The FEDsters Are Multimillionaires

“The senior officers of the Board of Governors are rich. So are some of the regional FED bank presidents. One of them is worth $50 million. Another owns 7,000 acres of land. He even owns gold. The FED is politically untouchable. Congress will not let the Government Accountability Office audit it. We hear of the need for more equality. The FED could use some. We hear of the need for transparency. Why doesn’t this include an audit? All the chatter inside the Washington Beltway about the role of democracy is great stuff for pulling the wool over the eyes of the voters. The cartel known as the state-licensed banking system has an enforcer. The FED is the enforcer.” Continue reading

Continue Reading The FEDsters Are Multimillionaires

Hopeless Savers: 0.26% on Money Markets

“The plight of savers in America is hopeless. We know that price inflation is over 2% per year. What do investors get in a money market fund? A pathetic 0.26%. Then they pay income taxes on this 0.26%. What if they do not want to tie up their money for a year? Then they get 0.12%. Before taxes. What about interest-bearing checking accounts in an FDIC-insured bank? These pay 0.05%. Let’s be honest. Let’s round it off (after taxes) to zero. The saver is falling behind. The rate of price inflation is eating into the saver’s net worth by at least 2.9% per year. How much money is deposited in money market accounts. About $2.6 trillion. This is up by $2.6 billion this week. This is a recovery?” Continue reading

Continue Reading Hopeless Savers: 0.26% on Money Markets

Investors (Suckers) Say They Have Things Under Control

“Today, 56% say they are confident about the future. This means that 44% aren’t confident. Today, 42% say they have increased their tax-deferred retirement savings. This means that 58% haven’t. Today, 55% say they are better prepared for retirement than in 2007. This means that 45% don’t think they are. Today, 42% have increased the size of their emergency fund. This means that 58% haven’t. We are asked to believe that people’s personal savings rate is up since November 2007, the month before the recession is said to have begun. Yes, it is — by a percentage so tiny that it is barely visible.” Continue reading

Continue Reading Investors (Suckers) Say They Have Things Under Control

Retire at 65. Become a Ward of the State.

“PBS had a recent article about retirees who stay in the work force beyond age 65. It interviewed economists. What it did not do was provide statistics on how many Americans work until age 75. The answer is: hardly any. Most Americans do not have enough savings. They retire anyway. Most Americans believe in the tooth fairy: the federal government. They think the checks will keep coming. They will not budget. They will spend their $120,000 long before they die. Then what?” Continue reading

Continue Reading Retire at 65. Become a Ward of the State.

Most people expect to be worse off than parents – except U.S., Chinese

“A ‘squeezed generation’ of middle-aged Europeans are convinced they are going to be poorer in retirement than their parents, according to a global survey that found the Chinese the most confident about their future and the French, Germans and Spanish the most pessimistic. Americans are the most sure they will enjoy their retirement, the British are among the most likely to worry about being lonely, while individuals in Eastern European countries are uniformly morose about their future. In the survey, 43% of Japanese said they associate retirement with ‘insecurity’ compared to just 13% in China and the US, and 15% in the UK.” Continue reading

Continue Reading Most people expect to be worse off than parents – except U.S., Chinese

Free Lunches for All Students in Boston

“The federal government has taken a chunk of taxpayers’ money and handed it over to Boston’s tax-funded schools. The money will be used to supply free lunches for all students. There will be no means-testing. Rich kids will get free meals. Why? So as to avoid the sense of shame in the hearts of poor kids, who might see their families as charity cases, which of course they are. Reality is painful. Self-awareness is painful. Politicians spend their careers trying to find ways to shield voters from reality.” Continue reading

Continue Reading Free Lunches for All Students in Boston

Wind farms are a breach of human rights says UN. No, really.

“Plans for future wind farms in Britain could be in jeopardy after a United Nations legal tribunal ruled that the UK Government acted illegally by denying the public decision-making powers over their approval and the ‘necessary information’ over their benefits or adverse effects. The new ruling calls into question the legal validity of any further planning consent for all future wind-farm developments based on current policy, both onshore and offshore. The commission declared that the UK flouted Article 7 of the Aarhus Convention, which requires full and effective public participation on all environmental issues and demands that citizens are given the right to participate in the process.” Continue reading

Continue Reading Wind farms are a breach of human rights says UN. No, really.

Orange County, CA Still Has No Tax Software

“The tax code of Orange County is so complex that the documentation for an useless computer program to run the tax system is 6,000 pages long. The program did not work. The county then hired another firm to produce the needed program. Original bid: $8 million. But there were cost overruns: another $8 million. The county says the second program does not work. The company is part of the Tata conglomerate, the giant Indian firm. Orange County has fired Tata. So, the county is still flying blind.” Continue reading

Continue Reading Orange County, CA Still Has No Tax Software