Tag Archives: bubble

What Frightens Me the Most About Stock Investing? “AI” (Microsoft, Google, Coca-Cola…..) Bonus: Crypto and Samsung

“AI” frightens me.

No, not the thought of living in the Future War of The Terminator. Skynet said that it “evolves in seconds”. ChatGPT, Dall-E, and Bard still get simple interest wrong and can’t tell me what things will cost when I ask them to factor in coupons or rebates.

NPR’s article about “AI” building rockets that would explode if anyone tried building them was just amusing. We’re a long way off from rockets when GPT and Bard can’t tell me how much interest $1,000 will make in 5 years if I put it in a CD that compounds daily at a given APY.

The entire point of “generative AI” is to create a seductive mirage for stock investors.

Google and Microsoft are examples of giant tech companies whose established products are still fairly widely used despite having degenerated quite a bit.

Google and Microsoft Bing search are an arm of the state propaganda mills, and Windows 11 is noticeably slower than Windows 10 even on faster hardware, carrying on Microsoft’s usual tradition there, and even Windows XP was more reliable in terms of uptime and hotfixes and service packs installing and rebooting successfully.

According to Gartner (which itself is Microsoft-affiliated), PC shipments have fallen more than 30% in the first quarter of 2023 vs. the comparable period last year, and so new PCs sales are not happening. Are people switching to Macs? Apple had the worst decline of a single OEM. Even worst than Lenovo.

Microsoft has basically given up on demanding “TPM 2.0” or new PCs, and has unofficially started trying to cannibalize all the Windows 10 systems it can by waving them through. Figuring that they’ll at least make some extra money with all of the additional adware and spyware if they can’t sell you on a new PC?

No, Microsoft said that they would make money with “Cloud”, but even Yahoo Finance articles admit that “Cloud” revenue growth is slowing and will be a disappointing miss.

There’s simply nothing here to justify MSFT stock nearly doubling in the last few years and it’s time to dump it if you have it.

Every major company, even Coca-Cola (we don’t want your White money), has “plans” to “Chaff Bot” now. This has jumped the shark already and they’ve been at it for less than 60 days. Amazing!

Consider the amount of money and potential being wasted to juice the stocks while the important people dump shares and, hey it’s not insider trading if it’s scheduled, right? 😉

Bill Gates himself has to know full well that GPT is a great big fat nothingburger, but the speculation makes him other people’s money, so he’s buying columns talking it up about how it will teach your kids to read. (Don’t teachers already do this?)

The “AI” bullshit was a major factor in my decision to exit stocks in the retirement portfolio recently. I expect the bond fund to right-size because those are binding obligations to pay and with a very low default rate, and prioritized during bankruptcy proceedings.

(Like Bed, Bath, and Beyond…. Now if only they had put out a press release about using AI to sell people coffee makers and pillows, and sold shares are horrifically inflated costs with no promise to pay anyone back.)

Walmart recently fired their global chief of marketing. This is the guy that said they were going to start selling NFTs and taking Cryptocurrency.

I read a news article today about the US Government’s war on crypto. At first it was just the IRS, then it was the New York “Department of Financial Services”, and now it’s the SEC.

The SEC just issued a notice to Coinbase that is the final step, usually, before criminal charges. Coinbase is threatening to exit the United States.

There are no Crypto exchanges you can trust. Ask FTX and Celsius customers.

Ask people who used Uphold and have Uphold freezing their account or money disappearing, and nobody from Uphold will talk to them.

Crypto had its day. Now these companies are saying there’s “AI”.

The reason why Microsoft can burn so much time in Azure to run GPT is because they weren’t doing anything with it. It was sitting there as dead, unsold, capacity.

They’ve cooked up this thing, and it’s an utter scam, and people will lose their life savings if they don’t get out quickly.

Investors should take serious note of the fact that while Microsoft is trumpeting an AI that returns false information, and can’t be fixed, they fire thousands of people in Bing, Edge, and other divisions that are responsible, theoretically, for fixing it.

It shows that their plans are, in fact, to deceive investors about what the potential future applications for generative AI really are, and not to fix it, and to dump inflated shares before the little people using Robinhood and their 401(k) to invest in Microsoft lose their asses on it.

This is a picture of the history of Microsoft stock.

When a stock moves like this, tread very lightly.

You see that little bump way back between 1986 and 2004?

That was around 1998-2001. The DotCom Bubble.

Hardly a blip compared to what’s been building up recently.

Microsoft isn’t alone at severely overvalued “tech” companies.

There is a wipeout coming.

And it’s not only fraudulent accounting, “AI” hype, and such. It’s not just “irrational exuberance” as Alan Greenspan might say.

A lot of it is also legal embezzlement, known as “share buybacks”, which are done to increase executive pay. Share buybacks should be illegal. They don’t add value. They destroy value.

Democrats in Congress put a 1% tax on share buybacks into law.

That’s better than nothing (which is what the Republicans want), but it doesn’t do very much to discourage them.

It’s saying “We’re going to let you do something incredibly wrong and fraudulent, but we want some money first.”

Captured government.

Don’t look for the government to help you. They’re figuring out how to shut down your retirement money and take it all back so they can bail banks out again; so they can run Super-TARPs.

As an investor in a retirement plan, there’s just not many safe options, but given that last year was already the worst year in 250 years for Bonds, I think that other people have taken the hit and fixed income will be the name of the game for a while.

I think that Gold and Silver could do well too. At some point, the large market caps are going to have to be companies that really make things and mine things and build things again. This tech surge is a seductive mirage.

“Intellectual Property” is just a fancy way of saying “slavery with extra steps”. It’s a way to extract rents from the productive sectors using nothing but the threat of law.

That being said, while some companies do make money like this, it’s normally a form of economic parasitism. “Non-Practicing Entities” and “Patent Trolls” come to mind, but Microsoft operates like this too, and it ruins companies that made stuff.

I was reading my email today, and Samsung emailed me about having until July to remove everything from “Samsung Cloud” before it got deleted.

I don’t even have a Samsung phone anymore. They turned a loyal customer into “Eww, Samsung.” with the increasingly buggy firmwares, and shoveling Microsoft crap into the phone and making it impossible to remove fully.

Then when I found secret Facebook spyware running in the background by default (“facebook service” or something), it was the last straw. I wiped the phone (which was malfunctioning anyway thanks to T-Mobile making my Sprint phone, which they sold me, incompatible with their network), and used T-Mobile’s buyback to switch to a Pixel.

Microsoft doesn’t add value, they ruin it. I can’t imagine that I was the only Samsung phone user who saw Microsoft Microsoft Microsoft popping up everywhere and went “LOL, no!”.

Bill Gates said in one of his “Creepy Uncle Says” articles the other day, that his “biggest mistake” was not “making Windows Phone what Android is today”, when “that was a natural place for Microsoft to be”.

Microsoft had Windows Phones, and they were cheap. Nobody wanted them. The only way they could dispose of them was selling them at a loss to Cricket Wireless customers with bad FICO scores and writing them off their taxes.

But they came back and forced themselves, as in rape, on people who used something else. That’s what they do. They corrupt and corrode. Samsung is finished.

The Galaxy S20 was the worst tech thing I ever bought, and I’m just glad I didn’t end up selling it to Amazon for a bag of cat food because T-Mobile offered me a 100% credit for giving it back.

It was such a bad phone (mostly because of the Microsoft deal) that I went in and said “Show me the iPhones and the Google phones.”

And almost like some sort of horrible comedy, the guy says “We’ll give you a Galaxy S22 if you want one.” I was like, “No.” He says, “Well it is a more expensive phone.” and I replied, “Well then anyone who pays that and gets another Samsung has my sympathy.”

Microsoft can’t seem to really enter into new markets, but it can do an enormous amount of damage on the way down. It’s basically turning Samsung into the sequel of what happened to Nokia.

There’s no telling exactly when this stock market is coming down, but it is probably “soon” and when it does, it will come down hard, and they’re not going to tell you when they plan to do it to you.

The people gravitating towards Microsoft and its ilk will get burned worse than others.

In the meantime, we can all enjoy the comedy. CNBC calls the Business Software Alliance (a legal trolling outfit operated by Microsoft, Adobe, and a few others, best known for running ads encouraging people to rat their employers out for “unlicensed software”) a “tech advocacy group” calling for “AI regulations”.

:/

Facebook is dying as the tech bubble bursts.

Facebook is collapsing right in front of us.

All you have to do is look at their stock price.

It’s “worth” less than 25% of what it was 13 months ago, even before you adjust for the fact that the money lost another 30% this year under Biden and (locally worse) Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker.

Where you have to pay for three dozen eggs at 2020 prices to get only a dozen and you have to pay for two pounds of butter to get a pound, and you have to pay for 1.2 months worth of rent to get a month.

This is Illinois and this is America under the Democratic Party.

Phoronix is talking about Facebook’s code contributions to the BtrFS file system for Linux, which I admit I use personally.

Since it’s all under the GNU GPL, it will survive the collapse of the Second Tech Bubble, when Facebook is long gone. As did much Free and Open Source Software the last time, much of which is still developed and in use today.

But what will be gone when Facebook itself collapses?

Cat pictures?

Terror content that they don’t see anything wrong with (because there’s no human moderators and they try to cover it up with software that detects words)?

Anti-vaxxers? People denying that we had an election and they lost?

They don’t care what kind of an open sewer they’re running as long as people engage with advertising, but in Biden/Pritzker’s economy, ad revenue is worth very little right now and many of the ad firms themselves are shutting down and having 100% layoffs.

Meanwhile, the company is mostly being mocked for spending down all of their assets on something that looks like characters in a Nintendo 64 game where nobody has any legs, on a $600 VR headset.

Facebook truly is burning while Zuckerberg fiddles. This is priceless. I shall watch with great amusement and then laugh in “I still use IRC and lost pretty much nothing.”.

There’s nothing particularly unique about what’s happening to Facebook (“Fakebook”) in the economy of the Bay Area. Layoffs Tracker shows mostly what’s unfolding in failed blue cities and states.

Yesterday, a “self-driving” car company based in Pennsylvania called Argo AI went under, and 2,000 people lost their jobs, as their clients took possession of the company’s “intellectual property”.

Self-driving cars are a pipe dream. Tesla is now under CRIMINAL investigation by the feds for advertising that their cars are “self-driving”. (NewsWaffle proxy. Original.)

I mean, it’s technically true that “self-driving” cars can mostly manage to stay in a lane, but you can’t trust them not to run people over and say they were a shopping bag or slam into the back of a parked police car in Florida, so you still, legally, have to be paying attention to the road and ready to take over at a moment’s notice.

I linked to the ARGO AI story in Techrights IRC yesterday, highlighting Matthew J. Garrett, joking “You’re next, Bubbles.”.

(Which is what Peter Venkman told the judge in Ghostbusters II while the ghosts were flying away with his court reporter.)

He didn’t reply as far as I know. I’m not telling him anything he doesn’t already know.

The Federal Reserve may be fixing to lose all credibility.

I saw a report yesterday that says that many investors feel that the Fed will crater and stop aggressively hiking interest rates in December. The Fed hasn’t commented, but I guess we won’t have to wait long to see.

I don’t subscribe to the notion that jacking up interest rates through the roof and causing immediate and rampant destruction is the best or only way to get hyperinflation under control, but it is what’s available considering that Congress won’t quit throwing money around and bailing out Zombie Corporations like Japan did in the 90s before it gave up because the government deficits were just too large and the population wouldn’t stand for it anymore.

If true, this means that instead of just a Depression or just a hyperinflationary period, we’re going to get both as the Federal Reserve throws its hands into the air and gives up trying to deal with this using the tools it has available.

Netflix thinks that the solution to its financial woes is a deal with Microsoft to put ads into your TV shows.

Netflix thinks that the solution to its financial woes is a deal with Microsoft to put ads into your TV shows.

Netflix is in major financial crisis. They’re doing huge layoffs. They’ve spent years mismanaging the platform and have only themselves to blame.

Even though the DRM is malicious, and encourages people to be jerks who can’t share with their friends, it’s not the cause of their financial problems.

Back when it wasn’t so expensive and had shows that people wanted to watch, people would pay the money to subscribe and then keep paying, usually even if there wasn’t anything on that they wanted to watch that month.

However, with the state of the economy being pretty lousy, and hyperinflation causing people to struggle to put food on the table, and gas in the gas tank, Netflix seems to have figured out what the solution is to losing a million subscribers per annum.

No, the solution is not canceling all the good shows, it’s not raising the price another $3-4 a month every year; it couldn’t possibly be paying $50 million for a documentary about Michelle Obama that nobody wants to see. But they’ve done all of this.

Michelle Obama’s main accomplishment as FLOTUS appears to be ruining school lunches to the point where what I had to eat as a child in school was a gourmet restaurant by comparison (and it was basically on par with what they fed Indiana prisoners back then!).

Then there’s the fact that streaming has become a highly competitive market with lots of contenders that have gigantic war chests dumping cash into programming investments, and that people simply aren’t going to subscribe to the company (Netflix) with the weakest content portfolio when there’s nothing on and the price is spiraling out of control.

(Sarcasm) No, no, what people really want is this horrible streaming company with nothing to watch except a documentary about Michelle Obama, plus advertisements from Microsoft. (/Sarcasm)

CNBC: Netflix partners with Microsoft on ad-supported subscription plan

Web / Gemini (NewsWaffle)

Microsoft is in a position to spy on the majority of desktop and laptop computer users through spyware that they have built into Windows, Edge, and Bing.

Of course, that’s the mistake of the people who use these things, but “interest-based advertising” built upon what Microsoft learns by spying on you elsewhere will almost certainly pop up during your Netflix shows, if you subscribe to this tier.

Seeing has how there’s rarely been a business partnership with Microsoft in the tech world that ended well (AOL, Novell, Nokia, SEGA, Spyglass, etc.) and when Microsoft can’t corrupt, they do a hostile takeover, patent litigation threats (Samsung), or just make some crappy cloned and stolen product (Windows NT is essentially stolen from DEC and IBM, and they twisted and contorted their agreement with Spyglass for Internet Explorer, and then both got settled out of court for undisclosed sums…), I think that a Microsoft partnership is just yet another sign that Netflix is a company in serious trouble.

It’s not good to be a tech company that is not earning a profit during a bubble, during a period of high inflation, during a downturn in the business cycle, and during rising interest rates. Netflix and others now find themselves here.

Either they’ll go to bankruptcy court and be sold for scrap (patents, etc.) or someone buys them for scrap. Maybe even to Microsoft. They’ve bought worse.

Netflix is probably heading this way, though it may take a few years.

I don’t see how putting ads in Netflix is going to do anything for their bottom line though. Consumers are pinched.

Consumer discretionary is going through Hell at the moment.

Amazon has quietly killed warehouse construction all over the place, sometimes with half a building standing.

TheRealDeal: Amazon binge ends in hangover, halt on warehouse deals amid $4B loss

Web / Gemini (NewsWaffle

Walmart and Target don’t even want their returns back.

CNN: Just keep your returns: Stores weigh paying you not to bring back unwanted items

Web / Gemini (NewsWaffle)

What’s bound to happen is the same thing that happened in the early 2000s. Ad revenues are going to crash in a major way. They’re going to start paying pretty much nothing after years of running hot based on the notion that the consumer would spend a bunch of money that turned out to not really be there in the end.

Yes, companies like Microsoft, Facebook, and Google have sharpened their knives and have better ways to target and psychologically manipulate consumers than the relatively blunt instruments there were before, but a broke working class is a broke working class and a tightening Fed is a tightening Fed.

TechRights has noticed that on Phoronix, a site about “Linux” news which has always been the subject of ridicule over the ad bombardment that takes place if you turn off your ad blocker, Michael Larabel has additionally started taking “free gifts” worth many thousands from companies like AMD, his to keep.

And he’s been writing incredibly favorable “reviews”. So it’s clear that he’s diversified away from obvious advertising and straight into “sponsored content”.

Worse yet, now many articles are not even about “Linux”. They’re about Microsoft. Leading us to call him “Microsoft Larabel”.

This came after years of entire articles begging people to subscribe to read his content churn.

Perpetual Comedian Jim Cramer (“Buy Bear Stearns!”) said today that he thinks that despite the fact that the government’s inflation figure for the year went from 8.6% to 9.1% after the latest monthly report, that the Federal Reserve “Is getting a handle on inflation.” and that we’ll see it soon. Also, that the bottom for the market is close.

Of course, there’s an investment strategy I call the “Reverse Jim Cramer”. If you listen to Cramer and do the exact opposite of what he just said, you usually make a lot of money, and if you do what he says, you usually lose money, while he’s reversed his position a couple weeks later and acts like he never said to do that.

Right now, Cramer is urging people to buy and hold Netflix and has been repeating that for many months as the company continues to fail.

I’ve witnessed five US recessions and have studied more as a hobby. Here’s what I think about Bitcoin.

I’ve witnessed five US recessions and have studied them as a historical phenomenon as a hobby. Here’s what I think about Bitcoin.

If you look at the fake coins bloodbath and bankruptcy proceedings going on right now, that alone is another dotcom bubble, and Bitcoin and clones turned out to be Flooz 2.0.

Remember Flooz? If you’re much under 40, you probably don’t.

There was going to be an “Internet Currency” that you could exchange USD for because online merchants weren’t established to take credit cards and stuff yet.

I got some as part of a promotion and used them to buy some cigars from a cigar Web site through the mail when I was underage. I think the statute of limitations is up on that. It was over 23 years ago.

Anyway, Flooz got Whoopi Goldberg doing commercials for them, similarly to the way Matt Damon and others were doing Super Bowl ads for crypto exchanges that are now defunct, only months later.

Most of the Flooz (and similar company, Beenz) activity ended up being Russian oligarchs using it to launder money.

When the company shut its doors with no warning in the middle of the night (like crypto exchanges that now freeze transactions because there is no money and head to bankruptcy court), people flooded Web forums to complain that they had a bunch of them and when they called the 1-800 number it said the line was disconnected.

Bitcoin+Clones and the exchanges are just a fancy Flooz.

The problem is that cryptocurrencies got very big because people figured that it would always go up, it appealed to Libertarian cranks who thought they had something real like Gold or Silver (and they didn’t) just from some buzzwords about it not being “legal tender”, which turned out to be a problem when it lost 70% of its value and continues plummeting, and then the tax evaders started getting letters from the IRS saying “We know what you did last year and we want money.”.

Ironically, people who bought Bitcoins last year have about 29 cents on the dollar today, while people who just held onto the dollar still have 91 cents even if they didn’t invest it.

And a full inflation-adjusted dollar if they bought inflation-backed treasury bonds.

So while my sister-in-law is tearing out her hair, my Treasury Bonds have not lost a single penny.

She comes from the slums of Manila and fancies herself an investor who drives a BMW.

They’re probably going to want that back.

Anyway, “Flooz on a Blockchain” (cryptocurrency) didn’t actually work out all that well, like I kept trying to say it wouldn’t.

Now who will clean up all of these ridiculous Bitcoin ATMs?

They managed to litter them at Merchandise Mart in Chicago and at gas stations in the suburban ghettos, and they’re rather unsightly.

The speculative bubbles in the US economy continue to collapse as the “news” is finally forced to say something about layoffs.

The speculative bubbles in the US economy continue to collapse as the “news” is finally forced to say something about layoffs.

A wave of layoffs is hitting the US economy. It’s been quietly building for months, but the “news” has barely spoken of it. During the 2020 recession, even large firms like IBM and Microsoft cut their head counts and did it piecemeal to avoid any loud negative publicity.

In Microsoft’s case, it even took advantage of the chaos to shut down their faltering Microsoft Stores, which had turned into an ongoing and pointless embarrassment for the company given the total and complete failure of Windows Phone, and the fact that it’s pointless to give demonstrations of Windows products in general, because it often just highlights that it cannot perform basic functions that should work as advertised.

Hell, when I went into a Microsoft store in Chicago in 2016, I wanted to try out Windows 10 with “MiraCast”, which is something Microsoft cooked up with Intel that promised that wireless screencasting would finally be done right.

Well, the demonstration unit synced up to the TV and sent one frame, and then Blue Screen of Deathed the entire display laptop. An employee at the store tried to reset it, but that’s what kept happening, and so I gave up on Windows doing anything right again.

That laptop had no HDMI port, so I limped by using a minidlna server on GNU/Linux and a Roku, which at least at that time, did support dlna.

The next time I bought a laptop, I got one with an HDMI port and a really long cable.

But as you can see, there was no need for a Microsoft Store. They’re not Apple. People despise Windows. It’s an experience to be endured, not enjoyed, if you have you, I guess. But they’re not good products.

The more recent trouble with the US economy is also mainly unfolding in the “tech” sectors, but the more recent bloodbath is things that are entirely speculative in nature, such as Bitcoins, Tesla, Uber, Real Estate tech companies, Carvana, and other shit that’s finally hitting the fan now that the Federal Reserve is raising interest rates, however slightly.

While it is true that the Fed is tightening at the fastest clip in over 30 years (Jerome Powell said they might do ANOTHER 75 basis points next month, back-to-back), the truth is that rates are still pitifully low by historical standards, and the fact that the US economy cannot stand up to a 1% Fed Funds Rate shows how pervasive the rot really is..

I mean, 40-50 years ago, that rate could be 20% and it would be miserable, but the economy would mostly go on because most people still had decent jobs and they worked at places that really made things.

In the post-Baby Boomer era, the damage that they allowed to unfold under the trade deals spanning from Bush Sr. through Trump has finally started becoming apparent. The only way the economy ran for the last 10 years was with debt that was cheaper than dirt, and the crack cocaine is finally being taken away.

To make matters worse, consumer prices were already starting to rise under Donald Trump due to his insane tariffs, which were neither high enough to encourage jobs to be created domestically, nor low enough to allow lower and middle income workers to avoid noticing that they were there.

The Fed is desperately trying to stamp out inflation, but we also have to ask ourselves where the inflation came from?

The insanity of Keynesian Economics. The last bout of it has made the US economy terribly, terribly sick. Trump and Biden, and the Congressional Republican and Democratic Parties were all for it and promoted it as “stimulative”, but it was really all about pouring fake money into the economy, not backed by anything, diluting what was already there.

In Trump’s case, it mostly went to his criminal friends and rich Republicans that cheat the system and don’t pay their taxes, and in Mr. Biden’s case it mostly went to slush funds for states that haven’t been managing their own budgets correctly.

In red states, the slush funds are propping up tax cuts that go almost entirely to unproductive rich people who already hoard a lot of wealth even during recessions, and in blue states like Illinois, it gets spent on outright vote buying to people who are terminal welfare cases no matter how the economy is doing that year and who mostly produce unnecessary children who have no future to grow up into, and to public employee unions to push papers around and make you wait 4 months to get your car title from the DMV.

In any event, the money was wasted, in the worst ways, and now it’s floating around out there like toxic waste, forcing the Federal Reserve to do something, which damages the economy in other ways.

The Fed and the government have rather been like Godzilla and Mothra fighting each other and destroying the entire damned city in the process while the onlookers are like “Wow! They’re here to save us!”.

Aside from that, and aside from the DotCom Bubble 2.0, we’re facing an old age crisis, the generation that ruined the underpinnings of the economy over the past 40 years is retiring and after demanding not to pay what Social Security and Medicare cost, they all want “THEIR” money, which in reality means working their children to death while their kids get to have nothing except their cost of living go up 20% a year.

So this entire thing goes much deeper than several thousand layoffs, or people waking up with a post-Bitcoin hangover.

Everything has been ruined in ways that are more horrible than most people even dare to imagine.

The most offensive part of all of this, of course, is that while it plays out, the bipolar “news” media alternate between how bad everything is (without actually scratching the surface), and then pivoting to tell us how real wages are up (they’re not) and the jobs market is “tight” and people can do anything they want.

If that were true, nobody would drive around beating up their car making a dollar here and there with Doordash, and then running into people’s garage doors and fleeing because they have no insurance and can’t afford to settle with the homeowner for paying for the garage door.

Nobody would be doing such menial tasks and losing money for their trouble if the labor market was any good. Nobody.

They’d be yelling “Hey, you assholes! Go get your own damned McDonalds! I found a job that pays $20 an hour with health insurance and I’m not a 1099 contractor who has to pay Social Security twice!”.

My cousin is trying to sell a house. It was my grandmother’s house. It used to be a nice house. I have many fond memories of that house.

Unfortunately, it’s seen better days. My grandfather passed away in September of 1998, and nobody has done a damned thing to it since then, except tear the shit out of it, and incompetently turned the dining room into a makeshift bedroom so some extended family could move in and help share the bills.

Now she’s trying to get out of it and is even willing to take a loss. A loss!

It’s in a good neighborhood. You can’t tell the extent of the wear and tear from the outside at a glance, but it’s really really bad in there.

I said “Try to get out of it with something before the Fed jacks up mortgage rates past 10% and nobody wants a fixer upper.”.

Now, this is really the economy in a microcosm. Pervasive rot, decades of “deferred maintenance”, the warning lights are flashing, but the politicians and their pet media don’t want you to see it, so instead of fixing anything, they take out the bulbs from the warning lights, and the entire thing is about to collapse.

I’m not even really sure if it’s possible to save the United States at this point.

The politicians have spent so many years getting high on their own supply and detached from the issues that real Americans have to go through, and changing election laws and gerrymandering themselves into office so the voters can’t take their revenge out even if they ever do get smart enough to realize what’s going on, which is doubtful given the state of public education.

But even in theory, if someone got in that was smart enough to realize that you need to balance budgets and pay your debts, and take care of your own problems first, I don’t know that it would matter.

You can tell just how deranged the warmongers are with this entire Russia thing. We’re dumping unlimited billions into this mess. It’s still unclear if Ukraine could ever win. The energy crisis could, in fact, be the last straw, and it’s being done entirely by people who have been in Washington forever and think they need to keep sticking Russia in the eye and making them angrier and angrier at us. No matter what the eventual cost.

Then there was the insanity that it’s essentially been the policy of the government since about 30 years ago that real estate was a “guaranteed thing no matter what…..NO MATTER WHAT” despite 2008 or what is going to happen here in a few months.

I don’t know that I’m going anywhere with this other than to point out that America is fucked six ways to Sunday, and they have us bickering over whether it’s poor people getting free broadband or a bunch of hillbillies committing misdemeanors two years ago that did it.

Details!

If this sounds like a lifetime pasta pass of madness, it’s because it is.

CNN stops bothering to hide that the economy has turned sour.

CNN was one of the last few holdouts insisting that we were in a “strong economy” with “robust growth” and “record job creation levels” and that high inflation would be “transitory” in America.

Sometime around yesterday, they changed their minds and finally started reporting what investment magazines and CEOs were saying for months, that a dire recession is coming. (It’s already here, though.)

I’ve said over the last few years, repeatedly, that we were in a “second tech bubble”, with the first big one of course being the Dotcom Bubble of the late 1990s and early 2000s where investors were willing to throw at and lose money on anything vaguely tech related that sounded like it might have a business plan, no matter how insane.

But even I didn’t see what’s happening now coming. We’re in uncharted territory on gasoline prices (for the United States….Europe has always had very decadent and corrupt politicians who subscribed to this green new deal insanity, but it’s a pretty new concept here).

There’s a shortage of baby formula, and the president of the United States refuses to do what current law authorizes him to, in order to get it under control. Because he doesn’t want to go too hard on the oligopoly that produces it all.

There’s pretty much every major company laying off or going into a hiring freeze at about the same time.

Carvana is about ready to collapse and has lost their license to sell any cars at all in the entire state of Illinois.

And streaming companies like Netflix are seeing record cancellations and the end to subscriber growth, and admit it will accelerate.

Walmart has had its worst trading days since the 1980s this week, losing 19% of its share price in three days. Target and Amazon got hammered much worse.

The whole thing is an epic disaster. And where is the news? Trying to tell people that “this millennial in their 20s just bought a $700,000 house….so why don’t you have one?”. (CNBC bullshit)

I’m just so sick and tired and goddamned disgusted by it all. I’ve tuned out advertising completely. I don’t have any streaming disservices in my house. I watch movies and stuff on discs. Usually ones I borrowed at the library, which I have to pay taxes for whether I use it or not.

I’ve blocked advertisements from appearing in my Web browser since 1998, when I got on the Web and found out there were ads and that they were slowing my browsing down a lot (images on a 56k modem….and now videos on my cable that I didn’t consent to watching).

I couldn’t really care less about their damned “economy” aside from how it bleeds into our household and affects our lives.

So far, we’ve weathered this better than a lot of people I know, who foolishly take on lots of debt over things that aren’t even remotely important and then plead bankruptcy for the fourth time.

That’s where advertising leads people. They go “There’s a scratch on my car…Get rid of it!”, “I bought those jeans last year….I need new jeans!”, “I’m so sick of this TV. It only has the features from 2020, I need the 2022 model!”.

And so a lot of what people spend money on isn’t only unnecessary, it’s ridiculous, it’s corrosive to their actual wellbeing.

They can’t afford healthcare, they can’t afford rent, they can’t afford groceries or transportation, because they’re sitting around a mountain of crap that doesn’t do any useful work for them, that they bought because the advertisers told them they were entitled to it.

The Democrat Party and the Republican Party that let laissez-faire Crapitalism dictate trade policy, who bankrupted us as a nation, who convinced us all we could “just go shopping” to cure what ails you, have no answers for how to fix anything, because they’re the ones who don’t really want to fix it.

Even Trump said he opposed NAFTA, then he got in and made it even worse.

But tech is the most interesting point of the economic collapse in my opinion.

Where are all of the people who were saying Microsoft, Apple, and Amazon had these trillions of dollars in “value”? Fake value which is starting to be erased. They’re silent. They’re going away.

And it turns out that the biggest fools of them all were the ones telling people to invest their money in the companies like Tesla and Netflix, which deserve to fail.

They deserve to fail for many reasons, including defrauding their investors and their customers, but they also deserve to fail because their customers have no control over their products.

Even now, you buy TVs with a “Netflix” button that paid to be there. After the company goes bankrupt, it’ll just be something you accidentally hit that doesn’t do anything anymore.

Like how Webvan left all of those empty tubs and that turns out to be their assets after the bankruptcy.

Speaking of Webvan….Instacart, Doordash, Grubhub.

I believe that economists will eventually call this the “app” or “smartphone” bubble, because it seems like everything involving those is shit hitting the fan, but there are lots of other bubbles too, like “cryptocurrencies”.

I remember when there were going to be “internet currencies” called flooz and beenz, and they got Whoopi Goldberg as their spokesperson, and that’s starting to sound a lot like Matt Damon doing cryptocurrency ads at the superbowl this year before those cratered, right?

I suppose we’ll see how long the IRS goes on auditing those when they mostly turn up losses that lower people’s tax liabilities.

I’ve also heard “Everything Bubble”. Since it has infected banking and even low end retail that mostly deals in toothpaste and underwear, like Walmart, I think maybe this is also a fair assessment.

However bad you think this will get, it’s going to be worse.