Last Wednesday, June 24, Pugs held a luncheon in honor of our first member to depart for the Elysian Fields, or that large CinemaScope screen up above, Sir Christopher Lee, age 93. Pugs club is now back to 19 members, the ceiling being 21. Our president for life, Nick Scott—I actually was the first chief but was overthrown in a bloodless as well as voteless coup by Nick—gave a wonderful address while breaking yet another custom, this one about having ladies present. Our guest of honor was Lady Lee, Christopher’s widow. Now, there’s nothing more that a poor little Greek … Continue reading

Via Investment Research Dynamics, BlackRock Inc. is seeking government clearance to set up an internal program in which mutual funds that get hit with client redemptions could temporarily borrow money from sister funds that are flush with cash.  – Bloomberg News We may have been early on warning about leaving your savings in the financial system. It’s okay to be too early getting your money out of the system but it’s fatal to be just one second too late.  The gates are already in place in money market funds just waiting for the signal to be lowered BlackRock’s filing with … Continue reading

A bullet-proof vest does not mean you’re bullet-proof. It just means most bullets won’t penetrate the vest. But some will. Same with radar detectors. You’ll be less vulnerable – but you won’t be able invulnerable. Probably the greatest threat – the one radar detectors are least able to protect you from – is so-called “instant- on” radar. The problem isn’t that your detector won’t detect that you’ve been targeted. The problem is not detecting the radar in time to do much about it. Here’s how it works: Revenue collector parks on the shoulder or some other such place where – ideally, from … Continue reading

Fatigue is a chronic issue plaguing millions of people worldwide. We all get tired now and then, whether it’s because we’ve been working nonstop during the day or simply because we’ve chosen the wrong foods or skipped exercise. For many people, getting sluggish during the afternoon or early evening can place a serious damper on one’s work and social life. You’re not meant to always be tired, because your life is meant to be full and you’re meant to be active as much as you can. Of course, rest is a very important aspect of repairing and healing; however, it is … Continue reading

In the Western World Capitalism Has Devolved Into Looting Paul Craig Roberts …when you see that men get richer by graft and by pull than by work, and your laws don’t protect you against them, but protect them against you–when…

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In the Western World Capitalism Has Devolved Into Looting Paul Craig Roberts …when you see that men get richer by graft and by pull than by work, and your laws don’t protect you against them, but protect them against you–when…

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In the Western World Capitalism Has Devolved Into Looting Paul Craig Roberts …when you see that men get richer by graft and by pull than by work, and your laws don’t protect you against them, but protect them against you–when…

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In the Western World Capitalism Has Devolved Into Looting Paul Craig Roberts …when you see that men get richer by graft and by pull than by work, and your laws don’t protect you against them, but protect them against you–when…

The post Capitalism Has Devolved Into Looting appeared first on PaulCraigRoberts.org.

In the Western World Capitalism Has Devolved Into Looting Paul Craig Roberts …when you see that men get richer by graft and by pull than by work, and your laws don’t protect you against them, but protect them against you–when…

The post Capitalism Has Devolved Into Looting appeared first on PaulCraigRoberts.org.

In the Western World Capitalism Has Devolved Into Looting Paul Craig Roberts …when you see that men get richer by graft and by pull than by work, and your laws don’t protect you against them, but protect them against you–when…

The post Capitalism Has Devolved Into Looting appeared first on PaulCraigRoberts.org.

In the Western World Capitalism Has Devolved Into Looting Paul Craig Roberts …when you see that men get richer by graft and by pull than by work, and your laws don’t protect you against them, but protect them against you–when…

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Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras’s statement announcing a bank holiday is as combative as that on the referendum, and is worth quoting at length. After pointing to the ECB’ refusal to increase liquidity to banks, Tsipras said:
“It is clear that the…

Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras’s statement announcing a bank holiday is as combative as that on the referendum, and is worth quoting at length. After pointing to the ECB’ refusal to increase liquidity to banks, Tsipras said:
“It is clear that the…

While everyone is talking about an “inevitable” Greek exit from the Eurozone, some intelligence analysts are saying that it is rather the beginning of the end of the euro. Most dramatic was the comment by columnist Larry Elliot in Britain’s Guardian, under the headline: “Greece Crisis Could Be a Sarajevo Moment for the Eurozone.”

“A hundred and one years ago on Sunday, gun shots rang out in a city in southern Europe. Few at the time paid much heed to the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his wife as they drove through the streets of Sarajevo. Within six weeks, however, Europe was at war.

“Make no mistake, the decision by Alexis Tsipras to hold a referendum on the bailout terms being demanded of his country has the potential to be a Sarajevo moment…. It is not just about whether the creditors overplayed their hand in the negotiations, although they did. It is about the future of the euro itself.

“If Greece leaves, the idea that the euro is irrevocable is broken,” Elliot writes, and saying that the other countries will take the option of leaving the Eurozone. He then warns, “Just as importantly, the financial markets will know that, and will pile pressure on countries that look vulnerable. That’s why Greece represents an existential crisis for the Eurozone.

“It will be said in response that Greece is a small, insignificant country and that the single currency has much better defenses than it had at the last moment of acute trouble in the Summer of 2012. Diplomats in Europe’s capitals took very much the same view in late June 1914.”

Sputnik reports an article in today’s Der Spiegel by Henrik Müller under the headline, “Merkel’s European Strategy Didn’t Just Fail, It Failed Spectacularly.” Henrik puts the blame squarely on the German government and German Chancellor Angela Merkel in particular. And, writes Sputnik in different dispatch, the policy is now paving the way not just for a Grexit, but “for a Brexit, Frexit and Fixit,” referring to growing anti-euro sentiments in Britain (which isn’t part of the euro), France, and Finland.

“There is a real threat of Europe collapsing and Germany … is letting it happen,” Müller wrote.

An editorial in the London Daily Telegraph slammed the European Union, writing that

“the humiliation now being heaped upon a proud and ancient country is a salutary lesson to all member states — that without the power to make their own decisions they are always at the mercy of the unelected bureaucrats and financiers who run the institutions. The democracy that was born in Greece more than two millennia ago, no longer applies when control over the currency and economic policy is handed to a supranational body. The question of whether the price is any longer worth paying is not one for the Greeks alone to answer.”

While everyone is talking about an “inevitable” Greek exit from the Eurozone, some intelligence analysts are saying that it is rather the beginning of the end of the euro. Most dramatic was the comment by columnist Larry Elliot in Britain’s Guardian, under the headline: “Greece Crisis Could Be a Sarajevo Moment for the Eurozone.”

“A hundred and one years ago on Sunday, gun shots rang out in a city in southern Europe. Few at the time paid much heed to the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his wife as they drove through the streets of Sarajevo. Within six weeks, however, Europe was at war.

“Make no mistake, the decision by Alexis Tsipras to hold a referendum on the bailout terms being demanded of his country has the potential to be a Sarajevo moment…. It is not just about whether the creditors overplayed their hand in the negotiations, although they did. It is about the future of the euro itself.

“If Greece leaves, the idea that the euro is irrevocable is broken,” Elliot writes, and saying that the other countries will take the option of leaving the Eurozone. He then warns, “Just as importantly, the financial markets will know that, and will pile pressure on countries that look vulnerable. That’s why Greece represents an existential crisis for the Eurozone.

“It will be said in response that Greece is a small, insignificant country and that the single currency has much better defenses than it had at the last moment of acute trouble in the Summer of 2012. Diplomats in Europe’s capitals took very much the same view in late June 1914.”

Sputnik reports an article in today’s Der Spiegel by Henrik Müller under the headline, “Merkel’s European Strategy Didn’t Just Fail, It Failed Spectacularly.” Henrik puts the blame squarely on the German government and German Chancellor Angela Merkel in particular. And, writes Sputnik in different dispatch, the policy is now paving the way not just for a Grexit, but “for a Brexit, Frexit and Fixit,” referring to growing anti-euro sentiments in Britain (which isn’t part of the euro), France, and Finland.

“There is a real threat of Europe collapsing and Germany … is letting it happen,” Müller wrote.

An editorial in the London Daily Telegraph slammed the European Union, writing that

“the humiliation now being heaped upon a proud and ancient country is a salutary lesson to all member states — that without the power to make their own decisions they are always at the mercy of the unelected bureaucrats and financiers who run the institutions. The democracy that was born in Greece more than two millennia ago, no longer applies when control over the currency and economic policy is handed to a supranational body. The question of whether the price is any longer worth paying is not one for the Greeks alone to answer.”