Tag Archives: economic

MSNBC Fill-In Host Absurdly Claims Again: Obama a ‘Republican President’

For the second day in a row, liberal talk show host and MSNBC guest anchor Cenk Uygur pushed the outlandish notion that President Obama is a conservative. Filling in on July 7 for Dylan Ratigan on his 4 p.m. show, Uygur exclaimed, “I didn’t realize we voted for a Republican president!” Uygur preceded this statement with a rant on how ridiculous it is for Obama to express concern about the ever-growing deficit when “60 percent of Americans favor additional government spending to create jobs and stimulate the economy.” Uygur and liberal guest Ryan Grimm of “The Huffington Post” could not understand President Obama’s rationale for focusing on deficit concerns. Grimm argued that, “when people say they are concerned about the deficit” they are just really saying that, “they are nervous about the economy. That’s all they mean. So if you solve the economic problems, you’re going to solve the deficit concerns.” Of course, Uygur and Grimm agreed that the only way to improve the economy was for the president to spend more, neglecting the fact that President Obama has already spent some $3.5 trillion in his first year in office, which more than exceeds any other first-year president. If Obama were a truly fiscally responsible statesman, he would recognize that our nation has a spending problem.  However, with unemployment close to double digits, and in need of a scapegoat, the hosts at MSNBC are growing restless, asking, “when will our president stop adopting Republican talking points and start giving us real change instead of pocket change?”

Open Thread: Former WH Economics Advisors Weigh in on Obamanomics

Michael Boskin and Edward Lazear, former chairmen of the Council of Economic Advisors for George H. W. Bush and George W. Bush, respectively, offer their takes on our current economic condition the Obama administration’s economic policies. Thoughts?

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Open Thread: Former WH Economics Advisors Weigh in on Obamanomics

Italy Installing More Solar Power in Two Months Than California Does in a Year

photo: teesha dunn via flickr We already knew that Italy was the world’s second-largest solar power market in 2009 (the United States was fourth, by the way), but according to a new piece in Wind-works Italy is installing more solar power in two months than California does in a year. By the end of this year they are expected to have one and… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Italy Installing More Solar Power in Two Months Than California Does in a Year

Balancing the Weights of Poverty and Population

Image credit: SlapBcn /Flickr The 21st century began on an inspiring note: The United Nations set a goal of reducing the share of the world’s population living in extreme poverty by half by 2015. By early 2007 the world looked to be on track to meet this goal, but as the economic crisis unfolds and the outlook darkens, the world will have to intensify its poverty reduction effort…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Balancing the Weights of Poverty and Population

Retail Sales Drop Stirs Fears

In the first drop since last September, U.S. retailers have unexpectedly reported a decrease in sales, stirring perennial fears that the much-discussed road to economic recovery isn’t as on track as once believed. —JCL Reuters: Sales at retailers unexpectedly fell in May for the first time since September following a record slump in purchases of building materials, adding to fears the economic recovery was losing some steam. Friday’s report follows last week’s data showing a sharp slowdown in private hiring in May, but analysts still saw little risk of the economy slipping back into recession. “The report is not evidence that the economy is getting ready for a double-dip or that consumers, facing headwinds of double-digit unemployment and bank credit restriction, are taking their ball and going home,” said Chris Rupkey, chief financial economist at Bank of Tokyo/Mitsubishi in New York. Total retail sales dropped 1.2 percent after rising 0.6 percent in April, the Commerce Department said. Read more Related Entries June 10, 2010 High School Dropouts Aren’t Helping June 10, 2010 Israel’s Gift to Iran’s Hard-Liners

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Retail Sales Drop Stirs Fears

WaPo Says World Cup’s ‘Most Essential Accessory’ Is Condoms

Thursday’s Washington Post Express tabloid carried the headline “Health Activists Eye World Cup.” When the world “health” breaks in before “activist,” sadly, you can often define that as a sly euphemism you could replace more accurately with “sex.” Post reporter Liz Clarke offered an interesting definition of the tournament’s most essential accessory, which isn’t cleats or Gatorade or even sunscreen:  Slathered in face paint, toting samba drums and waving national flags, the world’s most ardent soccer fans are streaming into South Africa for the 2010 World Cup. And they’re being met by a host of reminders not to forget the tournament’s most essential accessory: a condom. She forwarded how AIDS activists pressured FIFA, the World Cup organizers, of being “half-hearted” in condom promotion, and noted Cape Town hoteliers are offering condoms with the slogan “Play It Safe in Cape Town.” Then Clarke offered an  update. FIFA bowed to the sexual entitlement mentality: free condoms have now been offered in eight-packs for women (do they each have a day of the week inscribed?) Cases of condoms (bundled in packets of eight) were prominently displayed and free for the taking in the women’s restrooms at Soccer Stadium for Friday’s World Cup stadium, evidence of FIFA’s awareness of and commitment to the need to confront the epidemic of HIV/AIDS in the host nation. The “Choice” brand condoms were provided by South Africa’s Department of Health, and the packaging included a toll-free number for the AIDS Hotline, as well as a six-panel illustration of proper use and disposal. Related: Brent Bozell on FIFA’s half-hearted response to massive influx of prostitutes for World Cup

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WaPo Says World Cup’s ‘Most Essential Accessory’ Is Condoms

The Economy: Avoiding the ‘U-Word’ Doesn’t Mean It’s Not Still Happening

The establishment press is either getting tired of being beaten up over using the U-word (“unexpectedly,” or sometimes “unexpected”) to the point of excess when economic news disappoints, or has itself wearied of using the word. Here’s the Associated Press’s Martin Crutsinger on today’s retail sales report letdown, courtesy of the Commerce Department . The bolded sentence seen after the jump is Crutsinger’s substitute for the U-Word: Retail sales plunged in May by the largest amount in eight months as consumers slashed spending on everything from cars to clothing. The big drop raises new worries about the durability of the economic recovery. The Commerce Department says that spending fell 1.2 percent last month. Auto sales were down 1.7 percent but there was weakness in a number of areas. Excluding autos, sales fell 1.1 percent. The big decline cast new doubts about the strength of the economic recovery. Consumer spending accounts for 70 percent of total economic activity. … The 1.2 percent decline in May sales was the largest decline since sales had fallen 2.2 percent in September. Analysts had been forecasting sales would be weak but remain in positive territory. For May, the 1.7 percent drop in auto sales followed a 0.6 percent increase in April sales and was the poorest showing in this category since a 2.5 percent February decline. Expecting a slight positive and getting a large negative is what I would call a “big miss.” The auto sales drop may be suspect, because it’s not consistent with direct sales data from the car companies earlier this month . But there is a clue to how to reconcile the conflict in this statement at the link: “GM sales rose 17 percent, led by a jump in sales of its four remaining brands – Chevrolet, Buick, GMC, and Cadillac – and big orders from fleet customers, such as rental car agencies.” Fleet sales are not part of consumer spending. If those orders were big enough, it may really be that individual and families were buying fewer vehicles in May. That’s a big “uh-oh,” because fleet sales aren’t particularly profitable, and they may not be sustainable at current levels. That fleet sales and not direct consumer sales might be driving what growth there is in vehicle sales this year (especially, I believe, at government wards GM and Chrysler, and not so much at other companies) is consistent with my observation last week at this post about the “private investment – transportation equipment” sector’s outsized contribution to first-quarter GDP growth. Until “analysts” figure out how to incorporate FUD (Fear, Uncertainty, and Doubt) into their estimates (admittedly difficult, but they get paid to estimate these things), you can expect that the “unexpected” will “unexpectedly” continue to occur — even if the press stops using the words. Cross-posted at BizzyBog.com .

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The Economy: Avoiding the ‘U-Word’ Doesn’t Mean It’s Not Still Happening

Bilderberg: The Open Conspiracy

Now that the agenda for global government and a centralized world economic system is public and out in the open, the importance of the Bilderberg Group’s annual conference rests on grooming political candidates. The lion’s share of Bilderberg’s 2010 agenda has already been announced by its members weeks before – it will revolve around a potential military strike on Iran as well as the future collapse of the euro. Trilateral Commission members, who routinely also attend Bilderberg’s annual confab, have let slip that a war on Iran is being seriously debated, while the elite continue to exploit the fallout from the economic crisis to push for centralized financial regulation. The consequences of a military strike on Iran will cause a split between Bilderberg luminaries, just as it did before the invasion of Iraq at the 2002 meeting. During the recent Trilateral Commission meeting in Dublin Ireland, which routinely discusses an almost identical roster of topics to subsequent Bilderberg gatherings, chief advisor to the Russian leadership Mikhail Slobodovsici unwittingly told a We Are Change member he mistook for a colleague, “We are deciding the future of the world….We need a world government,” he said, but, referring to Iran, said “we need to get rid of them.” The continued push to pose as the saviors while offering global governance as the solution to the economic crisis was also re-affirmed in a recent speech by IMF chief and BIlderberg member Dominique Strauss-Kahn, when he told an audience of elitists in Zurich that the globalists need to see the ‘crisis as an opportunity’ to push for “a new global currency issued by a global central bank”. Our sources close to Bilderberg emphasize the fissure that exists within globalist circles. Younger elitists and the nouveau riche are concerned that the global economy is being sunk too quickly and too soon, and that the consequences will be so drastic in the long term that even the wealth and influence of insiders will be threatened. These divisions in the context of geopolitics was also addressed recently by Trilateral Commission co-founder and prominent Bilderberger Zbigniew Brzezinski, who in addition revealed that a “global political awakening,” in combination with infighting amongst the elite, was threatening to derail the move towards a one world government. Paul Joseph Watson Prison Planet.com Friday, May 28, 2010 more at link… added by: rodstradamus

Pampered Heiress Decries Obama’s Economic Plan to Bow-Tied Dandy [Ivanka Trump]

Real-life princess Ivanka Trump is scared for her children because of Barack Obama. “At the end of the day,” she tells Tucker Carlson , “the American people want to hear about jobs.” On The Celebrity Apprentice ! Sundays at 9/8 Central! More

London Lost £100m In Volcano Ash Flight Ban

The Icelandic volcanic ash cloud has caused UK airspace to close and this resulted to a lost tourist spending of more than £100m. The London mayor said each day about 30,000 overseas visitors arrive by air at this time of year, spending £17m in total. The last week’s flight ban had caused the city about £102m. Tourism is massively significant for jobs and growth in the capital. Hotel occupancy has dropped for about 25 percent, theaters, restaurants and shops also have experienced a fall in visitors. Some companies suffered the reduced footfall on London’s streets and others were facing disappointed customers, heavy backlogs and costly penalties from being unable to access airfreight services to deliver the three million items sent by companies every day. About more than 95,000 flights were cancelled all around Europe throughout the 6 days of disruption. According to the Mayor of London Boris John, “the coming out of the economic downturn, the last thing the capital’s economy needed was all air traffic in and out of the city grounded for a week.” London Lost £100m In Volcano Ash Flight Ban is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading