Tag Archives: recession

The Observations of Leaving the House Contradict Paul Krugman’s “Robust America”.

The Observations of Leaving the House Contradict Paul Krugman’s “Robust America”.

Yesterday when driving my spouse to a medical appointment in the south suburbs…

I noticed that there are miles of abandoned offices, and businesses that closed years ago and have not been replaced by anything else.

For a 50 mile stretch in the Chicagoland area, things are dead. The city proper apparently even has several empty Sears Tower-equivalents of empty office space.

The other day, Grindr (the gay sex app) made the news for a “not layoff layoff” whereby half the company (over 80 employees) resigned en masse over a “return to the office deadline”.

Some of them said that they wondered how, without their presence in the office, an app where people have been kidnapped and stabbed to death by a stalker, which the app told their location to, will “remain safe”. Yes, I wonder.

Roy Schestowitz commented that this is getting fairly common.

The managers impose deadlines and anyone who doesn’t come back is not technically a layoff and doesn’t qualify for any benefits.

We spoke of Walmart cutting people’s hours and how pressuring them to quit “also isn’t a layoff”.

I told him, Walmart absolutely lays people off and gives them severance, but only when they’re closing the entire store down with three days warning and they stick up a sign that says ‘Dear Shoplifters and Arsonists, valued Chicago customers, the store will close on Friday. Employees who can’t commute three hours to the nearest store will get a little bit of WARN Act Money. It’s been real, and it’s been fun, but it ain’t been real fun. C’ya!’.

(Not what the actual sign says, but it’s the thought that counts.)

Then we discussed the movies. I said, they wheeled Hiyao Miyazaki out (for those who don’t know, he’s been called the Japanese Walt Disney, because everything he touches sells like hotcakes) to make one last movie and the local theater has been hitting my email inbox hard with it because they know if people like me and my spouse go out to see a movie twice this year, one of them will be that one.

It’s just getting harder to justify movies.

It’s not only that barely any of them are worth watching at all, it’s that money is suddenly so tight for many Americans that something that costs $12 for two people on Tuesday isn’t even justifiable on a weekly basis anymore. You look at what’s out and 4-6 months goes by before you even consider watching the movie.

The local Marcus Cinema theater used to do $5 movie tickets on Tuesday, now it’s $6 and you have to use an app, and no Holidays, and some movies (the good ones) are special and are never $6.

So the “$6 Tuesday with an app that has dozens of spyware libraries in it” is a way to make theaters showing bad movies “not empty” so that they might sell a bucket of popcorn.

What I see unfolding in America right now is like the Second Great Depression, but even during the Depression the federal government admitted to everyone what was happening and enacted programs to help them muddle through.

Today, they cut programs. They tell disabled people in their late 50s “Go find work, bum!”, and with the cost of everything spiking, those lucky enough to have any work find themselves with almost all their money going out to rent and food and gasoline.

This last couple of months my electric bill was running 10% higher than it normally does this part of the year. I looked on my bill this month to find that the Democrats added $10 a month to my bill to save us from “the carbon”. Oh no, not carbon!

My extra $10 a month on the electric bill will certainly make the smog in India and China that’s as thick as pea soup better, and save the planet, the trees, the bees, the whales and snails, and the endangered horny toads.

His Excellency J.B. Pritzker, Lord above us in the high castle, is a very Progressive man.

He made $5 billion the old fashioned way, by inheriting a hotel fortune.

He strongly and earnestly believes in redistributing the wealth to people who don’t do anything except make babies.

Not his own wealth, but if I have an extra five bucks in my pocket that week, not for long if Morbidly Obese 400 pound “Health Expert” Lord Farquad (Seven COVID Shots and Counting) has anything to say about it.

This country is basically dying. What’s going on is the Democrats benefit from people who are too illiterate to understand the issues finding their way into a voting booth, so they enact policies where people who litter the place with unemployable children who will shoot at each other, deal drugs, and scare the taxpayers out of the State don’t have to use any of their own money to reproduce.

They then reduce school by getting rid of the arts and literature, and replacing an increasing amount of actual education with propaganda.

Then they make college so expensive that most people can only dream of going there, even though you’ll also be poor if you don’t.

They’re also the Party of Lockdown Fetishists who basically have wet dreams of killing more businesses, which still employ a few people, with taxes and another winter of discontent, because once all the businesses and taxpayers are gone, you can run a corrupt welfare State on nothing but loans from the Central Bank why not?

It’ll be paradise. Just wait and see!

The Democrat answer to the criminals shooting up the place is to make it difficult for law abiding citizens to arm themselves and shoot back.

The police around these parts are so dumb and corrupt, that the other day, a black man was shot in the head, and the cops ignored the bullet hole in his window, and the bullet in his head, dumped him on the funeral home, and wrote down in the police report that he fell and hit his head and died accidentally.

“Just put him in the ground! We have places to be! People to falsely accuse! Donuts to eat!”

-Waukegan Police Department

Yes, they will protect us all from the bad criminal people! You do not need a FOID card, dear friends!

Anyway, there’s hardly even a reason to leave the house anymore.

They’ve ruined just about everything you could possibly want to see. I mean, some people still walk around in the forest preserves because the Democrats only took the trees in open air parks away from people during “COVID Lockdowns” which they want to bring back this winter. But trees are still there. They don’t employ very many people, but the trees are still there.

At least the ones that didn’t get knocked over to make the suburbs, which are now rotting malls and empty offices.

It should be very interesting to see how long anyone keeps reading the KrugmanBot3000 in the New York Times and doesn’t wake up and see with their own eyes what is actually going on in America.

My Cat Is Sick With Hyperthyroidism And A Tumor. Also: Economic Gaslighting. Paywalls. Copyrights. Google WEI.

My Cat Is Sick…Hyperthyroidism And A Tumor.

Our black and white “tuxedo” cat is sick with hyperthyroidism and a tumor. The vet figures the tumor is probably benign, but we’re not going to wait and find out. We’re going to have it surgically removed.

She also did the labs and found hyperthyroidism starting to develop.

She informed me that my cat was probably older than I guessed (~9 or ~10) and that most cats don’t develop this until they’re around 12.

She said that for the hyperthyroidism we can do pills, which are cheap, or surgery to remove a different growth (which is almost exclusively benign), which is expensive. Like $3,000, which is a LOT of pills. More than the cat will ever need.

Fortunately, I bought a handy dandy secret weapon. A pill giver you load and then push into the cat’s mouth and pop the pill in with a plunger so you’re not getting bitten twice a day trying to keep the cat alive.

Twice a day, come pill time, it’s like the opening of Ghostbusters. “GRAB HER!”

Things are going in a bad direction economically due to the “Economic Miracle of Biden”, as told by “KrugmanBot3000” (with a Volvo) in the NY Times.

I too am sick, of being told of this “Miracle” that is unfolding, as people lose jobs, get their hours cut, and have to wonder how long they can even afford to take care of their pet cat or fill up the tank of their car.

It makes me depressed to read it even though I know it’s propaganda that would make Goebbels or Stalin blush.

The other day, they went so far as to blame people with low interest fixed-rate mortgages for still being able to spend a lot of money while the Fed bangs the poor into bankruptcy due to the wealthy panicking about inflation. This situation with the American media has never been worse.

What level of Freedom and Capitalism are we in where the media gleefully shouts “HAHAHAHAHA!!! It’s all working as planned. The Central Bank is killing American families with rigged interest rates. They can’t afford to buy a can of beans and they are losing their jobs! This will bring inflation to a very manageable 3% eventually!”

A troll in IRC told me he believed copyright should be abolished.

(If it was to be, then Microsoft can commit more code theft using Plagiarism as a Service, AKA CoPilot.)

Then another sockpuppet in IRC shamed me for reading the Times via Links or the Newswaffle.

I mentioned that their paywall is pretty much just there so that people on a Mac with Safari, or on an iPhone, can’t do anything about it. It was never going to stop smart people who can just drop to the terminal and type “links nytimes.com”.

The WEI “attestation” of Chrome is there to stop people from doing this. There will be two or three Web browsers that are “trusted”, and they will be “trusted” to prevent the user from doing anything at all to alter the display of “content”, on the client-side.

So in layman’s terms, no more “KrugmanBot3000” and “Miracles” because the browser has to attest that you have not done anything clever.

The only benefit is that these sites tend to be so bogus that nobody should pay for them anyway which is why they’re really dying.

Let me be frank, that considering that these places only ever post propaganda that benefits the wealthy elite and the American government’s gaslighting, you’d think taxpayers would be on the hook to directly subsidize all of them and not just NPR.

They could have packed it into the “Inflation Production Act” or something.

Americans Go Deeper in Debt Using Buy Now, Pay Later Apps for Groceries and Other Routine Expenses While Banks Start Talking About Cutting Them Off

Americans Go Deeper in Debt Using Buy Now, Pay Later Apps for Groceries and Other Routine Expenses

(Sorry for using MSN News, but the source, Bloomberg, is paywalled.)

Americans have gone deeper into debt, using Buy Now, Pay Later Apps to buy groceries, often at horrific interest rates.

Microsoft (which owns MSN) has built a Buy Now, Pay Later App into Microsoft Edge.

What’s more revealing is how many Americans use these loan apps at the high interest rates in categories where spending could be cut, minimized, or eliminated entirely, such as travel, clothes, eating out, toys, “technology” (another TV when your old one works fine, an iPhone even though the one you have is barely 2 years old, trips to the mall when you could go thrifting, Disney World).

Meanwhile, banks are starting to talk about cutting them off.

American Express said its first-quarter profits fell by 13% from a year ago despite record quarterly revenue as the credit card company had to set aside more than $1 billion for potentially bad loans.

[…]

AmEx’s biggest credit card competitors also set aside money to cover potentially bad loans and have talked about how consumers are now carrying higher balances and aren’t paying off their cards.

[…]

If AmEx hadn’t set aside money for loan losses, this would have been a blockbuster quarter for the company. 

-Associated Press

I see that the “very robust economy” with the “resilient labor market” and “quiet quitters” is “experiencing slowing growth”. Perhaps, there might be a recession “on the horizon”, but with a “soft landing”.

But only if everyone “gets extreme” for the “year of efficiency” and comes sleep in their cubicle.

Last one in gets stabbed by the Microsoft Stabber and is also a rotten egg.

Facebook is dying. Part II.

In my last post, I mentioned that Social (Control) Media is dying off, and we’re no worse for wear because of it.

I noted that Musk was ruining Twitter (as a business) and clearly had no idea what to do, because he has no successful businesses on their own merit, which make profit without ripping off the public via government theft of wages. (Taxation to give to private companies as endless bailouts.)

Musk is hardly alone. Many of the large US corporations operate this way.

Facebook’s CEO, Mark Zuckerberg, has gone totally crazy. Like Vladimir Putin deciding to invade Ukraine crazy.

He’s thrown so much money into the “Metaverse” VR crap, which everyone mocks, and most people who actually did buy the expensive headsets gave up trying to use within their first month, that he’s wiped out over $268 billion of wealth and climbing just with this, and only with the top 10 investors in Facebook.

Most of the loss goes to Zuckerberg, but in many cases, Facebook shares were stuffed into people’s retirement accounts like some sort of a Ponzi scheme, without their consent, because it was part of a passive fund.

(Most American workers have no control over their retirement investments, either because a pension fund “takes care of that” or because they’re in some sort of corporate savings schemes like 401(k) and 403(b), where they have to choose between funds, and they all have some shit in the plumbing so there is no perfect outcome.)

Facebook is failed. It has plunged in “book value” by over $700 billion in the past year. It just sacked 11,000 people today in “Round 1” (means more to come….), and it admits it will lose many more billions of dollars in “Metaverse” before Mark Zuckerberg runs the company into the ground completely.

Any one problem that Facebook has would be bad for the company, but probably not fatal.

Unfortunately for them, they’ve seen ad revenues decline as America enters quite possibly a worse recession than 2008, and their CEO has not only failed to see the recession coming, but blew through their cash reserves instead of investing it into the products people are actually “engaging” with. They have some, but they’re being utterly neglected due to the VR nonsense.

Zuckerberg takes advantage of the somewhat unique structure of Facebook to do whatever he wants with it (he set it up so he gets a lot of votes) and his investors only have two options. Sit there and continue to get thumped by a CEO who is squandering assets, or dump their shares for whatever they can get today, which floods the market with shares that nobody wants at lower and lower prices.

I do wish the people who are losing their jobs the best of luck in the 2023 Hunger Games.

Maybe some of them can even find a job that _benefits_ society next time instead of pampering my parents, both of which are right-wing cranks who are level 12 susceptible to paranoid conspiracy theories and propaganda, with a feedback bubble which makes them feel validated, or like they’re in some sort of clear majority in their political opinions, which get even more fringe by the year thanks to this gaslighting.

If my parents were a lot more astute than they actually are, they would notice that it was Jack Welch (GE/RCA merger, dad) and the Catholic Church (mom) who screwed them on their retirement and left them to rot, and Republicans that allowed it and are coming for their Social Security money while they worry about non-existent threats like “brown people from other countries”, like the Fox News telescreens order them to.

In his case, he got his from a wealthy Republican businessman, and in her case, the pension turned out to be nothing more than an unsecured promissory note from a Mafia-affiliated group of pedophiles with a city-state in the middle of Italy. Will they never learn?

(Rhetorical. People who haven’t figured it out by 71 or 65 probably won’t. Mom still swears up and down that the Archdiocese told them their pensions were guaranteed for 20 years. Just like they were previously guaranteed for “as long as you live”, and before that they were “guaranteed to grow until you’re 66”, then “63”, then “62”, then “nobody new gets a pension and yours is frozen NOW”. How much money is there really? Nobody will say. Where is it invested? “Don’t worry!”)

Even if the unemployed Facebook and Twitter workers take a job at Taco Bell, slinging cheap tacos and burritos at people who are stoned at 2 AM is neutral to the fabric of our society.

Facebook and Twitter are as corrosive as Xenomorph blood and I wish the platform a swift and total demise. But they’ve already done insurmountable harm to people like my parents.

Mom spent all of COVID bashing me for being responsible and levelheaded enough to get me and my spouse our vaccines. For wearing masks at large gatherings. For using hand hygiene. And we didn’t get COVID, and they got….COVID and the flu at her house, at the same time.

She lacks the ability to comprehend how vaccines work, or even the very basics of germ theory, which is unfortunate since she’s a nurse.

Many political confederates of mom and dad are no longer with us because listening to the Party of Trump was the last mistake they ever made.

But even as they witnessed millions of each other dying on ventilators, they still proclaim it was all a hoax.

This is what happens when you’re watching Fox News and looking at Facebook all day.

Facebook waited until this country was on the verge of being overthrown in a coup before they even thought to ban Trump. It took _days_ after for them to claim they made a very brave decision.

In the background, they didn’t want to do it. They wanted dimwits looking at Facebook, even if Trump was the reason why. It helped them sell ads.

Facebook is too dangerous to continue. Fortunately, I doubt we will need to endure it for too much longer.

Major “adtech” layoffs. Newspapers continue dying off. American economy continues to the scene of the crash.

In another sign of Dotcom Bubble 2.0, adtechs are laying off, according to layoffs.fyi and the New York Times.

We’re definitely seeing echos of the Dotcom Bubble collapse, even though most consumer-facing news is trying to spin things to suggest the lowest unemployment rates ever. A lie that Vice-President Kamala Harris repeated only the other day.

Most Americans are terribly concerned with inflation and losing their jobs, but the CNNs and CNBCs still project denial. What rags!

Burying your head in the sand hasn’t ever helped anyone solve a problem. These folks want you to subscribe to the religion that as long as “consumer confidence” remains high, it does not matter how much toxic sludge is swirling around in the system. There’s a lot of toxic sludge, that’s for sure. When is the last time anyone asked how confident YOU were as a consumer? Yeah, me neither.

In the New York Times article I just linked to, Marc Andreeson, one of the early Web pioneers (Netscape, Sun, etc.) and an active “Venture Capitalist” today, says that “good big tech companies” are overstaffed by 200% and “bad big tech companies” are overstaffed by 400%.

(By good and bad, he means as investments, of course. And, relatively speaking.)

So it falls somewhere in-between with Microsoft, Apple, Facebook, Google, and Uber where in the 200-400% range they actually are.

I posted about the internal woes at Microsoft.

It’s a bloodbath in tech right now. A complete bloodbath.

Most people who have been through layoffs (I have.) can tell you that when the CEO or their boss calls a meeting and says that the company has to “become leaner and more focused”, it’s not a good thing. Employee morale tanks immediately, people start looking for jobs, even the ones that may not have been fired.

But layoffs work like that. Microsoft is in so much trouble, and their executives have no vision, and they’re not alone. Most companies are like that. They try to sand and paint and keep it looking okay, and then the problems just bubble up and the rust explodes publicly. That’s what’s going on in Microsoft today.

I think that Marc Andreeson is correct and we’re looking at job losses that could easily enter the millions within the next 6-12 months.

“The News” quality is being chiseled away at due to the collapse in both advertising revenues, and the lack of people willing to pay for it.

Gannett, the largest newspaper company in America, posted a $54 million dollar quarterly loss recently, and risks being “acquired” by another Bezos (like The Washington Post was) or Bezos himself.

The gaslighting becomes so much easier as there’s less and less journalism to turn to.

Over the years, the US federal government has more or less defunded the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, citing budget cuts.

The government spends over $7 trillion USD a year now, and that’s just the feds. Tax revenues are maybe half that, and you hear the Democrats go on and on about “deficit reductions”.

Does it sound like they care how much they spend on anything or what the deficits are?

Neutering NPR and PBS and leaving them vulnerable to corruption by Bill Gates, Amazon, Bezos personally, Exxon, and Walmart, and countless others, ensures that they’re only slightly less bad than the “corporate media”. The only reason they’re kept alive at all is because they can claim to be “public broadcasting” and “fair” and the idea of that is laughable. Federal funding is like <1% of their budget.

They may be chartered by law to do some things, but when 99% of your money comes from the James Bond villains, you don’t piss off the James Bond villains.

To chart the decline in the American media is difficult. No matter where you think the bottom is at, you’re wrong and it gets worse. It’s such a sewer that millions of people either have been or will be newly unemployed at the end of this another year, and they’re still talking about a “tight jobs market” even though there’s “a lot of layoffs”.

It’s written in such a way that any individual person who happens to read this crap is supposed to think that it’s just a problem for them that they’re unemployed and nobody is calling them.

That’s pretty sick, honestly.

What’s even sicker are all of these businesses that got “Paycheck Protection” money.

Now the news admits 75% of it failed to reach any workers, according to a study conducted by the United States Central Bank, specifically the St. Louis branch of the Federal Reserve. $600 billion out of $800 billion went to the rich.

Specifically to people like the Indiana slumlord who drives 3 Cadillacs and cheats on her taxes, and fakes eviction letters to the Township trustee to get her tenants “poor relief” vouchers payable to her. You know, “job creators”.

I’m sure she was very happy that President Trump was there to hand her $12,000 that open records show that she didn’t have to pay back.

You put this all together and it’s obvious what’s going on. They think that with the appropriate amount of brainwashing, they can hold the riots back while they continue sucking our national treasury bare.

Pretty much all of the corruption is open, indeed some of it is even reported on, but when did you see the article about the PPP that I just mentioned. Now, right?

They say that you know a country is circling the drain when its people become decadent and start favoring “Bread and Circuses”, or as the Roman term was, “panem et circenses“.

Last year, as part of an attempted turnaround, Gannett hired a new executive with a background in “Entertainment and Gaming” to “build a customer obsessed platform”, all anyone wants to do is sit in their home staring at a 5″ phone screen watching “streaming apps”.

Hell, Chicago Mayor Lori “Beetlejuice” Lightfoot recently signed an agreement to turn Chicago over to NASCAR for TWO WEEKS, insisting that $500,000 to let them tear up our streets and make noise and a mess and draw drunken crowds to one of the most violent cities in America, was a great deal.

(For comparison, Lollapalooza pays the city $2 million to be there for 4 days, occupying part of Grant Park.)

“Beetlejuice” claims Chicago has a lot of “closeted NASCAR fans”. (I haven’t seen any.)

The ultimate costs of having the NASCAR spectacle to the taxpayers of Chicago is “unknown”, but that hardly matters.

The government can steal from you to pay for whatever it wants.

And distracting you from the lousy government (which is taking bribes among other things), is a good investment of your hard-earned money.

The incestuous relationship of the mainstream news, entertainment, and politics is where one hand washes the other.

The wealthy do not want to pay for programs to compensate the unemployed.

The dying news media makes for easy takeovers, which become a psyop splog for Bill Gates, Bezos, Musk, Cook, and the rest, and the politicians get their “numbers”.

Like, “2% unemployment. There must be something wrong with you, bro.”

The best advice I’ve seen, from someone on one of my chats, was “Don’t trust your employer and keep your fixed expenses down as much as you can.”.

I’m sure NASCAR in Chicago will fix everything. That government could be given all of the gold bars in Fort Knox and they’d be broke again next month.

Walmart fires 200 corporate employees in the “Don’t Call it a Recession” Recession. Bonus: Celsius “crypto” investors beg bankruptcy judge for help.

Walmart fires 200 corporate employees in the “Don’t Call it a Recession” Recession.

CNBC: Walmart lays off corporate employees after slashing forecast

Web / Gemini (NewsWaffle) / “WebWaffle”

Walmart has had a problem with too many managers since at least when I worked there in the mid-2000s.

Now Biden’s “Democrats have an election. Don’t say recession.” has claimed more victims, and I doubt they’ll be the last.

The corporate layoffs are a complete blood bath all over America as companies tighten their wallets and try to get spending under control so that they’ll survive and can appease Wall Street with layoffs during falling revenue.

It’s an old, old, trick.

I certainly have no love for Donald Trump. I didn’t vote for him. But if Trump was in office, the media would be wall-to-wall “recession” right now. You’d be hearing it 24 hours a day. They’re holding off because of Biden.

They want Biden. They want Democrats. That’s why they’re not going to throw them any hard balls about the economy, Monkeypox, mass layoffs, hyperinflation, or any of the other messes we’re in.

I can’t bring myself to vote for either party in Illinois this year.

Pritzker is just Biden in miniature. He’s trying to contain public anger until after the election. Trying to buy my vote with $50 of the taxes the state stole from me to begin with leading up to a major gas tax hike that drains it all back out of my wallet and then some. It’s an insult.

The other guy, the Republican, Darren Bailey, is a straight up Nazi, and a dumbass.

It’s beneath me to get into the middle of this.

The Democrats have been throwing tons and tons of bailout money into the economy, except none of it is helping average people. It’s all TARPS and CARES Acts and it’s getting worse. The American Rescue Plan worked, obviously. 😛

Now there’s a law regarding inflation. Diocletian was famous for commanding inflation to go away.

True to form, even people like Richard Stallman have been duped into repeating Democrat propaganda. The United States debt has almost doubled in about three years and we haven’t even began to see the worst of things yet, but just as Diocletian, they were blaming “profiteering” when there are other, primary causes.

(In our case, reckless public spending and a tanking domestic economy that is the only real source of value for our money.)

Living in America under these morons reminds me of the Community episode where they find an aging hippie living under the school, hasn’t been above ground since the 70s, and he says he doesn’t know if millions of dollars are worth anything anymore because they were “Nixon Dollars”.

I read an article a while back comparing the times we’re living in to the Nixon years, but it was about the conservatives on the Supreme Court at the time, not about the man himself. It accidentally made a good point.

Biden is a lot like Tricky Dicky. He wants cheap money and he wants a lot of it now, and this is what happens.

I was also reading Don Melton’s blog for some reason. Wikipedia led me to it I think. He was the lead developer of “Safari” at Apple. He posted that Biden and Harris were good people and our national nightmare was over. That certainly aged well, didn’t it?

Bonus: Celsius “crypto” investors beg bankruptcy judge for help.

CNBC: Homeless, suicidal, down to last $1,000: Celsius investors beg bankruptcy judge for help

Web / Gemini (NewsWaffle) / “WebWaffle”

As bad as fiat currency is, the government can at least make it legal tender and threaten people who don’t use it for things, including taxes, but some people have invested their life savings into magic beans like Bitcoins, and now plead with the United States Bankruptcy Court to stop outfits like Celsius from squandering assets, such as the $4.5+ million dollars per week on executive pay while freezing “investors” out of their accounts.

The whole thing was a Ponzi Scheme to begin with and the only reason they “had money” was rounds of “investor funding”. Now that the Fed has raised rates and destroyed Bitcoin and people aren’t borrowing cheap monkey to recklessly gamble with, the scam is exposed.

Well it’s exposed to everyone who has a brain and two eyes, but CNBC and other outfits are still not going for the throat and calling it what it is.

They act as if there’s still actually something to “crypto” other than a highly volatile imaginary token that draws worth from finding an even bigger idiot to take it. I assume that’s because there’s some wealthy people out there who got roped into it and want the court to prioritize them over the plebs.

The problem for the “investors”, both “Venture Capitalists” and people stuffing their mortgage money into “crypto” coins is that even if they somehow convince the judge to pay out the little guys first (and when has that ever happened?) or to declare bankruptcy fraud and sic the FBI on Celsius, it doesn’t change the fact that they’re not going to get very much back.

One man wrote to the Southern District of New York Bankruptcy Judge pleading with him to take some of his money and give it back to him “so I can make my mortgage payment next month”.

The man took screenshots of his Celsius account, which says there’s nearly $50,000 in it.

They can put whatever they want on a Web page, that you’re locked out of, but there’s hardly any money according to Celsius’s own filing.

Not even 10% of what they need to pay out their liabilities, and that’s if they’re even being honest on their Bankruptcy Schedule and not just buying executives time to finish draining what’s left and flee the country.

I hate to be callous considering that the guy’s family shouldn’t have to suffer because of Dad, but I wasn’t really surprised to find “Mr. Sophisticated Investor” left $1,000 of real money in his checking account while handing Celsius $50,000 and it turned out he was using Chrome on a Mac.

Ooops.

This particular guy will be lucky if he gets $500-1000 when the dust settles. He may yet get nothing at all.

When I was a kid, my grandparents (mom’s side) fell for every scam that made its way through the church.

Most of it was Multi-Level Marketing bullshit like King’s Vitamins or Destiny Telecommunications, but the concept is always the same. You find rubes, marks, who have absolutely no idea what they’re doing or where their money will really be, and don’t know to be skeptical of something that isn’t regulated, bonded, and insured, and you go for them.

That’s exactly the sort of thing these “crypto” companies have done.

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.

Facebook had to pay us about $800 because they violated the Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act.

Facebook had to pay us about $800 because they violated the Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act.

I got a $397 check for my spouse last week and a $397 check for myself this week.

Facebook had been tagging us in our pictures and storing our facial patterns in their facial recognition programs. That turned out to be a big problem for them that cost them nearly $700 million in the resulting class action settlement.

Scumbag corporations have been losing big time due to the BIPA, and they want it repealed. There’s pending lawsuits against at least a dozen major companies, and lots of settlements too.

The only thing corporations understand is losing money. Facebook has already had a lot of fake stock value erased this year.

Facebook blamed the loss mostly on Apple’s alleged new “privacy” functions on the iPhone, even though Facebook already has patents pending on how to avoid those features and track people with iPhones anyway. As long as their apps are even on your phone, you’ve lost already whether you use an Android or an iPhone.

I use a Free and Open Source app called Frost from F-Droid that gives Facebook no significant access to my phone. It’s basically a blinged out webview that tricks Messenger into working. So it’s very likely that Facebook has less access to my Pixel 6 than anything Apple has done to box them in on an iPhone, where all you can use is Facebook’s apps.

Facebook’s financial problems have more to do with laws like the California and Illinois privacy statutes.

The only safe way to operate is to assume that anyone you track could be in Illinois or California, which is why although BIPA is an Illinois law, and Illinois is a state of 12.8 million people, Facebook disabled their tagging and facial recognition everywhere in the world after losing $700 million dollars.

Another source of Zuckerberg’s heartburn is the state of the economy in general. Major stocks of companies with real products are down 30 even 40%, and not even Walmart was spared.

Most of the ads I’ve seen go by on Facebook are from lawyers suing app companies.

Since the economy is so bad right now (Maybe call it the “Don’t Say Recession Recession”?), consumers have to tighten their wallets, and while that may or may not eventually break the hyperinflation (since most of this is due to Biden and Congress throwing around trillions of dollars we don’t have, that came at the expense of your bank account), it means the value of advertising is collapsing.

This is what set off the DotCom Bubble Collapse in the early 2000s.

Eventually, investors get sick of losing money, the hysteria wears off, and reality sets in.

Usually in an environment where the Fed loses its appetite for entertaining that round of mania.

Like what’s starting to unfold now.

The reason why Elon Musk wants Twitter isn’t because he has a plan to turn a profit. His Tesla company is down 41% YTD, you know.

It’s because he wants to be able to say whatever he wants without any censorship, and invite Trump back to scream and yell, but there will still be “content moderation” and spyware tracking the people foolish enough to have accounts there.

I’ve never really understood how a company that lets you post 140 characters from the toilet that disappear into the void quickly has managed to stay in business. Pretty much the only thing on Twitter are influencers, “brands”, and politicians. The 1% can say whatever they want unfiltered.

Do you even want to be on this thing?

I barely even have a presence on Facebook anymore. It’s not generally worth using. You hope other people will hate like your vacation or something and there’s a lot of stress to be fake popular on it.

I tried to tell Roy Schestowitz that he’d be a lot happier and lose nothing if he got off Twitter years ago, but the only reason he left was because they shoved him out the door for criticizing Bill Gates.

Merely criticizing the rich and powerful is enough to get you thrown out.

It is dangerous to have “social media” replace the Web, because then they can throw you out when they don’t like what you say, even if it’s not illegal to say that. And that’s why corporations and the governments want the Web to die. They can spy and censor better that way. It was much harder to do this in bulk when everyone who wanted a blog just got their own Web site.

Google even crawls my blog and I get readers. When you post to Facebook and Twitter, your thoughts just die immediately. It gives the illusion of having spoken, even though nobody is really listening.

I wonder if Elon Musk will let him back in. He is a “free speech absolutist”, or so he says. 😉

Banking is a competitive, but they try to stay out of each other’s way. Why I like credit cards and hate annual fees.

Banking is a competitive, but they try to stay out of each other’s way. Why I like credit cards and hate annual fees. What is FICO and VantageScore?

I’ve been talking recently about Capital One’s nightmarish dispute process that is stacked against their customers, their higher-than-average interest rates if you carry a balance, and the fact that they’re a “subprime” bank that typically goes trawling to sign up the working class for their cards, even if they have a bankruptcy.

The first question I hear from some people is “Why do I need a credit score if I don’t intend to take on a big loan?”.

Dave Ramsey says you don’t need a credit score. He calls FICO and VantageScore, the two main credit scoring systems in the United States, the “I love debt.” score. But it’s possible to have a high credit score, no debt, and to make money using the cards, and actually save thousands of dollars someplace else because you have an okay or fantastic score instead of no score or a bad one.

The first place that not having a credit score is going to hurt you badly is that it will usually limit the type of apartments you can rent.

While it is true that management companies and landlords can make whatever decisions they want, they almost always pull a credit score.

The most common model they tend to use is called TransUnion SmartMove.

In fact, they’ll probably even make you pay for it so that you’re wasting your own money if they decide to turn you down for a place to live.

So it’s important to know what’s on your credit score, and to keep the score as high as possible. This is why renters really need to bring the hammer down and find reasons to dispute any and all negative information on their TransUnion credit score.

You’d be amazed the number of times that it turns out that the collection agency or other entity that put the debt there actually doesn’t respond in time, doesn’t follow “the process”, or just doesn’t bother to reply at all, or doesn’t actually have everything in order to substantiate that you owe them the debt.

It’s a crapshoot, but I’d say between 40-60% of the time, when you dispute a delinquent bill, it just falls off, sometimes the same day!

Obviously, your strategy should be to make sure you don’t overlook bills long enough to have them go to collections, and a barrage of disputes should be your last resort, when the damage has been done and you need to undo as much of it as you can.

I have no idea what exactly goes on “in the kitchen”, to make this happen, but my guess is that most collection agencies are only going to sue you if it’s going to be over a certain amount.

If it’s been a while, they figure the debt is uncollectable, and if they pay someone to sit there and gather up a response, they just spend money to no avail, and so they let things go sometimes. It’s certainly no guarantee, but a law of averages seems to be that 40-60% of the time, the item in dispute disappears.

Obviously, the more negative information you can remove, the less harm there will be to your credit scores, and the more likely you’ll be able to get it to a level where you can start applying for some apartments or credit cards, or car loan terms, that wouldn’t have been accessible to you before.

Obviously, you shouldn’t go into debt if there is any other choice, but I know people with car loans that they signed to get to work, and then the interest rates were so high that they spent most of their money from work on the stupid car loan. So there’s a big difference between getting a car loan at 15% and getting one at 6-8%. 6-8% is subprime and 15% is predatory.

So, if it has to be a shit sandwich, at least make it a smaller shit sandwich I suppose, and paying interest is always a shit sandwich because it just bleeds you and disappears into the bank’s pockets.

People also don’t seem to be aware that they might be able to get a personal loan from the bank at 5.5% and that a car loan may cost them 9%, and in addition to saving a couple thousand on bank interest, if disaster strikes later, a personal loan is not directly attached to their car, so nobody is coming to haul the car off and leave them stranded.

And finally, insurance companies in all but 4 American states where the practice is illegal, use credit scores to justify giving you much higher car insurance premiums.

There are actually no good studies that show that people with lower credit scores are more likely to file a big claim with an insurance company, but people who have bad credit scores tend to work lower income jobs, have medical bills they can’t pay, and so on. Many of these people are also minorities.

While civil rights laws say that insurance companies would be in hot water for openly charging people more for their skin color, they can jack up insurance rates on black people and “make it legal” by saying anyone with a credit rating under 700 starts paying a lot more for car insurance.

If I file bankruptcy, won’t that hurt my credit score?

Well, the answer is technically yes, but factually, almost always no.

Of course, THEY don’t want you to know that the reality is almost always “no”. Once a person files bankruptcy, it’s because their fiscal outlook is totally hopeless and their credit score is already ruined by having so much debt which is probably also all delinquent.

The longer you go without filing for bankruptcy, the worse it gets when you do file for bankruptcy.

About the only three things you will accomplish once you’re pretty sure the debt is as bad as it will get are (1) you give your creditors more months to post on your credit reports that you’ve been delinquent for another month, which they have to stop doing the moment you file and the automatic stay is granted by the courts, and this may even mean your car gets repossessed and the repossession outside of bankruptcy stays on your credit and causes great harm after you’ve filed and lose the car anyway, and (2) by putting it off, you’re delaying by an equal amount of time into the future until you can file again, and (3) you successfully delay the amount of time before the debt is forgiven by the court and your credit rating starts to mend and you can start over and build your credit up again.

How do I get a credit card if I’m young and have no credit history or have had some credit problems or a bankruptcy?

This can make things considerably difficult, but by no means impossible.

For example, there are some things to just flat out avoid.

There are “bottom feeder banks” that make Capital One look respectable. One example is the similarly named “Credit One” bank, which has nothing to do with Capital One.

While you could start out with “subprime” banks like Capital One that aren’t complete bottom feeders, you could also go to a more mainstream bank like Chase, Citi, or Discover, and apply for a Secured Credit Card.

Essentially, when you get a Secured Credit Card, you can file a deposit, which becomes your credit limit.

The danger with a Secured Card is that if you default, the bank can take your deposit, report the entire balance to the credit bureaus anyway, and then sue you for the entire amount on top of keeping your deposit, so the risk is yours, and it’s guaranteed money for the bank. This is why most Secured Cards approve everyone except those with a filed but not discharged (“active”) bankruptcy.

But it still looks like a tradeline, just as any other credit card would.

For example, I put down a $200 deposit on a Secured Discover Card and $200 became my spending limit.

For 8 months I made small purchases and paid them back, then after 8 months, the bank does an account review each month by computer and decides when to return your $200 deposit and convert you to a non-secured card. In my case, they raised my limit to $3,000 to start off with. And it’s very unusual for a Secured Credit Card to have a rewards program, but Discover’s does, and it survives into the Unsecured card.

Then you can change your rewards program to the Discover It card and activate rotating bonus categories. For example, in this quarter I even get 5% back on gas.

Another trick is if you have a trusted spouse, you can each get credit cards and make the other one an Authorized User, and then it shows up that you each have more revolving accounts than you really do, and it helps both of you (as long as you manage your credit lines responsibly).

Should I pay annual fees for a credit card?

As a rule of thumb? 95% or more of people out there shouldn’t.

Unless you can get some INSANE rewards on a category you will use ALL THE TIME, it’s not worth it. Like, if you can get an American Express Blue that has 6% back at grocery stores permanently and a $95 annual fee, and you have four people in the house eating groceries, obviously this card will benefit you more than the small nuisance of paying the annual fee.

And when you throw multiple cards with annual fees together, eventually you won’t even have a good idea how much you really net in rewards points.

But if you have two people in the house eating groceries, and you shop at Walmart, and you do it online, you could use the Capital One Walmart Rewards card and get 5% back on your groceries (and anything else from Walmart’s website) and no annual fee.

Since Walmart doesn’t ever code as a grocery store, that would also make the AmEx essentially useless there as far as a decent rewards rate on your grocery shopping.

You can also find credit cards that have 3-4% back at coded Grocery stores with no annual fee, so in many cases it’s just not worth getting the AmEx card with the 6% on groceries.

There’s also cards with annual fees that have eyepopping rates on gasoline, but once you subtract the annual fee, you might as well have gotten a PNC Cash Rewards that is 4% on gas all the time (and 3% on restaurants).

Once you have a substantial number of cards, you’ll probably figure out which is the best to use for a given category of merchant. I always like to have a card with 2% for non-category spending as a fallback because there’s guaranteed to be hundreds of dollars in non-bonus spending that would otherwise have a wimpy rewards rate of like 1% on other cards, as well as the occasional BOAT (Bust Out Another Thousand) payment to a mechanic to keep your car running, so the Citi Double Cash or the Wells Fargo Active Cash cards can both fill in when you can’t earn bonus points paying your cell phone or electric bill.

And then Discover’s 5% category for rotating quarters (which you can activate ahead of time on their site) kicks in, and you switch to that for a while (5% beats 4% on gasoline but then 4% on gasoline the other 9 months beats 2%).

As long as credit card points are there and you are spending responsibly, on bills that you absolutely must pay, which would earn no rewards otherwise, then credit cards can be an asset.

The average family in America could be leaving as much as $1,000 or more on the table each year by using cash or debit cards. There’s just not much incentive to use these forms of payment because nobody is paying you for gas and groceries, and if you’ve looked around lately during Bidenflation, they’re not exactly giving those away!

What’s more, the IRS considers credit card rewards to be tax-free income, because it treats them as rebates on money you’ve already spent, so odds are you probably don’t have to declare them on your state returns either.

Credit card companies aren’t a charity, however. They offer the rewards to loosen you up to spend more, and hoping that you’ll misuse the card and end up badly in debt.

There is some debate about credit card points and whether they actually benefit consumers or not. It benefits the ones that are using them.

The Federal Reserve studies the effects of rewards credit cards and found that the average person who pays cash loses out.

As of 2010, which granted was 12 years ago, “After accounting for rewards paid by banks, households who earn more than $150,000 annually receive a subsidy of $756 on average every year, while the households earning $20,000 or less pay $23.”.

I figure when you adjust for inflation it’s more, because we tend to make nearly $800 on credit card points every year and our household income is not $150,000.

Even if you consider that retailers may charge you a little less than half of your own rewards to make up for the expected amount of interchange, we’d still easily clear over $400, but as a counter-point, sometimes the retailers help fund the schemes with the big bonus points.

I doubt Capital One is paying the entire 5% you get back on the Walmart card for buying your groceries and stuff online.

Regardless, the fact that the wealthy tend to make off with the money could be why the IRS is loathe to charge income tax on the rewards points. Every time rich people scream about something, like paying taxes, it tends to disappear, doesn’t it?

There’s a bill in Congress to cap credit card fees, but they always lose because the Card Industry is a more powerful lobby than Retail in the end.

Besides, there’s a distinct possibility that retailers could promise to lower prices, and then keep the money after the credit card rewards are gone, just as banks played down the magnitude of repealing Glass-Steagall as “wanting to provide complimentary magazines to credit card holders”, and then used the repeal to cause the housing crisis of 2008.

So in the end, there’s reasons to have credit cards in your wallet, and reasons not to.

If you are responsible, you will:

Earn rewards points worth a lot of money.

Have a better credit rating.

Get access to more favorable loan terms, if you have to take on a loan for something. (But you should avoid this if you can.)

Save money on insurance premiums.

Show landlords that you are managing credit responsibly. If you pay them, you’ll probably pay the landlord.

On the other hand, if you have no credit rating at all or, worse, the only thing on your report is some drive by shootings from collection agency scum, the landlord could determine you’re too much of a risk and that other people are more likely to pay him, statistically, so you’ll end up renting from a bottom feeder and paying him too much money because he knows you have nowhere else to go, and then your neighbors will most likely be criminals who are making loud noises, dealing drugs, and spilling bedbugs over into your unit.

If you are irresponsible:

Well, eventually the banks will sue and you’ll be a serf with oppressive garnishments.

When my Aunt was alive, she was a very nice person. I loved my Aunt and I miss her terribly. She was a fantastic person, and they even named an entire hospital after her because she always fought for her patients there and saved many people’s lives.

But she simply couldn’t handle money. She had overwhelming depression, and as I do as well many times, I understand how painful it can be. To struggle and hurt and feel hopeless every day but to fight through the pain and to take on other people’s burdens anyway.

To escape from the depression, (she made good money but could never afford to pay cash for everything she WANTED to do, so took on loans), they retreated into fantasy vacations at Disney World. Sometimes twice a year.

She never drove there either, they always bought expensive plane tickets. Then when they were there, they spent yet more eating at places like “Cinderella’s Castle”, which is terrific if you’re made out of money and can just pay it and not worry about it, but she wasn’t.

One year, she sold the family car to finance a vacation to Disney, then came back and had no car, nobody would loan her money for a car, and she ended up having to keep an Enterprise van for a while to get back and forth to work, which she rented for the vacation.

(Don’t ask me why, but she drove that year, and instead of taking the Lumina that was only a few years old, she sold it and rented a van for hundreds of dollars a week.)

One way some people deal with depression is to finance and escape, which causes a rebound effect and a feedback loop which makes the depression worse.

For some people, they understand this concept when it comes to why people abuse drugs or alcohol, but not when it’s the root of money problems. And I’m not saying I’m perfect and that my methods of coping have always been healthy, but I’ve at least steered clear of substance abuse and reckless financial decisions.

Banks can absolutely be your worst enemy. They often are.

In the end they create nothing, they assist in ruining lives. The credit scoring system that we have shouldn’t even be legal. The “rewards” points literally rob Peter to pay Paul.

But Dave Ramsey is a millionaire and probably truly doesn’t need a credit score. Many of us are not as lucky.

Some of his advice is right, like not buying extended warranties because over time they’ll cost you more money than just replacing things sometimes, and they may not even honor the warranty when something does happen.

An extended warranty is nice in theory. You buy one, you don’t have to worry about a thing, because if it breaks, you go to the warranty people and tell them all about how the stupid thing broke and you want a replacement or repair.

That’s how it works in theory, but in fact, they find ways to screw you.

In theory, federal law requires Capital One to take my side in my dispute against Batteries Plus Bulbs in Gurnee, Illinois, which is in the business of selling fake aftermarket car keys that don’t work. I even got a letter from a dealership saying there’s nothing wrong with my car and the person who sold me the keys ripped me off because it wouldn’t program.

Capital One still ruled against me and I’m still yelling at them over something that happened like 6 weeks ago.

Extended warranties are worse. Dave Ramsey says to avoid paying for an extended warranty or “service plan” at all costs.

Often, you pay for the plan, and then 90% of the time, you find out it wasn’t what you thought it was and they won’t give you the money for the warranty back, so now you have broken shit and a warranty that cost you 100% more than it was worth.

Walmart is pushing these things HARD, and it’s often for some crazy amount of money too, like I bought a microwave for $67, and it’s been a good microwave, and that was two years ago. They wanted to sell me a 2 year service plan that would have expired already for an additional $17.

When I bought this laptop, Lenovo wanted me to pay them $150 for an additional year of warranty. The additional year is almost up. I had one repair (a malfunctioning USB-C port) in the original warranty, and they had to replace the whole motherboard to fix it. And their service plans go out to five years. But I didn’t buy the “service plan”, so I have some money to buy a new laptop if mine craps out and isn’t worth fixing.

Who pays hundreds of a 5 year plan on a laptop that probably won’t break in the 5 years, and even if it does, it would cost less to go down to uBreakiFix and tell them to tear it down and put a new battery or something in it?

Most consumer products either outlive any kind of warranty you can buy or wouldn’t be worth the money you spend even if you bought one and they honored it for whatever reason.

Sometimes you get an extended warranty for free, from your credit card!

Obviously, if it doesn’t cost extra, you may want to put a big ticket purchase on a credit card with such a benefit. If they don’t honor it, at least you didn’t pay anything for it, so it’s worth filing a claim.

When I lived in Chicago, my ex and I went to The Roomplace for furniture. It looked like good furniture, then they delivered it and it started falling apart immediately.

Since I paid with my Chase card, which had Purchase Protection and Extended Warranty for free, I not only submitted a price adjustment and got over $100 back when the same set went on sale two months later, but after the first year was up and the furniture still kept breaking, I just called a furniture repair company and paid them with my Chase card, and then submitted a repair bill invoice and a statement about what the guy was fixing on his company letterhead, and Chase gave me a matching credit for the next 5 times I had to have them out repairing the furniture. Eventually, the guy had to fix it so much with improved parts, that the furniture stopped breaking every time someone sat down.

So there’s companies that honor what they say they’ll do in the Cardholder Agreement, like Chase, and there’s ones that obviously only pretend to follow Federal Law, like Capital One.

And thanks to Capital One screwing me, the only way to win now would be to make some day the “take this asshole to court over $70 day” and he’d probably just stiff me even if I got the ruling.

So there’s a list of how credit cards work, what you shouldn’t do, a run down on why credit ratings matter, and a little more free financial advice.

You know, it’s funny that Dave Ramsey has people paying him millions to get worse advice than what I can give you here on my blog, isn’t it?

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.