Considering the slowing GDP, the growth of the broad money supply figures, MZM and M2, remains exceptionally strong. We would expect the growth of the broad money supply to be a little closer to a steady growth in GDP. From the charts it appears obvious that the Fed stimulates money supply when the economy slows.
The money supply growth has been achieved in spite of the declining growth of commercial bank credit thanks in large part to the Fed, the Treasury and several of the foreign Central Banks. Money supply expands from many sources other than commercial bank lending.
"Seneca had made the bargain that many good men have made when agreeing to aid bad regimes. Their presence strengthens the regime and helps it endure. But their moral influence may also improve the regime's behavior. For many, this has been a bargain worth making, even if it has cost them—as it may have cost Seneca—their immortal soul. The Rome he has been trained to serve, the Rome of Augustus and Germanicus, was gone. In its place stood Neropolis, ruled by a megalomaniac brat.” James Romm