. Seniors always tell their children they know better —
now they should tell Janet Yellen to let those rates rise.
03/21/2014 - 18:33 Veteran
Investor Jim Sinclair Says That If Russia Accepts Payment For Oil And Gas In
Any Currency Other Than The Dollar – Whether It’s Gold, The Euro, The Ruble,
The Rupee, Or Anything Else – Then...
So…….are
you interested in hearing the ‘voice’ of Cognitive Dissonance, to sneak a peek
into the thinking and mindset behind the anonymous man who is Cognitive
Dissonance?
White
House attacks Russian financial markets and oil, Merkel suffers from “moral
cowardice,” Russia develops “Putin Doctrine,” in crescendo of sanctions and
counter-sanctions
Submitted
by Tyler Durden on 03/21/2014 - 09:41 While
Europe is furiously scrambling to find alternative sources of energy should
Gazprom pull the plug on natgas exports to Germany and Europe (the imminent
surge in Ukraine gas prices by 40% is probably the best indication of what the
outcome would be), Russia is preparing the announcement of the
"Holy Grail" energy deal with none other than China, a move which
would send geopolitical shockwaves around the world and bind the two nations in
a commodity-backed axis. One which, as some especially on these pages,
have suggested would lay the groundwork for a new joint, commodity-backed
reserve currency that bypasses the dollar, something which Russia implied
moments ago when its finance minister Siluanov said that Russia may refrain
from foreign borrowing this year. Translated: bypass western purchases of
Russian debt, funded by Chinese purchases of US Treasurys, and go straight to
the source. Submitted
by Tyler Durden on 03/21/2014 - 21:52 As
was reported
earlier, the Turkish premier, embroiled in what increasingly appears a
career terminating corruption and embezzlement scandal (it is not exactly clear
yet just how involved the CIA is in this particular upcoming government
overthrow), blocked Turkey's access to Twitter last night, hours after vowing
to "destroy
twitter." The idiocy of this escalation against dissemination of
information in the internet age needs no comment. Well maybe one. This is what
we said in our post from this morning: "since Turkey will certainly not
stop at just Twitter, here is what is coming next: "Last week,
Erdogan said the country could also block Facebook and YouTube."
It now appears that at least half of this threat is about to materialize
because moments ago Google just announced that it would not remove a
previously uploaded video, one in which Erdogan tells his son to hide money
from investigators (one
which can be seen here), and which Erdogan demanded be pulled from Google
(seemingly unaware that by doing so he simply made sure that everyone saw
it). This means that within days, if not hours, Turkey will likely block
Google-owned YouTube, if not Google itself. Submitted
by Tyler Durden on 03/21/2014 - 21:05 In the 16 months since Japanese
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe launched his bold plan to reflate Japan’s shrinking
economy the yen has depreciated by 22% against the dollar, 28% against
the euro and 24% against the renminbi. The hope was to stimulate trade and push
the current account decisively into the black. Yet the reverse has occurred.
Japan’s external position has worsened due to anemic export growth and a
spiraling energy import bill: in January it recorded a record monthly trade
deficit of ¥2.8trn ($27.4bn). Having eked out a 0.7% current account surplus in
2013, Japan may this year swing into deficit for the first time since 1980. So
why is the medicine not working? Submitted
by Tyler Durden on 03/21/2014 - 20:29 Presented
with no comment... Submitted
by Tyler Durden on 03/21/2014 - 20:26 With
home-ownership
rates collapsing and the
likelihood of 'wealth taxes' potentially weighing on even the oligarchs and
1%-ers willingness to throw cash at US housing, we thought the following
rusting hulks of a bye-gone era in a strorage yard deep in Middle America... Submitted
by Tyler Durden on 03/21/2014 - 19:52 Look who is warning us again about the great
harm conspiracy theories are doing to the minds of impressionable citizens
everywhere: Cass
Sunstein has emerged at Bloomberg, to once again plead for 'correction' of
the many conspiracy theories that are disseminated on that pesky new medium,
the intertubes, seemingly without inhibition. Contrary to the infamous paper in
which he described how to precisely combat the spreading of false information
that lacks the government's seal of approval, he doesn't list his favored
censorship and disinformation techniques outright this time, but it is
certainly implied that 'something must be done'. Mr.
Sunstein's concern with 'conspiracy theories' is all about preserving
the State's perceived right to rule by letting nothing intrude
on the notion that politicians and bureaucrats are 'disembodied spirits solely
devoted to the public good' rather than people who pursue their own personal
interests. Submitted
by Tyler Durden on 03/21/2014 - 19:15 A
month ago we presented a must read interview by Swiss Finanz und Wirtschaft
with respected value investor Howard Marks, in which, when explaining the
motives driving rational investing he summarized simply, "in
the end, the devil always wins." Today, we are happy to bring our
readers the following
interview with one of our favorite strategists, GMO's James Montier, in
which true to form, Montier packs no punches, and says that the market
is now overvalued by 50% to 70%, adding that there is "nothing at
all" that has an attractive valuation, and that he sees a "hideous
opportunity set." Submitted
by Tyler Durden on 03/21/2014 - 19:08 Despite
the total collapse (flattening) in the Treasury yield curve in the last 2 days,
Citi's FX Technicals group is convinced that we have seen a turn in
fixed income that will see significantly higher yields in the years
ahead and notably higher yields by this yearend also. Furthermore, they believe
this will initially come from the belief in a continued taper, and the curve
will initially steepen (2’s versus 5’s and 2’s versus 10’s). This normalization,
they add, will be a good thing - QE encourages misallocation of capital
and poor business decisions which has a negative feedback loop into the economy
- but add (as long as yields do not go too far too fast like last year). Submitted
by Tyler Durden on 03/21/2014 - 17:50 In its 2013 annual report to Congress,
the Office of the Taxpayer Advocate wrote that the IRS shows “disrespect for
the law and a disregard for taxpayer rights.” Further, the report says
that the current system “disproportionately burdens those who [make] honest
mistakes." We all know the stories. The IRS has nearly infinite power
to do whatever it wants, including freezing you out of your own bank account
without so much as a phone call, let alone due process. This is an incredible
amount of authority to wield. But the British government has just gone
even further... Submitted
by Tyler Durden on 03/21/2014 - 17:12 As
gold completes its golden cross today and remains by far the best-performing
asset of 2014, we thought it intriguing that Goldman Sachs' commodity group
would issue a strong "sell your gold" recommendation... of course, when
Goldman's clients are selling, who is buying? As a reminder, the
last
time the bank was extremely bearish on gold (about a year ago), our
skepticism at the time was well warranted as Goldman was in fact the
largest buyer of gold in the following quarter. Submitted
by Tyler Durden on 03/21/2014 - 16:35 The biggest news this past week was Janet
Yellen's first post-FOMC meeting speech and press conference as the Federal
Reserve Chairwoman. While some have the utmost respect for her
accomplishments, every time we hear her speak all we can think of is a white
haired, 75-year old grandmother baking cookies in her kitchen. This
week's "Things To Ponder" covers several disparate takes on what
she said, didn't say and the direction of the Federal Reserve from here. Submitted
by Tyler Durden on 03/21/2014 - 16:21 Quad-witching
only added to an extremely volatile week as the entire bond, stock, FX
complex pumped and dumped on the basis of whether a "considerable
period" was really six months and whether "quite some time" was
more or less than six months. The S&P hit record highs early on this
morning thanks to a ramp in AUDJPY (but once again bonds didn't blink). All
that ended when Europe closed and the Biotech sector's weakness spread,
leaving the Nasdaq -1.4% post-FOMC (and all other indices in the red
post-FOMC). The range of moves in bonds, FX, commodities, and vol
this week were impressive as we noted below... 4 words sum up
stocks - "not off the lows" Submitted
by Tyler Durden on 03/21/2014 - 16:17 First
the Fed screws up the "dots" - on one hand telling HFT algos not to
worry about rate hikes, on the other saying the FF rate in 2016 will be a
scroching 2.25%, then Yellen flubs the "6 month" statement sending
stock into a tailspin and Hilsenrath and Liesman explaining in overdrive that
she didn't mean what she said, and now, we learn with the traditional Friday
afternoon "shove under the carpet" bomb, that the Fed also flubbed
its stress test results. Sounds about par for the world's most powerful, and
clueless, monetary institution. Submitted
by Tyler Durden on 03/21/2014 - 15:40 At
10:27:21 ET, the Nasdaq 100 e-mini futures contract suddenly dropped
on extreme activity as someone decided it was an opportune time to dump
3000 contracts or around $220 million notional. As Nanex notes, the ETF - QQQ -
also collapsed (with over 1200 trades in 1 second) as bids and offers were
crossed and markets went flash-crashy for a few tenths of a second. The
questions is - who was it? Waddell & Reed? Submitted
by Tyler Durden on 03/21/2014 - 14:54 With
Bernanke gone, the remaining Fed members knowing full well they will be
crucified, metaphorically of course (if not literally) when it all inevitably
comes crashing down, are finally at liberty with their words... and the truth
is bleeding out courtesy of the president of the Dallas Fed, via Bloomberg. We
wonder how President Obama, that crusader for fairness, equality and all time
Russell 200,000 highs, will feel about that? In the meantime, just like the
Herp, QE is the gift that keeps on giving.. and giving... and giving... to the
0.001%. Most
people have absolutely no idea that the Earth barely missed being fried by a
massive EMP burst from the sun in 2012, in 2013 and just last month. If
any of those storms would have directly hit us, the result would have been
catastrophic. Electrical transformers would have burst into flames, power
grids would have gone down and much of our technology would have been
fried. In essence, life as we know it would have ceased to exist – at
least for a time. These kinds of solar storms have hit the Earth many
times before, and experts tell us that it is inevitable that it will happen
again. The most famous one happened in 1859, and was known as the Carrington
Event. But other than the telegraph, humanity had very little dependence
on technology at the time. If another Carrington Event happened today, it
would be a complete and utter nightmare. A study by Lloyd’s of London has
concluded that it would have taken a (Read More...) In our 657th issue: EFF
is fighting to get to the bottom of disturbing new government claims that seem
to indicate that it has been destroying records of their ongoing mass
surveillance despite a court order. This is part of our longstanding case
against illegal NSA spying, Jewel v. NSA, but also has implications for
our First Amendment-focused case, First Unitarian Church v. NSA. After
an emergency hearing this week, the judge in the case issued an evidence
preservation order in First Unitarian. On top of that, the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Court is demanding answers from the government about its behavior
in not telling it about the Jewel v. NSA preservation order. The
question of whether the government improperly destroyed evidence so far will be
briefed over the next several weeks. This
week, EFF joined over 5,600 individuals in a letter pressing the Senate for
meaningful patent reform. We joined entrepreneurs, investors, and inventors in
calling for changes to the patent system that increase transparency and address
excessive costs in litigation, create better programs for challenging bad
patents, and protect end-users and consumers. EFF
recently won victories in two FOIA cases. These victories are encouraging, but
they also make it clear why better transparency is necessary. In both our
cases, we sought information that would shed light on government intelligence
activities, and judges have ordered the government to either hand over more
documents or come up with new arguments to justify withholding information.
These victories create good precedent for future FOIA requesters, but the
multiple years and court rulings it has taken to get these records demonstrates
why whistleblowers are so important to transparency. A Short Guide to the
Internet's Biggest Enemies We've
written a short guide to Reporters Without Borders annual Enemies of the
Internet index, which tracks the countries that repress online speech,
intimidate and arrest bloggers, and conduct surveillance of their citizens. We
outline which countries have improved, which have gotten even worse, and which
we think are missing from the list. Former Church
Committee Counsel and Staffers Call on Congress to Create Modern Day Church
Committee The
Church Committee was formed 40 years ago in response to U.S. intelligence
agencies spying on Americans. The Committee delved deep into these abusive
practices and brought about desperately needed reform in the 70s. Now, we've
published a letter written by 16 former counsel, advisers, and professional
staff members of the Church Committee calling on Congress to form a new Church
Committee to investigate the NSA and other intelligence agencies in light of
the abuses we see today. EFF Fights Back Against Oakland's Disturbing Domain
Awareness Center EFF
submitted a second letter to the Oakland City Council opposing Oakland's
proposed Domain Awareness Center, a potent surveillance system that could
enable ubiquitous privacy and civil liberties violations against Oakland
residents. The letter emphasized how many questions remain about the DAC.
Nonetheless, on March 4th, Mayor Jean Quan cast the deciding vote in favor of a
motion to remove city cameras and ShotSpotter from the DAC components but move
forward with the DAC. New NSA Slides Reveal
Tailored Access Run Amok New
slides from Edward Snowden have revealed the disturbing extent of the
aggressive tactics used to gather signals intelligence by the NSA's Tailored
Access Unit. These slides show plans to install malware directly onto targets'
computers at an "industrial scale," using a system called TURBINE.
These implants are clearly excessive, and they make the Internet as a whole
less secure. We offer recommendations to increase security, including using
HTTPs and other tools. Why is the Patent
Office So Bad At Reviewing Software Patents? Broad
and vague software patents issued by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (PTO)
lead to many of the current problems with the patent system, in particular
patent trolling. A large contributor to this problem is the PTO's failure to
thoroughly search for prior art--the pre-existing publications and technology
that could invalidate a patent by showing that the invention wasn't new. EFF,
Public Knowledge, and Engine have submitted written comments urging the PTO to
do better at finding the most relevant prior art. Obama Nominates Former
SOPA Lobbyist to Help Lead TPP Negotiations President
Obama has nominated former SOPA lobbyist Robert Holleyman, the former chief
executive officer of the Business Software Alliance, to join the team of U.S.
negotiators leading the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) talks. This is an
interesting choice in light of the fact that the draconian copyright
enforcement sections of TPP, among other areas of concern, have led to a
standstill in the negotiations. This is one in a long string of indications of
heavy corporate influence on trade talks in which the U.S. is increasingly
encountering resistance from other countries. TPP is also facing opposition at
home, from both voters and President Obama's political allies. Without the
authority to Fast Track TPP, Obama may not be able to pass TPP at all. Los Angeles Cops Argue
All Cars in LA Are Under Investigation In
a brief filed in opposition to EFF and ACLU's request for a week’s worth of
Automatic License Plate Reader (ALPR) data, the Los Angeles Police Department
and L.A. Sheriff’s Department have argued that “All [license plate] data is
investigatory.” This novel argument is completely counter to the Fourth
Amendment and our criminal justice system, which require some indication of
criminal activity in order to conduct an investigation. Instead, ALPRs
automatically collect information. The law enforcement agencies acknowledge
that there is a privacy interest in this information, but ironically argues
that this means the data should not be released. Notice-and-Takedown
Gets its Day in Congress The
House Judiciary Committee heard testimony from a range of stakeholders around
the Digital Millennium Copyright Act's (DMCA) copyright notice-and-takedown
system and safe harbor provisions for service providers. The panelists spoke
from a variety of perspectives, with some speaking strongly in favor of legal
consequences of abuse of copyright takedown notices, some explaining why
treating searches that include the words "free" or "watch"
differently would not make sense, and some making suggestions that would almost
certainly lead to wiping out fair use. Safe harbor must remain in place, and
Congress should consider the actual costs of copyright abuse as it hears
testimony about the DMCA. EFF to the United Nations: Protect
Individuals Right to Privacy in The Digital Age The
Human Rights Committee of the United Nations is scrutinizing the United States'
mass surveillance practices and its compliance with Article 17 of the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which deals with the
right to privacy. EFF urges the Committee to consider the Necessary and
Proportionate Principles in this review. These principles, supported by over
400 organizations and 300,000 individuals, take a broad look at how modern
communications surveillance technologies can be addressed consistently with
human rights and the rule of law. NSA surveillance
program reaches 'into the past' to retrieve, replay phone calls Newly
released Snowden documents reveal the existence of MYSTIC, an NSA program
operative in one unnamed country that records 100% of calls into and out of
that country, including calls placed from the United States, and retains them
for 30 days. Netizen Report: Russia
Shutters Independent News Sites The
attorney general in Russia orders three opposition news websites shut down. Pentagon watchdog 'not
aware' of NSA bulk phone data collection The
Pentagon's deputy Inspector General states that he was unaware of the NSA's
bulk phone records collection. Our
members make it possible for EFF to bring legal and technological expertise
into crucial battles about online rights. Whether defending free speech online
or challenging unconstitutional surveillance, your participation makes a
difference. Every donation gives technology users who value freedom online a
stronger voice and more formidable advocate. If
you aren't already, please consider becoming an EFF member today. Editor:
Nadia Kayyali, Activist EFFector
is a publication of the Electronic Frontier Foundation. Membership
& donation queries: [email protected] General
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Photo: APLux, a
22-pound Himalayan cat that attacked a seven-month old baby. Cats don't become
ferocious felines that turn on their families for no reason, says the cat
behavior expert Jackson Galaxy, star of Animal Planet's "My Cat from
Hell", who is heading to Portland soon to work with the 4-year-old
part-Himalayan pet named Lux. Galaxy will film the visit for his show's fifth
season, which kicks off April 26 Paul Joseph Watson | Authorities deemed Jonathan Hall to be “depressed”. Infowars.com
| “You know, Morgan, that I will literally beat the hell out of you.” Mikael
Thalen | People have the right to certain weapons… providing that they register
them. Kurt Nimmo
| Legislation designed to put damper on alternative media. Steve Watson
| Latest leak exposes how government agents “hunt” network system
administrators to get data. Paul Joseph Watson | Authorities downplay concerns over new law. Kurt Nimmo
| Internet giant has done business with NSA and CIA. Paul Joseph Watson | Deputy Prime Minister confronted during incident. Why Silver Could
Outshine Gold TheStreet.com | Silver gains ground. Is the NSA manipulating the stock market? Jon Rappoport | There is already evidence of NSA
financial snooping. Do Not Make Fun Of Those That Have Fallen Out Of The Middle Class
– You Could Be Next Michael Snyder | There are
millions of American families that once lived very comfortable middle class
lifestyles that have lost it all. Why
None of the NSA’s Ideas Are Worth Spreading { Yeah … the alphabet soup kitchen crew (nsa, cia, think tanks,
sink tanks, etc.), welfare dependants all, have really been wrong at every turn of history, particularly
after the cold war when they irrevocably snatched defeat from the jaws of
victory. One really must wonder what they get paid for (in addition to all they
can take, etc.)} Mashable | If it were up to the NSA, we would be
victims in the dark. Turkey’s Twitter block and propaganda be damned: revolutions will
be tweeted Richard Wike | If ever there were a global trend, it’s
that the revolution will be tweeted, and then restricted. U.S. Navy Tracks Civilian Traffic Tickets Washington Examiner | Traffic citations added to military
database. Mississippi
gun protection bill headed to Governor’s desk Guns.com | Bill forbids gun confiscation. Delaware Supreme Court Throws Out Gun Ban Breitbart | Delaware Supreme
Court ruled gun ban “is unconstitutional.” Conservative prof who was denied promotion wins First Amendment
lawsuit Daily Caller | Adams’s lawyers said the victory is an
important one for free speech on public university campuses Mexico:
Knights Templar Drug Cartel Made Recruits Eat Children’s Hearts in Initiation
Rite International Business
Times | Cartel also
reportedly sold children’s organs to black market. Awash In Cash, Drug Cartels Rely On Big Banks To Launder Profits
NPR | As Infowars has reported for years,
cartels use megabanks for money laundering. Mexican police find 7 slain near U.S. border AZ Central | Incident occurred less than one mile from
Arizona border. Michelle
O: Human rights are off the agenda for China trip AFP | White House declined to reveal cost of
trip. Tripoli
clashes intensify, death toll hits 24 The Daily Star | Violence has lasted nine days so far. Furious reaction, political split after Turkey bans Twitter Reuters | Turkey bans social media ahead of
elections. Michelle O: Human rights are off the agenda for China trip AFP | White House declined to reveal cost of
trip. Daily Mail | First lady’s mother is “barking [orders]
at the staff since she arrived.” Senate Has Votes to Pass Law Shielding Corporate Journalists Kurt Nimmo | Legislation designed to put damper on
alternative media. Kenya Legalises Polygamy Without Wife’s Consent AFP | Kenya’s parliament has
passed a bill allowing men to marry as many women as they want. Steve Watson
| Latest leak exposes how government agents “hunt” network system
administrators to get data. Paul Joseph Watson | Authorities downplay concerns over new law. Zero Hedge
| Russia is preparing the announcement of the “Holy Grail” energy deal. London Telegraph | “He was responsible for building Google, which is a
benevolent corporation.” Kurt Nimmo
| Internet giant has done business with NSA and CIA. Paul Joseph Watson | Deputy Prime Minister confronted during incident. Biz
Pac Review | MSNBC host Al Sharpton, who brings race race up at every
opportunity, wanted to know where U.S. Sen. Rand Paul got off talking about
racial issues. Mac
Salvo | The apple doesn’t fall far from the tree. Backtrack
Ukraine: Self-proclaimed govt fails to deliver on promises RT | Ukraine’s interim Prime Minister hasn’t
managed to deliver. President Putin mocks US sanctions, vows not to retaliate RT | Putin treated with irony the recent
sanctions imposed on certain Russian lawmakers. Ukraine crisis: EU signs association deal BBC News | EU leaders have
signed an agreement on closer relations with Ukraine, in a show of support
following Russia’s annexation of Crimea. Crimean Self-Defense Forces to Join Russian Military – Official
RIA Novosti | “After Crimea and
Sevastopol join Russia the self-defense forces of Crimea should be reformed and
become part of [Russia’s] Southern Military District.” 2014 Gallup International poll: US #1 threat to world peace Washington’s Blog | Gallup
International’s poll of 68 countries for 2014 found the US as the greatest
threat to peace in the world. Reuters | Mt. Gox said on Friday
it found 200,000 “forgotten” bitcoins on March 7. Do Not Make Fun Of Those That Have Fallen Out Of The Middle Class
– You Could Be Next Michael Snyder | There are
millions of American families that once lived very comfortable middle class lifestyles
that have lost it all. The Music Just Ended: “Wealthy” Chinese Are Liquidating Offshore
Luxury Homes In Scramble For Cash Zero Hedge | One of the primary
drivers of the real estate bubble in the past several years, particularly in
the ultra-luxury segment, were megawealthy Chinese buyers. Beef Prices Surge Most In A Decade As Food Inflation Soars Zero Hedge | Just a month ago we
warned that food inflation was on its way. Today we got the first confirmation. Obama
administration to blow $52 million in 3 months promoting Obamacare Tom Tillison | The administration needs an additional
one million people to sign up. Conservative prof who was denied promotion wins First Amendment
lawsuit Daily Caller | Adams’s lawyers
said the victory is an important one for free speech on public university
campuses. Nancy Pelosi: Obama is ‘about as nonpartisan a president as I have
ever served with’ Biz Pac Review |
Ha,ha,ha,ha,ha,ha,ha,ha,ha!!!!!!!!!! SHE
WEARS RED... STOCKS
SLIP AFTER SETTING NEW RECORDS... Pope
Warns Mobsters: Hell Awaits... Venice
votes to cut ties with Italy in online poll...
BloombergPetrodollar
Alert: Putin Prepares To Announce "Holy Grail" Gas Deal With China
Turkey
Set To Block YouTube Momentarily, After Google Refuses To Yank Clips Exposing
Prime Minister
Guest
Post: Japan's Self-Defeating Mercantilism
Millenial
Hope - Then And Now (In One Cartoon)
All
Aboard The Bus To Home Ownership
The
Taming Of Deluded 'Conspiracy Theorists'
James
Montier: "The Market Is Overvalued By 50%-70%" And "Nothing At
All" Is Attractively Valued
Citi
Warns Bond Bulls "QE Is Dead... Long Live Normalization"
British
Tax Authorities Just Out-Mafia'd The IRS
Goldman
Doubles Down Its Hate On The Best Performing Asset Of 2014: Gold
5
Things To Ponder: Yellin' About Yellen
Bursting
Biotech Bubbles And Calendar Concerns Club Stocks/Bonds
Fed
"Fails" Stress Test, Releases Revised Results
Who
Just Dumped $220 Million Nasdaq Futures In 1 Second?
"QE
Was A Massive Gift Intended To Boost Wealth", Fed President Admits
After
Several Near Misses, Experts Warn The Next Carrington Event Will Plunge Us Back
Into The Dark Ages
EFF Fights Potential Evidence Destruction in NSA Spying
Cases
Thousands Speak Out in Favor of Strong Patent Reform from
the Senate
EFF Victories in Two FOIA Cases: Court Rules Government's
Arguments are "Clearly Inadequate" to Support Claims
EFF Updates
miniLinks
Supported by Members
Administrivia
[email protected]
eff.org
San Francisco, CA 94109-7701
United StatesRecovering Alcoholic Has Guns Seized by Connecticut
Police
Alex Jones Re-issues Challenge to Box
‘Coward’ Piers Morgan
Middle School Assignment: Second
Amendment Requires Gun Registration
Senate Has Votes to Pass Law Shielding
Corporate Journalists
NSA Employee Brags About How “Cool”
And “Awesome” Spying On Innocent People Is
Connecticut State Police: No Door to
Door Gun Confiscations
Don’t Trust Google to Protect Email
from the NSA
Protester Crashes Live BBC Broadcast
to Warn of Pedophile Rings
NSA Employee Brags About How “Cool”
And “Awesome” Spying On Innocent People Is
Connecticut State Police: No Door to
Door Gun Confiscations
Petrodollar Alert: Putin Prepares To
Announce “Holy Grail” Gas Deal With China
Occupy Founder: ‘Make Google’s Eric
Schmidt CEO of America’ {
Wow! Talk about out of touch…}
Don’t Trust Google to Protect Email from
the NSA
Protester Crashes Live BBC Broadcast
to Warn of Pedophile Rings
Al Sharpton: ‘Where does Rand Paul get
off talking about civil rights?’
Daughter Pelosi Mocks Gadsden: “Don’t
Tread on My Obamacare”
MT.
GOX: We Just Found 200,000 ‘Forgotten’ Bitcoins
MICHELLE
O: HUMAN RIGHTS ARE OFF AGENDA...
HOTEL
STAFF COMPLAINS ABOUT OBAMA MOTHER IN CHINA...
BATTLE
OF FIRST LADIES...
OBAMACARE
TAX COLLECTION BEGINS; WHITE HOUSE SLAMS DRUDGE 'LIE'
Fed
Pres: 'QE Was Massive Gift Intended To Boost Wealth'...
Dying
Memphis Neighborhood Foretells Next Crisis: Mortgages...