Americans Agree Violent Crime Should Be Police Priority – Not Drugs

“A newly released Cato Institute/YouGov survey of 2,000 Americans finds that when people are asked to select their top three priorities for the police they choose the following: Investigating violent crime like murder, assaults, and domestic violence (78%); Protecting individuals from violent crime (64%); Investigating property crime and robbery (58%). Notably, only 30% think police should make enforcing drug laws a top three priority. Some may find these results surprising, given that police made more arrests for drug abuse violations (1.6 million) than they did for violent crimes (498,666) in 2014.”

https://fee.org/articles/americans-agree-violent-crime-should-be-police-priority-not-drugs/

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Your Right to Use Encryption

“Today, encryption is used in many areas beyond traditional communications — it’s what ensures that our online bank accounts are secure; it can prevent someone from snooping on your Internet traffic at a coffee shop; and, most importantly, it’s what we rely on to secure our personal devices, like smartphones and computers, which contain our entire lives.  Government officials have started pushing for ‘backdoors,’ where an encryption system is intentionally weakened so that government can access whatever data it wants. But this idea is a nonstarter.”

Read more: https://fee.org/articles/your-right-to-use-encryption/

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Australia Joins The War On Cash While Venezuela Backtracks Cash Ban

The Venezuelan government, amid looting, protests, shootings, and extremely long lines at banks, decided that its ban on the most circulated 100-bolivar note was ill-advised at this time.

The Indian government caused its own outbreak of chaos and deaths by banning 500- and 1000-rupee bank notes, worth about $7 and $14 respectively.  Amid the ensuing long lines and protests, in at least 6 cases bank employees were arrested aiding their customers in the conversion of banned notes.  Indians have been employing a number of workarounds to get their cash converted to the new notes, but others have been simply buying gold from vendors.  The government’s response is to now push for the income-tax office’s raids on families to target not only cash holdings, but gold as well.

An article in The Economist enumerates the failures of the India demonetization initiative:

  • 98% of economic transactions in India are done in cash
  • Four-fifths of India’s workers are paid in cash
  • Estimates of annual GDP growth now include a 2% decline due to payments drag
  • The new notes are smaller and only a subset of ATMs can handle them
  • $22 billion in notes are to be replaced; only $3 billion worth can be printed per month
  • The flood of deposits into banks were used to buy bonds, depressing interest rates

The cash ban has also caused a diplomatic row, as a flight to the safety of US dollar notes and the ensuing shortage of dollars has left Pakistan unable to pay its diplomatic staff in India.

Turning a blind eye to the chaos in other countries that are banning their own citizens’ cash, the head of the Australian tax office suggested banning the Australian $100 note in an explicitly stated attempt to raise tax revenue.  Earlier in the year, a surprise $34 billion increase in the Australian budget deficit over four years had been acknowledged.

Developed-world governments are joining their developing-world counterparts in governing by surprise and openly placing their citizens’ wealth at risk through anti-cash messaging and actions.

The stated reasons usually range from fighting the drug black market (created by global drug prohibition) to fighting terrorists (often created, funded, and armed by developed-world governments) to fighting tax avoidance, which could be fought more effectively by lowering tax rates and eliminating burdensome paperwork and reporting requirements.

However, regardless of the stated reasons, the underlying motivation is to move cash-based activity into banks.  This benefits the global ruling class in several ways.

The banks and other financial middlemen win, because every transaction will subsequently have fees attached.

After all, depositors at a bank are no longer the bank’s true customers, thanks to privileged credit facilities at the central bank, state-sponsored deposit and loan guarantees, and myriad banking regulations erecting barriers to entry and thereby fostering consolidation of bank ownership.  Banks can survive without customers’ deposits, thanks to state backing, but they cannot survive without regulatory compliance.  In the cashless society, the banks will have an army of new unwilling customers from whom to extract fees, without being subject to the otherwise countervailing market force of consumer choice.

And the state wins, because all depositors’ economic activity is transparent to it through its control over the banks, making tax collection more thorough and dragnet surveillance more comprehensive.  The state can also, through its control over the banks, order accounts frozen at will.  This could prevent, for example, a defendant in a government action from retaining a specialist lawyer that could mount an effective defense, which wouldn’t be a problem if he had cash.

Other than control, the state can directly profit from cash bans: notes that are not turned in can be cancelled and converted into a ‘fiscal stimulus’ windfall for the state, a strategy openly floated during India’s cash ban.

Workers and savers lose; who else loses?  As a Telegraph article describes, a cashless society would be a nightmare for the homeless, who generally do not possess the proper paperwork to satisfy the state’s requirements to open a bank account.  Suddenly the class warfare inherent in cash bans comes into focus, and not in a way that was expected.

As The Economist states:

India is not the first country to introduce abrupt, drastic reform of its currency. But the precedents—including Burma in 1987, the former Soviet Union in 1991 and North Korea in 2009—are not encouraging. Burma erupted in revolt, the Soviet Union disintegrated and North Koreans went hungry.

Governments that now seek to ban cash in partnership with banks should consider whether they wish to be in the company of the above countries, whether in their motivation or in the outcome.

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Liberals embrace gun ownership now that Trump is President

“The change in attitude is a stark contrast to liberal views about gun ownership during the Obama years, when CNN host Piers Morgan scored high ratings calling for a ban on assault rifles.”

Read more: https://liberty-intl.org/2016/12/do-liberals-still-think-the-government-should-take-all-the-guns-now-that-trump-was-elected-president/

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More Americans support torture than Afghans, Iraqis and South Sudanese

“39 percent of the Americans who supported torture told the ICRC they ‘didn’t realize my country had agreed to ban torture’ as a signatory to the Geneva Conventions.  The ICRC study is not the first to establish Americans’ increasing tolerance for torture in recent years.  A Pew Research Center study in February found that 58 percent of Americans think the torture of suspected terrorists can be justified. Of 38 nations surveyed, only five countries have a higher tolerance for torturing suspected terrorists, the Pew study found: Uganda (78 percent), Lebanon (72 percent), Israel (62 percent), Kenya (62 percent) and Nigeria (61 percent).”

Read more: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2016/12/05/more-americans-support-torture-than-afghans-iraqis-and-south-sudanese-why/

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Trump Gets Behind Philippines Drug War Death Squads

“The Filipino strongman took office earlier this year with a promise to unleash mass murder on Philippine drug users and dealers, and he has lived up to that vow, leaving the streets running with the blood of more than 5,000 killed so far, either directly by his police, or in a more shadowy fashion by ‘vigilantes.’  Duterte’s bloody campaign has drawn scathing criticism from human rights groups, the United Nations, and the Obama administration, with Duterte responding to the latter by calling Obama a ‘son of a whore.’  But in his phone call with the Filipino strongman, Donald Trump was singing a different tune.”

Read more: http://www.alternet.org/drugs/trump-gets-behind-philippines-drug-war-mass-murderer

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Republicans, now in majority, turn to supporting $1 trillion budget deficit

“In a dramatic reversal, many members of the hard-line House Freedom Caucus said Thursday they are prepared later this month to support a budget measure that would explode the deficit and increase the public debt to more than $29.1 trillion by 2026, figures contained in the budget resolution itself.  [Rand Paul’s] floor speech attacking the budget measure for making no attempts at deficit reduction — it projects a $9 trillion increase in the debt by 2026 — was preempted by statements from Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.), Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah), and Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), pledging to vote for the resolution anyway.”

Read more: https://www.washingtonpost.com/powerpost/conservatives-ready-to-support-1-trillion-hole-in-the-budget/2017/01/05/76d4bf34-d391-11e6-a783-cd3fa950f2fd_story.html

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Trump Threatens Toyota With Taxes Over Plans For New Factory

“The attack overnight on Toyota is his first against a foreign automaker. ‘Toyota Motor said will build a new plant in Baja, Mexico, to build Corolla cars for U.S. NO WAY! Build plant in U.S. or pay big border tax,’ Trump tweeted.  Toyota shares fell more than 3 percent before recovering, and Honda Motor Co and Nissan Motor Co slid around 2 percent – even as the government and analysts sought to brush off the impact of the attack.”

Read more: http://fortune.com/2017/01/06/japan-toyota-trump/

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China Increases Capital Controls, Warns It May Dump Treasuries

“Beijing unveiled its latest set of capital controls according to which Chinese banks would be required to report all yuan-denominated cash transactions exceeding 50,000 yuan. Cross-border transfers more than 200,000 yuan by individuals would also be subject to the report process.  Citizens faced draconian new currency exchange disclosure requirements, requiring foreign currency buyers to indicate how they plan to use the money and when they plan to spend it. Additionally, mainlanders would be restricted from using the FX proceeds to buy overseas property, securities, life insurance or other investment-style insurance products.”

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2017-01-03/china-may-dump-treasuries-keep-yuan-stable-prepares-more-capital-controls

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