Saturday, April 28, 2018

On this day in 1970,

U.S. Invades Cambodia



Nixon announces invasion on national TV two days later

On this day in 1970, Republican President Richard Nixon ordered the invasion of Cambodia, a decision which caused the resignation of key aides, led to protests and the murder of protestors by the National Guard and local police, and caused Congress to restrict the president’s war powers. 
Secretary of State William Rogers and Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird, who had continually argued for a downsizing of the U.S. effort in Vietnam, were excluded from the decision to use U.S. troops in Cambodia. Gen. Earle Wheeler, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, cabled Gen. Creighton Abrams, senior U.S. commander in Saigon, informing him of the decision that a “higher authority has authorized certain military actions to protect U.S. forces operating in South Vietnam.” Nixon believed that the operation was necessary as a pre-emptive strike to forestall North Vietnamese attacks from Cambodia into South Vietnam as the U.S. forces withdrew and the South Vietnamese assumed more responsibility for the fighting. Nevertheless, three National Security Council staff members and key aides to presidential assistant Henry Kissinger resigned in protest over what amounted to an invasion of Cambodia. 
When Nixon publicly announced the Cambodian incursion on April 30, it set off a wave of antiwar demonstrations. A protest at Kent State University resulted in the killing of four students by Army National Guard troops. Another student rally at Jackson State College in Mississippi resulted in the death of two students and 12 wounded when police opened fire on a women’s dormitory. The incursion angered many in Congress, who felt that Nixon was illegally widening the war; this resulted in a series of congressional resolutions and legislative initiatives that would severely limit the executive power of the president.

Source article

More background here

On this day in 1965,

U.S. INVADES DOMINICAN REPUBLIC


On this day in 1965, Democrat President Lyndon Johnson sent 22,000 American troops into the Dominican Republic to prevent a claimed communist takeover.
President Johnson declared that he had taken action to forestall the establishment of a “communist dictatorship” in the Dominican Republic. As evidence, he provided American reporters with lists of suspected communists in that nation. Even cursory reviews of the list revealed that the evidence was extremely flimsy–some of the people on the list were dead and others could not be considered communists by any stretch of the imagination.  
Many Latin American governments and private individuals and organizations condemned the U.S. invasion of the Dominican Republic as a return to the “gunboat diplomacy” of the early-20th century, when U.S. Marines invaded and occupied a number of Latin American nations on the slightest pretexts. In the United States, politicians and citizens who were already skeptical of Johnson’s policy in Vietnam heaped scorn on Johnson’s statements about the “communist danger” in the Dominican Republic. Such criticism would become more and more familiar to the Johnson administration as the U.S. became more deeply involved in the war in Vietnam.

Source Article 

More background here

Andrew McCarthy: Baier Interview of Comey Reveals The Clinton investigation was Fixed by Obama

Trump order seeks to limit federal role in K-12 education


Black Activists Allege Starbucks’ Shutdown for Racism Training Violates Civil Rights Laws

Bill Kristol: Biggest Never Trump Idiot of All-Time?


Friday, April 27, 2018

Byron York: Comey's Convulted Justifications for his Memo Leaks
National Security Expert Michael Pilsbury Praises Trump’s ‘Negotiating Genius’ on Korea
House report backs claim that FBI agents did not think Flynn lied, despite guilty plea
Althouse; Even Dems Admit in Dissent to House Report Finding No Collusion that there is No Collusion
The Art of the Deal

DONALD TRUMP ON NORTH KOREA

1989 Meet The Press


Pat Buchanan: Macron - The Last Multilateralist
On this day in 1805,

From the Halls of Montezuma, 

to the shores of Tripoli

U.S. Marines attack Fort Derne after a 600 mile march through the Libyan desert as part of Jefferson's Barbary War.



A short video history of the Marine Hymn.

On this day in 1865,

THE WORST MARITIME DISASTER IN AMERICAN HISTORY

THE SULTANA SINKS DROWNING 1,700 UNION VETERANS AND SURVIVORS OF CONFEDERATE P.O.W. CAMPS

On this day in 1865, just days after the end of the Civil War, the worst maritime disaster in American history occurred when the steamboat Sultana, carrying 2,100 passengers, exploded just north of Memphis and sank in the Mississippi River, killing all but 400 of those aboard.  To make this tragedy even worse, all but 100 of those killed were Union veterans, and most were survivors of Andersonville and other brutal Confederate prisoner of war camps.

Thursday, April 26, 2018

Trey Gowdy: James Comey's definition of a leak "is what the rest of us call a felony"


Harvard Poll: 65% Blacks/Hispanics Support Trump Immigration Plan

Mary Katherine Ham: 7 Reasons Why Trump Should Pardon Martha Stewart

On this day in 1954,

THE SALK POLIO VACCINE TRIALS

"The Greatest Public Health Experiment in American History."


There was a terrifying polio epidemic going on.  Imagine being a parent with little kids, worried that they might be infected with crippling and incurable polio, that they may never walk again, and that they might even die.  Then this.  This day was a part of my childhood.  

Great background story here from CBS News:

www.cbsnews.com/news/the-salk-polio-vaccine-greatest-public-health-experiment-in-history/

FWIW via OAN.
OPCW Allegedly Finds No Evidence Of Chemical Attack Near Target Of Syrian Airstrikes
Amazon's Alexa had a flaw that let eavesdroppers listen in

National Review: Judicial Tyranny Must End


Warren Buffett Raises Wages in Trump’s Tight Labor-Market

Wednesday, April 25, 2018

Kanye West: ‘Obama was in Office Eight Years and Nothing in Chicago Changed’
You mean liberal judicial tyranny might be stopped?

Retired Con Law Prof Althouse: It's Clear Trump Will Win Hawaii Immigration Case

Grant's Almost Daily.

Will Corporate Earnings and Stock Prices Revert to the Mean?

Is this as good as it gets? Mr. Market has been a little cranky of late, sending stocks down despite phenomenal results.  With 154 components of the S&P 500 having reported as of this morning, the average sales (1.97% above consensus) and earnings surprises (7.25% above consensus) are easily the best relative performance in each metric in at least the last eight quarters, according to data from Bloomberg.  On an absolute basis, the S&P 500 components have so far managed 10% year-over-year sales growth, far above the top-line growth logged in at least the prior four quarters. Yet since the commencement of earnings season on Feb. 16, the S&P 500 has dropped by 3.4%, a 17% annualized pace.

Yesterday, a number of economic bellwethers offered seemingly solid quarterly results that were met rudely: Shares in truck manufacturer Paccar, Inc. (PCAR on the Nasdaq) dropped by 7% despite topping consensus expectations for the first quarter and offering an upbeat forecast for Class 8 truck sales.  Ronald E. Armstrong, chief executive officer, expressed optimism on margins, telling listeners to the earnings conference call that: “We feel good about the operating results. We have the best margins – the best operating margins in the industry.”

Industrial conglomerate 3M Co. (MMM on the NYSE) topped sales forecasts and met the Street’s expected adjusted earnings per share figure, yet shares declined by 7% after the company trimmed the upper end of its fiscal year earnings forecast. Analysts at RBC Capital Markets observed that: “While this guidance cut is relatively small, the implications are magnified, given that it is happening so early in the year.”

Masco Corporation (MAS on the NYSE), a maker of building and home improvement products, saw its shares fall by 9% despite stronger than expected revenues, as higher than expected investment spending and the “price cost relationship in plumbing and cabinetry” dinged the bottom line. Perhaps most instructively, machine and mining equipment giant Caterpillar, Inc. (CAT on the NYSE) reversed strong initial gains following impressive results, after the company CFO Brad Halverson noted on the company conference call that the first quarter “will be the high watermark for the year.”

Meanwhile, a dispatch from Bloomberg this morning details the struggle in the U.S. grocery store industry to raise prices, despite the seemingly perfect macro-economic backdrop for such hikes: Low unemployment, sturdy consumer confidence and an uptick in measured inflation. Instead, an intense competitive environment featuring foreign interlopers Aldi and Lidl, the specter of cross-industry boogeyman Jeff Bezos, as well as diminished brand loyalty on the part of consumers, have put the squeeze to the consumer packaged goods industry (a development which informed the bearish calls on packaged food companies such as Kraft-Heinz Company and Campbell Soup Company in the March 24, 2016 edition of Grant’s). Bloomberg says:

“There’s no question the balance of power has shifted,” said Gary Stibel, who runs the New England Consulting Group, which advises consumer companies. Packaged-food and consumer-product companies aren’t “creating the kind of intense” loyalties that retailers need to be able to pass on higher prices to shoppers, he said.

Overall, corporate profits have remained well above 10% of U.S. gross domestic product in every quarter since the third quarter of 2009, peaking in the fourth quarter of 2014 at 12.6% according to data compiled by the Bureau of Economic Analysis as of Dec. 31, 2017. That compares to a post-1948 average at 9.6% of GDP. In a 2014 essay in Barron’s, co-founder of Boston’s GMO Jeremy Grantham called corporate profit margins “probably the most mean-reverting series in finance.”  Grantham subsequently shifted his perspective, writing in a May 2, 2017 Barron’s follow-up that: “I used to call profit margins the most dependably mean-reverting series in finance. And they were through 1997.” Increased globalization, consolidated corporate power, and lower real interest rates were among the factors that influenced the great investor to change his mind.

What if Grantham’s 2014 viewpoint turns out to be the correct one? Needless to say, equity bulls will get no help from valuations.  The current Shiller Price/Earnings ratio (based on average inflation-adjusted earnings over the last 10 years) on the S&P 500 stands above 31 times, nearly double the long-term median and mean readings of 16.15 and 16.85 times, respectively.

Philip Grant

Tennessee lawmakers OK monument ‘In Memory of the Victims of Abortion’


Dang, I thought the science was settled.

Climate change is ‘not as bad as we thought’ say scientists

FEE: 18 Spectacularly Wrong Predictions Made Around the Time of the First Earth Day

The Federalist: How the U.S.' Mistakes in the Middle East have helped China

Sara Carter: Did McCabe Issue "Stand Down" Order re Hillary Email Investigation?

Toronto Police Officer Holsters Gun & Disarms Killer Who Repeatedly Bluffs Shooting the Officer

Worth the risk?

Tuesday, April 24, 2018

Three More Border Patrol Agents Assaulted in South Texas
Grant's Almost Daily 4/24

Is a China Devaluation and U.S. Stock Market Decline in the Offing?

Two debt-laden ships pass in the night. As rates in the U.S. mostly ride the escalator, Chinese government yields have enjoyed visible downward momentum in recent months.  The 10-year Chinese government bond yield currently sits just under 3.58%, down from 3.9% on Dec. 31, 2017. The move at the short end has been even more pronounced.  China’s one-year yield has dropped below 3%, down from more than 3.8% at the turn of 2018. More broadly, Bloomberg notes this morning that “Chinese bonds are the top performers so far this year, among 70 markets in the Bloomberg Barclays Global Aggregate + China index, calculated in dollars.”
 
While lower rates are surely welcome news for a country as highly leveraged as China (total banking assets represented 305% of GDP as of year-end 2017) the prospects of slower economic growth bear close watching. This morning, a separate Bloomberg report notes a communique from Chinese media seemingly girding its citizens for tougher times ahead:
 
China’s leaders are giving their strongest signal since 2015 that growth in the world’s second-largest economy could slow – and that they’re prepared to tweak policy if trade or financial risks threaten a sharp deceleration. 
 
Hard work is needed to meet this year’s economic targets amid an increasingly complicated geopolitical situation, according to a statement released by state media Monday following a Politburo meeting led by President Xi Jinping. 
 
“There’s a deep sense of risk underlying the calm surface, and the leadership’s attitude has changed greatly,” Deng Haiqing, chief economist at JZ Securities Co. in Beijing, wrote in a note. “The attention attached to stabilizing growth is the greatest since 2015.”
 
Indeed, this morning, China-levered global construction and mining equipment firm Caterpillar, Inc. reported stronger than expected first quarter results, extending gains its recent skyward stock price. Those intraday good times were emphatically reversed during the conference call, after chief financial officer Brad Halverson predicted that the first quarter “will be the high watermark for the year.”
 
So what ails the Middle Kingdom?  Waning credit appears to be taking a toll on growth. The Chinese credit impulse (growth in borrowing as a percentage of GDP) dropped to 25.39% as of March 31, the lowest since the 2015 yuan devaluation. 
  
The decline in credit impulse colors both China’s slowing economic growth and downward pressure on interest rates.  An April 16 report from J Capital Research summarizes the situation thusly:
 
Less credit means that companies will be unable to pay their outstanding loans and will instead rely on rollovers. That means more issuance of short-term bonds, wealth-management products, and central bank repos to make sure the system has enough liquidity.
 
Lower credit growth also tends to be deflationary and to make for slower fixed-asset investment growth. Indeed, the Producer Price Index, while still growing, was up just 3.1% in March and has declined every month since February 2017. As we noted above, the first quarter of 2018 witnessed commodity and asset deflation broadly.
 
Author Anne Stevenson-Yang summarizes the predicament facing China’s leadership as flagging growth and skyscraping debt levels seemingly argue for opposing policy responses:
 
The only way to generate growth is by jacking up investment levels, but authorities seem to believe they can generate a more efficient allocation of capital by using tight command-control tactics. When command-control doesn’t work, we expect the government to try stimulus again, and that will threaten the RMB. Q2 will tell us whether the borders have been sufficiently sewn up against capital flight that authorities can engage in another round.

Could another Chinese currency devaluation be in the cards? Recall that the August 2015 yuan deval was followed by a severe bout of global risk aversion, culminating in a 9% intraday decline in the S&P 500 on Aug. 24, 2015. On that day, a trading halt in eight S&P 500 stocks cascaded into an ETF pile-up featuring major dislocations to net asset value and stoppages of 42% of all equity ETF’s. Will this time be different? The bulls hope so. 

WSJ - Elitist Anti-Trumpers Bigger Threat To Democracy Than Trump


Germans in Germany - A Minority By 2060

Pat Buchanan: Conservatives Must Recognize That U.S. Has An Unsustainable Empire


Maine Democrats vote to allow female genital mutilation
On this day in 1979,

U.S. Attempt To Rescue 270 Iran Hostages Fails

Eight U.S. Servicemen Killed


Sunday, April 22, 2018

French President Emmanuel Macron: I’m Here to Make France Great Again



On this day in 2000, President Bill Clinton had federal agents remove Elian Gonzalez from his relatives' home in Miami so he could be deported back to Cuba despite Elian's request to stay in the U.S. and the fact that Elian's mother had died during the boat crossing which brought him to America.

Full story here at Wikipedia

NEVER FORGET



On this day in 2004, Pat Tillman, who gave up his pro football career to enlist in the U.S. Army after the terrorist attacks of September 11, was killed by friendly fire while serving in Afghanistan.  Tillman, who was only 27, was mistakenly gunned down by his fellow Rangers, a fact which the military attempted to cover up.  After a criminal investigation, the Army censured retired three-star general Philip Kensinger for lying to investigators and other violations.  Several brigadier generals and other lower-ranking officers were also disciplined.