From: WorldAffairsBrief.com
Daily News Links |
Tuesday, August 9, 2011 |
Democrats Call SnP Decision a Tea Party Downgrade Story by The New American In the aftermath of this historic U.S. fiscal shift, which arrived despite the $2.5 trillion deficit reduction plan passed last week, the congressional blame game is an inevitable outcome, and Sunday shaped the springboard for Congress to indulge the media in partisan pandering. …More
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U.K. PM recalls Parliament for London riot crisis Story by Washington Times In London, groups of young people rampaged for a third straight night, setting buildings, vehicles and garbage dumps alight, looting stores and pelting police officers with bottles and fireworks into early Tuesday. The spreading disorder was an unwelcome warning of the possibility of violence during London’s 2012 Summer Olympics, less than a year away. …More
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Why the Stock Market is Plunging Story by mises.org None of this should surprise those conversant with Austrian economics. The “fundamentals” of the economy have been and remain awful because the government and Federal Reserve are consistently doing the wrong things. The apparent recovery, fueled by Bernanke’s sheer money creation, has been bogus all along. …More
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The Refusal to Think Story by 321Gold Early this year, Cornell University in the US did a study which was designed to see if Americans equate the money they receive from the US government with government programs. They asked a large number of ordinary Americans if they had ever used a government program. The findings – as reported by the New York Times in February this year – were astonishing. Forty-three percent of Medicare recipients said NO. Forty-four percent of those on Social Security said NO. Forty-three percent of people on unemployment benefits said NO. And to crown the whole study – FIFTY-THREE percent of those getting student loans – likely including Cornell students – said NO… …More
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Monday, August 8, 2011 |
Consumer Metrics Institute’s Growth Index: Seeing the Other Side of the Chasm Story by dshort The Consumer Metrics Institute’s Daily Growth Index set its historic low around Memorial Day. The index appears to be rebounding at an amazing pace and turned positive on August 3rd. …More
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Wisconsin Recall Elections Attract National Attention, Funds Story by The New American The eyes of the nation are on Wisconsin again as voters head to the polls to decide the fate of eight state Senators – six Republicans and two Democrats – in a series of historic recall elections. And the stakes are enormous. Analysts are touting the looming showdown as everything from a referendum on the policies of Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker to an indicator of President Obama’s chances of victory in 2012. Control of the Senate could go to Democrats if they manage to unseat three or more of the Republican Senators being targeted. …More
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The Demonization of the Tea Party Story by The New American Apparently, liberals are unable to recognize traditional conservative Republican positions for less government, lower taxes, a balanced budget, and adherence to the principles of the Constitution of the United States. They have become “terrorists.” …More
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The real risk to US debt’s credit rating Story by Guardian UK For SnP, the downgrade was rational: sooner or later, American taxpayers will rebel against austerity cuts to pay for the crisis …More
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SnP Downgrade Another Y2K Scare Story by nakedcapitalism.com It isn’t yet clear what the impact of the SnP downgrade of the US to AA will have. There are good reasons to believe, despite the media hyperventilating, that it won’t add up to much, and may perversely hit wobbly stock markets more than Treasury yields. …More
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A world without a benchmark Story by Asia Times Americans who question the validity of the downgrading of United States debt by rating agency Standard and Poor’s, or China, which has called on America to rein in its ballooning budget deficit, are almost entirely wrong with their assumptions of how this particular fork in the global financial crisis road needs to be navigated. New rules apply in the markets now. …More
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