21 February 2025

Stocks and Precious Metals Charts - Ghouls of Wall Street

 

"Now we remember that it was Bill Clinton's administration that deregulated derivatives, deregulated telecom, and put our country's only strong banking laws in the grave. He's the one who rammed the North America Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) through congress.  Mass incarceration and the repeal of welfare, two of Clinton's other major achievements, are the pillars of the disciplinary state that has made life so miserable for Americans in the lower reaches of society.  He would have put a huge dent in Social Security too, had the Monica Lewinsky sex scandal not stopped him.  If we take inequality as our measure, the Clinton administration looks not heroic but odious."

Thomas Frank, Rendezvous With Oblivion, 1 September 2006

"In 1999, on signing Gramm-Leach-Bliley into law, Clinton said, 'This is a day we can celebrate as an American day' and that 'the Glass-Steagall law is no longer appropriate for the economy in which we live' and 'today what we are doing is modernizing the financial services industry, tearing down these antiquated laws and granting banks significant new authority' and 'This is a very good day for the United States.'"

Columbia Journalism Review, Bill Clinton on Deregulation

"I think Bill Clinton was the pivotal figure of our times. Before he came along, the market-based reforms of Reaganism were controversial; after Clinton, they were accepted consensus wisdom. Clinton was the leader of the group that promised to end the Democrats’ old-style Rooseveltian politics, that hoped to make the Democrats into a party of white-collar winners, and he actually pulled that revolution off. He completed the Reagan agenda in a way the Republicans could not have dreamed of doing—signing trade agreements, deregulating Wall Street, getting the balanced budget, the ’94 crime bill, welfare reform. He almost got Social Security partially privatized, too. A near miss [Miss Lewinsky that is] on that one.

He remade our party of the left (such as it is) so that it was no longer really identified with the economic fortunes of working people. Instead it was about highly educated professional-class winners, people whose good fortunes the Clintonized Democratic Party now regarded as a reflection of their merit. Now it was possible for the Democratic Party to reach out to Wall Street, to Silicon Valley, and so on. This was something relatively new for a left party in the industrialized world, and it was quickly adopted by other left parties in other countries, most notably 'New Labour' in the UK. Unfortunately, this strategy has little to offer the people who used to be the Democratic Party’s main constituents except scolding. It merely assumes that they have, as the ’90s saying went, nowhere else to go."

Seymour Hersh, Ordinary People By the Millions, July 13, 2023

"There is no Republican Party.   There is no Democratic Party.  You are lick-spittles and panderers, the creatures of the Plutocracy.”

Jack London, The Iron Heel, 1907

"What is the Democratic Party’s former constituency of labor and progressive reformers to do? Are they to stand by and let the party be captured in Hillary’s wake by Robert Rubin’s Goldman Sachs-Citigroup gang that backed her and Obama?   The 2016 election sounded the death knell for the identity politics. This strategy to distract voters from economic policies has obviously failed.

This election showed that voters have a sense of when they’re being lied to. After eight years of Obama’s demagogy, pretending to support the people but delivering his constituency to his financial backers on Wall Street. 'Identity politics' has given way to the stronger force of economic distress. Mobilizing identity politics behind a Wall Street program will no longer work."

Michael Hudson, Break Up the Democratic Party, November 2016


Gold and silver meandered around, and were pressed down below upper resistance for small losses.

The Dollar chopped sideways.

VIX climbed quite a bit from its recent complacency.

Stocks were hammered.   And they went out near the lows.

And so it was for today's stock option expiration.

The Banks will struggle, and the political class will try to muddle through.

One of the things that comforts me in my old age is that I never voted for either of the Clintons.  Obama once.  I was fooled along with many that he was a reformer, a belief of which he quickly relieved us with his economic and financial actions and appointments.

I have never voted for Trump.  And not for Biden either, for what I hope are obvious reasons.  You could say that my votes are 'wasted.'  Unlike the world, nothing is wasted in God's economy.

But I am very glad that Trump is seeking an end to that insane conflict in the Ukraine.  It has deep roots in American politics, and it will not go away quietly.   Like so many of our recent wars, its was a source of enrichment for some, and of sorrow for many.

My geopolitical concerns in the Middle East as high.  I think it represents a serious threat to many things that we cherish.

But this is how the world works, from one debacle to another.  I've seen worse.

Need little, want less, love more.  For those who abide in love abide in God, and God in them.

Have a pleasant weekend.