Saturday, February 11, 2012

El martirio de Homs La ciudad siria aporta cada día nuevas imágenes del horror



Una imagen del presidente sirio, Bachar El Asad, yace en la nieve tras una protesta en contra del régimen árabe en Bucarest. / RADU SIGHETI (REUTERS)
Como en Sarajevo, sufren los bombardeos diarios de la artillería y morteros del Ejército y los disparos de los francotiradores. Como en Chechenia, deben ocultar a los heridos en improvisados refugios o en sótanos sin material médico alguno por temor a que tanto aquellos como sus cuidadores sean detenidos y desaparezcan en los siniestros puntos de filtración.

"Esta es una revolución política, no tiene nada que ver con Dios". Mayte Carrasco

Una imagen cedida por la agencia siria Sana muestra vehículos y cascos policiales en el suelo después de un enfrentamiento en la ciudad de Alepo. / - (AFP)
Dos miembros del Ejército Sirio Libre van subidos en una motocicleta, con un pasamontañas y un kalashnikov colgado al cinto, recorriendo Al Qusayr, una ciudad de 40.000 habitantes donde todo el mundo se conoce. Aquí equivocarse de calle puede llevarle a uno a la muerte, porque las tropas rebeldes controlan solo un tercio de la localidad, con una veintena de francotiradores que disparan de forma indiscriminada contra la población: hombres, mujeres y niños. Hoy, la brigada Al Farouk del Ejército Libre logró tomar el cuartel general de los moujarabat (servicios secretos) del régimen y mató a cinco oficiales que se encontraban en el interior.

Los conservadores de EE UU buscan a uno de los suyos. David Aldrete

Dos votantes que apoyan a Santorum frente a uno que apoya a Romney, en la conferencia CPAC. / J. Scott Applewhite (AP)
Pocas pruebas hay tan importantes para un candidato republicano en año electoral que pasar con éxito por el Comité de Acción Política Conservadora, un cónclave de 10.000 votantes de derecha que cada año se reúne en Washington para mantener viva la defensa de sus principios e ideales. Este año, con las primarias en marcha, todos los aspirantes republicanos a la presidencia han pasado por aquí para defender sus credenciales conservadoras. Y a algunos les ha resultado más fácil que a otros.

Romney retoma la inciativa con una victoria en las primarias de Maine


Mitt Romney. / MANDEL NGAN (AFP)
El exgobernador de Massachusetts Mitt Romney volvió a ganar ayer la iniciativa en la contienda de primarias republicanas con dos victorias, una con efectos prácticos de cara a la nominación y otra simbólica. Romney ganó en las elecciones de Maine y en un sondeo no vinculante celebrado entre activistas conservadores reunidos en una conferencia política en Washington, la capital federal. Hasta la fecha, el candidato mormón ha ganado ya en cuatro Estados: New Hampshire, Florida, Nevada y, ayer, Maine.

US ‘creative destruction’ out of steam

If anybody wants a reason to feel optimistic about America, they might take a stroll through the magnificent trading floor of the Minneapolis Grain Exchange. A hundred years ago, farmers would come here and tip samples of their grain on to heavy wooden desks for merchants to assess. When that business moved on, the floor turned into a place for the open outcry trading of futures and options in hard red spring wheat.
In 2008, that business died too, after the market became fully electronic. But today, the Minneapolis exchange is far from dead; this year, its floor was taken over by CoCo, which lets out space to freelancers and small businesses. Among the ghosts of 19th century farmers, there are new companies catering to mobile advertising, iPad apps, business-to-business online networking, and other niches that the old grain traders never imagined.
“At home I listen to the news about the economy, and it’s really different from what I see at work,” says Kyle Coolbroth, a CoCo co-founder. “When you come into this space and look at what’s happening, it doesn’t feel like we’re in a terrible recession. A lot of people are rushing into market spaces that haven’t been defined yet.”

Can America regain most dynamic labour market mantle?

By Edward Luce
In Part One of the series examining the US jobs crisis, Edward Luce says that fears persist it cannot be fixed
Is America working
Last week, Barack Obama went to Osawatomie, Kansas, to kick off a more populist phase in his 2012 re-election bid. “This is a make-or-break moment for the middle class,” declared the US president, who chose the same venue that Teddy Roosevelt used in 1910 to call for a new progressive era. “I believe that this country succeeds when everyone gets a fair shot.”

The risk of a Syrian massacre. by Gideon Rachman

A few weeks ago, I heard a senior person in the Obama administration talk about the situation in Syria. One of the problems with Bashar al-Assad, he said, was that the Syrian leader was still surrounded by his father’s old cronies. But one positive development, he mused, was that it was no longer possible simply to kill 10,000 protesters in a single city, as Hafez al-Assad once did.
I wonder whether that may be too optimistic?
The reports from Syria are certainly alarming. Refugees flooding across the Turkish border. And the citizens of the rebellious town of Jisr al-Shugour, bracing themselves for a full-scale assault by the army.
I think the idea that the Syrian army could not simply kill thousands of their fellow citizens was based on two assumptions – or, perhaps, hopes. First, that in the internet age, it would be impossible to carry out bloody repression on this scale, without immediately provoking a paralysing international outcry. Second, that the development of the international doctrine of a “responsibility to protect” brutalised civilians – even within the boundaries of a sovereign state – would make Assad junior stay his hand.

Keep taking the testosterone


Lionel Bissoon working lives
High T: Lionel Bissoon (above) has seen a rise in demand for testosterone from Wall Street workers.
Until a few years ago, doctor Lionel Bissoon, who practises what he calls integrative medicine on Manhattan’s smart Upper West Side, mostly treated middle-aged women for what is politely known as cellulite. Then the financial crisis hit Wall Street and a strange thing happened: a stream of financial executives and traders began coming to him in the hope of being turned into alpha males.

False dawns and public fury: the 1930s are not so far away

Forget the icy weather: the financial markets are signalling that spring is coming. Equities are rallying and credit spreads have narrowed. Yet look around, if you can bear to. Similarities with the interwar period – a time of persistent false dawns – are multiplying ominously.

Obama Budget Again Skips Making Hard Choices

On Monday, President Obama is scheduled to release his proposed budget for the coming year. If his past three budgets are any indication, it is unlikely anyone outside of the White House will take this budget seriously.
That's because past Obama budgets have been long on empty promises and short on real solutions. This president has consistently ignored Washington's crushing debt and passed the real costs on to future generations.
The administration has already signaled that this year's spending plan will offer more of the same: a budget that spends too much, borrows too much and taxes too much.

The Producers

The decline of marriage and male wages is a problem of equality, not inequality.

Former Enron adviser Paul Krugman has expanded the blog post we criticized Wednesday into a full-length column, and in doing so made explicit a predictable fallacy in his thinking. To review, Krugman's argument is that the sharp decline in marriage rates among less-affluent white Americans, documented by Charles Murray in his new book, "Coming Apart: The State of White America, 1960-2010," is "mainly about money" as opposed to "morals." Here's the meat of Krugman's argument:

Wall Street Journal reporter Jeffrey Zaslow was tragically killed in an automobile accident on Friday. Kelsey Hubbard spoke to Deputy Managing Editor Mike Miller about the beloved journalist, whose work touched and inspired millions of people around the world.
Jeffrey Zaslow, a longtime Wall Street Journal writer and best-selling author with a rare gift for writing about love, loss, and other life passages with humor and empathy, died at age 53 on Friday of injuries suffered in a car crash in northern Michigan.

10 Things That Every American Should Know About The Federal Reserve

What would happen if the Federal Reserve was shut down permanently?  That is a question that CNBC asked recently, but unfortunately most Americans don't really think about the Fed much. Most Americans are content with believing that the Federal Reserve is just another stuffy government agency that sets our interest rates and that is watching out for the best interests of the American people.  But that is not the case at all.  The truth is that the Federal Reserve is a private banking cartel that has been designed to systematically destroy the value of our currency, drain the wealth of the American public and enslave the federal government to perpetually expanding debt.  During this election year, the economy is the number one issue that voters are concerned about.  But instead of endlessly blaming both political parties, the truth is that most of the blame should be placed at the feet of the Federal Reserve.  The Federal Reserve has more power over the performance of the U.S. economy than anyone else does.  The Federal Reserve controls the money supply, the Federal Reserve sets the interest rates and the Federal Reserve hands out bailouts to the big banks that absolutely dwarf anything that Congress ever did.  If the American people are ever going to learn what is really going on with our economy, then it is absolutely imperative that they get educated about the Federal Reserve.

Buying Gold on the Price Inflation Guarantee

By The Mogambo Guru

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Tampa, Florida – At my age, I have pretty much figured out that people don’t like me because they fear me.
I don’t know why, exactly, but perhaps they fear me because I am a cynical, paranoid, gold-bug old man who thinks that the Federal Reserve has turned into an evil institution by creating So Freaking Much Money (SFMM), now so that it can commit the sin of monetizing new government debt by the truckload, increasing the money supply and guaranteeing a roaring inflation that hurts the poor, and hurts the almost-poor, and hurts the not-quite-poor, and (now that I think about it) it hurts everybody, which hurts me personally because they come whining to me to give them some of MY money!

The Next American Oil Boom?

By Addison Wiggin

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02/10/12 Baltimore, Maryland – Decline rates.
Seriously.
There are not very many people outside the “Peak Oil” crowd who care — heck, even know — what “decline rates” are.
Yet the “story that isn’t being told” is often where you find the best investment narratives.
“At first,” our resident energy enthusiast kicks us off with just such a tale, “the conservative approach was to estimate that the Marcellus wells would be productive for about two-three years and then the decline curve would kick in.
“Now, after three years of testing in some areas, that window is more like five years.”
After five years? Many operators will go back and refrack the wells. Those five-year wells might become 10-year wells.

Why US Job Creation Heats Up in Cold Weather

By Bill Bonner

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02/10/12 Delray Beach, Florida – We used to like traveling. Now, it’s a drag.
“No, we don’t want to go through your new x-ray machine,” we told the TSA guard.
“Whassa matter? It’s safe…” she replied.
“How do you know that?”
“The government said it was safe.”
“Do you believe everything the government tells you?”
“Heh…heh… Okay…” then, turning to no one in particular… “REFUSAL on 11. Male.”
We were out quickly…but the poor old woman behind us had to get up out of her wheelchair…hobble through the x-ray machine…and then they still wanted to feel her up on the other side.
You can’t be too safe, right?

Economic Growth in the New Millennium

By Joel Bowman

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02/10/12 Buenos Aires, Argentina – Wow! That was quick!
“Greek Bailout at Risk as Party Pushes Back,” reports Bloomberg.
“Greece Plunged Into Political Turmoil Over Austerity Measures,” chimes The New York Times.
“Greek government hit by resignations,” adds the FT.
We spilled a good deal of virtual ink in yesterday’s issue casting doubt and aspersions over the validity of the Greek bailout plan. The story, we reckoned, was at best an old one…at worst an irrelevant one. Bailout or no bailout, the Greeks are broke. The rest is merely noise.
Curiously (and to their credit), markets yesterday would not be roused to action, neither by rumour, hearsay or scuttlebutt regarding the imminent, 11th hour deals “struck” between Greek Prime Minister Lucas Papademos and European Central Bank President Mario Draghi.
Instead, they held tight, patiently.

US: Charles Manson energy – by Paul Driessen

“… gleaming white wind turbines generating carbon-free electricity carpet chaparral-covered ridges and march down into valleys of Joshua trees.” This is “the future” of American energy – not “the oil rigs planted helter-skelter in [nearby] citrus groves,” nor the “smoggy San Joaquin Valley” a few miles away.

US: Our Constitution Is The Best Model A Country Could Have – Investors.com

Our Constitution is no longer respected as it once was. Nations writing new constitutions don’t see it as the prototype to be followed. All have something in common with our president.

US: Plutocrat Dems attack Romney as ‘Richie Rich’ – by Ann Coulter



Having given up on pillorying Mitt Romney for plundering his way to vast wealth — because, unfortunately, it isn’t true — the NFM (Non-Fox Media) seem to have settled on denouncing him as a rich jerk.

Postwar Rent Controls Mises Daily: by Robert L. Scheuttinger and Eamonn F. Butler

The rent that a landlord charges for his accommodation is merely an instance of a price for a commodity, like all other prices for all other commodities. And like all other prices and all other commodities, rents have been a prime target for government restrictions. The postwar experience with rent control has been particularly revealing in regard to the adequacy of controls in general.

The Fed's Quasi-Fiscal Policies Mises Daily: by David Howden

 2007 are a sharp departure from the old way of performing monetary policy. In fact, it is difficult to state that the Fed is any longer in the business of traditional monetary policy — understood in the United States as aiming for low inflation and smoothed output volatility. A new breed of monetary policies better referred to as "quasi-fiscal" policies has become the norm.

Time Is Money: Capital and Interest Mises Daily: by Eugen-Maria Schulak and Herbert Unterköfler



Time Is Money
The up-and-coming Austrian School received support from abroad even during the Methodenstreit. Léon Walras mentioned already well-known supporters of the new value theory from among the Romance countries in the preface to his Théorie de la monnaie (1886). In English publications, the subjectivist theory of value was gaining increased acceptance as well (cf. Böhm-Bawerk 1889b). The fact alone that it had been discovered at almost the same time by three authors (Walras, Menger, and Jevons) was considered by Böhm-Bawerk to be substantive evidence of its veracity (Böhm-Bawerk 1891/1930, p. 132 n. 1). In contrast, Gustav Cohn (1840–1919), an advocate of the Historical School, interpreted this brisk publishing activity to mean that the discovery of the marginal utility constituted a "meager morsel" that would have to be shared by "a number of like-minded discoverers" (Cohn 1889, p. 23).

Will Currency Devaluation Fix the Eurozone? Mises Daily: by Frank Shostak

Roubini said in Davos, Switzerland, on January 25, 2012, that tight policies are making the recession in the eurozone worse. According to Roubini what Europe needs is less austerity and more growth. In particular, the NYU professor is concerned about the deep recession in the eurozone's peripheral countries: Spain, Portugal, Greece — all are on a strict regime of austerity. For instance, in Spain the yearly rate of growth of government outlays stood at minus 12.4 percent in November against minus 15.7 percent in the month before. In Portugal the yearly rate of growth stood at minus 3.6 percent in December against minus 2.5 percent in November. In Greece the yearly rate of growth fell to 2.9 percent in December from 6.2 percent in the prior month.
Figure 1
A visible tightening is also observed in the two major European economies of Germany and France. Year-on-year government outlays in Germany stood at minus 1.6 percent in November versus minus 1.7 percent in October. In France the yearly rate of growth stood at minus 12.4 percent in November against minus 12.3 percent in the prior month.

Psicología del tirano

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Por Marcos Aguinis
La Nación

Abordé este asunto en el programa Hora Clave y recibí tantos pedidos para que lo escribiera, que cedo al reclamo. No dije nada original, porque ya lo había desarrollado en uno de mis libros. En él me baso de nuevo ahora.
Sostuve que existe un "romance secreto" con los tiranos, a quienes se llama, según las épocas, caudillos, dictadores, "mano dura", personalidad carismática o jefe autoritario. Por ejemplo, los caudillos, dueños de vidas y haciendas, eran adorados por su valentía, su crueldad, su viveza, su obstinación y hasta su generosidad caprichosa. Gobernaban como un rey, pero no como cualquier rey, sino como un tirano, según el clásico modelo que nos viene de la antigua Grecia.

El primitivismo intelectual latinoamericano

El primitivismo intelectual latinoamericano

Las-venas-abiertasPor Manuel Hinds
El Diario de Hoy 
Yo tengo mucha fe en que las nuevas generaciones se liberarán de la mentalidad tercermundista que está en la raíz de nuestro atraso y logren desarrollar a este país. Estas generaciones están menos inclinadas a la polarización política y son más propensas al pragmatismo, que las generaciones anteriores. Hay un aspecto, sin embargo, que me sorprende cuando lo veo en muchos jóvenes: su vulnerabilidad a fantasiosas teorías de conspiración, promovidas por caracteres como el millonario productor de cine Michael Moore, el lingüista Noam Chomsky y Eduardo Galeano, autor de "Las venas abiertas de la América Latina".
Estos y similares caracteres mantienen que el mundo es un lugar controlado por unos cuantos capitalistas, que conspiran continuamente para que nadie progrese. De acuerdo a ellos, cualquier cosa que pasa en el mundo es atribuible a esa gigantesca conspiración. Desde el calentamiento global hasta la gran crisis económica que vive el mundo, son atribuibles no a errores colectivos sino a decisiones explícitas de estos plutócratas que controlan el mundo y que dicen, "hoy calentémoslo" o "ahora causemos una gran crisis económica", para extraerles la riqueza a los pobres del mundo. Es como un cuento de Batman.

Venezuela: el gran día

Primarias_12FPor Alvaro Vargas Llosa
Este domingo se celebrarán por fin las elecciones internas de la oposición venezolana, que no son internas porque tienen derecho a voto, como sucedió en Argentina en su momento, todos los que quieran. Los sondeos juran que el gobernador del estado Miranda, será el vencedor y que una oposición férreamente unida bajo su mando se enfrentará a Hugo Chávez en las presidenciales del 7 de octubre. Pero ni siquiera es esto lo primero que se debe resaltar, sino la extraordinaria lección que han dado al mundo los miembros de la Mesa de la Unidad Democrática, como se llama a la sombrilla que cobija a los demócratas de ese país, en teoría desde 2008 pero el práctica desde 2010.

Hitler y Che Guevara, dos caras de la misma moneda

Two of a KindPor Manuel Llamas
Resulta del todo aberrante observar cómo, a día de hoy, la izquierda aún sigue aseverando las bondades del comunismo, cuyo triunfo condenó a muerte a más de cien millones de personas -sólo de forma directa-. El último ejemplo de tal barbarie propagandística tuvo lugar recientemente en Ecuador, donde la Asamblea Nacional aprobó una resolución para condenar el asesinato del terrorista Ernesto Che Guevara. Más allá de esta anécdota, lo trágico de la cuestión radica en que multitud de jóvenes, políticos e intelectuales continúan alabando las virtudes de esta ideología totalitaria y genocida al tiempo que braman con total soltura su espíritu "antifascista" cuando, en realidad, comunismo, fascismo y nazismo configuran un frente común. Son, en esencia, manifestaciones diversas del pensamiento anticapitalista más extremo.

Las Malvinas: los límites de la solidaridad

Las Malvinas: los límites de la solidaridad

Casa Rosada
Por Alvaro Vargas Llosa
La presidenta argentina, Cristina Kirchner, está decidida a malvinizar su política exterior y, por tanto, su política doméstica, pero tiene en sus manos dos problemas cada vez más complicados: la ausencia de opciones efectivas y un escenario sudamericano, en el que empieza a incomodar la exigencia de tanta solidaridad.
La escasez de opciones quedó en evidencia de espectacular forma esta semana, cuando la mandataria convocó, con urgencia y dramatismo, a las fuerzas vivas del país (como se decía antes), incluida la oposición, a un acto público relacionado con las Malvinas del que no se dio mayor información previa. Todos pensaban que Kirchner usaría la última bala que le quedaba en la cartuchera: prohibir el uso del espacio aéreo argentino al único vuelo que conecta a Mount Pleasant con Sudamérica, lo que en la práctica implicaba prohibir el vuelo entre Santiago y las Malvinas. Pero ni siquiera eso puedo hacer: se limitó a anunciar que denunciará la "militarización" ante la ONU, donde el Comité de Descolonización se reunirá el 14 de este mes, y que desclasificará el "informe Rattenbach". La sensación de anticlímax en el auditorio fue palpable y no careció de cierta comicidad. La oposición, que se había dejado arrastrar a ese evento para que no pareciera que se alineaba con el enemigo, acabó sintiéndose embaucada. Lo que es peor, también quedó expuesta su evidente inferioridad de condiciones ante la astuta presidenta.

CONVERSACIONES CON EL TIO GILBERTO IX


REFLEXIONES LIBERTARIAS
Ricardo Valenzuela

“Plutarco Elías Calles era elegido para ocupar la presidencia en el periodo de 1924-1928 sustituyendo a Obregón. El Presidente Obregón entonces me envía un comunicado informándome que Calles, como presidente electo, llevaría a cabo una gira por Europa y me pedía que lo acompañara. Días después recibo otro de Calles, pidiéndome lo esperara en Hamburgo para iniciar la jornada. Me llevé a tu padre quien contaba con solo 12 años de edad y nunca se le olvidaría su encuentro con Calles. Al presentárselo al General, explicándole era mi hermanito y estudiaba en Bruselas, Calles en un gesto inusual, le toca la cabeza y le dice con voz fuerte casi ordenando; estudia mucho y edúcate bien muchachito, Mexico necesita talento.
Al siguiente día que la gira del presidente electo arribaba a Paris, le fue ofrecida una cena de gala al General por el Burgomaestre de Paris y el Prefecto del Sena. El discurso del Burgomaestre fue vacío, superficial, general y protocolario; pero la pieza oratoria preparada por el Prefecto del Sena, cuya copia había recibido el General solo una hora antes del evento, tocaba problemas delicados como los sociales, económicos, filosóficos, históricos, de política internacional, y un tema tan audaz y sensitivo en esos momentos como la intervención francesa en México en 1862.

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