Economic Cycles Are Far Bigger than Presidents

I’ve never had a good word to say about Barack Obama, and I’m not going to start now. But it would be disingenuous to blame him for the Great Recession that has persisted for most Americans since the downturn ended officially in 2009. Politically speaking, there is nothing Obama or any other president could have done to alter the course of economic events after real estate prices collapsed in 2007-08. This happened on George W. Bush’s watch, but he can’t be blamed either, since the factors leading up to the crash had been gathering strength for more than a generation. Economic cycles are far bigger than the presidency, and anyone in the White House when times are good is simply lucky to be in the right place at the right time. Luckiest of all was Bill Clinton, who, for all his personal failings, is recalled almost nostalgically because of the relatively prosperous economic times America enjoyed during his tenure as president.

Obama, on the other hand, inherited a mess that no president, Democrat or Republican, could have cleaned up. There was but one solution that would have worked: Let the system fail, and then regenerate itself. Of course, that could never have happened in the real world — even with Ron Paul in the White House and a veto-proof Libertarian majority in both houses of Congress. Yes, they initially would have stood on principle. But not for long, and certainly not for the full length of an election cycle. If laissez-faire economics had obtained during the Great Financial Crash, it seems likely the entire banking system would have collapsed rather than just a few big players such as Lehman and Bear Stearns that were sacrificed to make it appear the government had control of the situation.

Why Risk Collapse?

The outcome we’ve experienced may have permanently conditioned politicians and the banking interests they serve to do the wrong thing no matter what. Why risk a total collapse of the financial system when you can create a false prosperity that lasts indefinitely? Of course, we know that these so-so economic times will eventually end. But who’s to say we can’t muddle along for another ten years?  Under the circumstances, only an exceedingly bold and principled politician could declare for taking our lumps now and getting it over with. No such politician would be even remotely electable, as we know, although his ideas might be taken seriously after-the-fact in the throes of an economic depression.

Jim Grant argues in his latest book that the boom times that followed the severe downturn of 1920-21 are proof enough that non-intervention can work. He refers to the economic crisis of this period as “the last unmedicated depression,” noting that President Harding elected to do nothing as prices and wages fell. Grant implicitly believes this could work again. While undoubtedly true in a literal sense,  it’s arguable that the cure, with global credit inflated to its present extreme, would require a catastrophic shakeout rather than a mere reset of cyclical economic trends.  Instead, we face the more or less predictable course of continuing to muddle along – until we don’t.

  • Andy Gutterman December 5, 2014, 6:28 am

    I’m watching this company like a hawk:

    http://lawrencevilleplasmaphysics.com/about/

    If they can pull it off then all bets are off on a depression. Unlimited cheap energy can start the next boom. The only problem is getting there when trillions are invested in the old system.

    Andy

    &&&&&&

    Interesting link, thanks. No question, a fusion-based energy solution would revive the global economy. Although it would precipitate the most spectacular “creative destruction” ever seen, the “replacement rate” would be even faster than the automobile replaced the horse and buggy.
    RA

  • Other Paul December 5, 2014, 2:17 am

    If oil companies run into trouble they can be bailed out by the federal goverment, just like the banks were bailed out in 2008-09. How about symbol USXOM for the New Exxon?
    If dollars are going to be in great demand, I am sure that supply can be created with a few keystokes at the Fed or US Treasury.
    My wonder is why hackers bother to steal other people ‘s money. Why don’t they create their own digital dollars? They don’t have to split atoms or buy any graphene.

    &&&&&

    Hackers don’t need to create their own digital dollars, Paul. There are Hole-in-the-Wall gangs operating out of mudholes in Krasnoyarsk where $250K sports cars congest the streets. RA

  • Rick Ackerman December 4, 2014, 2:46 am

    I am reposting the following on behalf of B. Culkin:

    Long have I pondered what the first domino would be. Japan currency crisis? Euro meltdown? US equities collapse. No. All these are under control of the central banks. The answer is oil. The one important commodity price not easily controlled/manipulated by the central banks. Charles Hugh Smith is all over this and I think he’s right. Oil in the ground will prove to be the next flimsy collateral underpinning vast amounts of debt.

    &&&&&&

    I’ve been doing some pondering myself, BC, and my favorite black swan is the dollar, since there are far, far too many of them in play to control. In my scenario, there’s a run INTO dollars when some ostensibly minor crisis disrupts very short-term rollovers.

    Thanks for the Charles Hugh Smith citation. Everything he writes is worth reading. Click here to be taken to his blog. RA

    • Jason S December 5, 2014, 9:20 pm

      I don’t subscribe to Charles’ theory that oil’s price decline is a black swan event. I cannot find data to support that oil has been substantially securitized and without that the 35% drop in prices would not usher in a systemic problem of counter-party risk.

      In reality, during the financial crisis, it was the FASB 157 ruling that companies would have to mark-to-market their securities that was the black swan event. That threat exposed the counter-party risk and it was huge because of the ubiquity of CDOs, CMOs, etc. Even with their tabling of rule 157 it was too late, the genie was out of the bottle.

      I just don’t see where securitization of oil underpins enough to shake the “house of cards”.

      &&&&&&

      Supportive data? Try the collapse of the ruble and the Nigerian naira, for starters. RA

  • REVILED VLAD December 4, 2014, 2:32 am

    http://www.elliottwave.com/freeupdates/archives/2014/11/26/Colossal-Debt-Levels-Scream-Deflationary-Depression.aspx#axzz3Kqyj8QHz

    explains the soon-to-be DEVASTATING DEFLATIONARY future
    in just one 100-year chart and 1 page commentary, or 4 minute video–

    1. current credit market debt as % of ussa gdp, is 176% HIGHER, than 1929 credit debt.

    2. current stockmarket bullish sentiment, at 4 to 1, bulls over bears, is highest since 1987.

    3. meticulous accounting of current world debt, is now running at usd quadrillion PLUS;
    and most of it, are again in, unknowable-how-they’ll-repercussionedly-manifest: derivatives.

    &&&&&&&

    The first comment by you in months that I’ve published. You’re welcome to continue posting here as long as you follow the rules, Vlad.
    RA

  • tommyd December 2, 2014, 11:17 pm

    Rick – thanx for the link above to the graphene technology. I can buy on the fuel cell technology and even pursued the possibility of using it myself about 15 years ago. Then all public interest seemed to vaporized and could not find much of anything on it. Fuel cell tech may be a possible alternative for a reasonable amount of our energy needs. Other than a possibility for a small niche segment of people living in the hinterlands, I cannot conceive of wind/solar as a viable alternative source of energy to keep the industrialized world going, if that is what is intended. Solar/wind is enormously expensive to install, a person must be educated in its use to maintain(will not happen) or afford to pay for upkeep, and cumbersome on an individual use basis. Just not possible for wide spread use IMHO, for whatever that is worth. Besides, how many Solyndras (a dozen or so I believe) have sucked/been given $$billions in taxpayer subsidies, paid themselves $millions in salaries then filed bankruptcy, not able to ‘make it work’…..

    That old adage, ‘when gov’t comes up with a solution, beware!’ I always keep in mind….So in that sense economic cycles can be larger than presidents and sometimes thrive in spite of them! As much as solar/wind has been pushed on us and the questionable gov’t $$ spent on it, it simply does not match what the existing ‘evil’ oil industry provides….

    &&&&&&

    Germany — not exactly a niche segment of the hinterlands — has gone ‘all-in’ on the renewable energy bet, even phasing out nuclear power within the next 10 years. This may prove to be the most costly investment error in history, especially since German output is all that stands between Europe’s welfare-state economy (‘led’ by France) and a bankrupt Europe.
    RA

    • tommyd December 3, 2014, 8:21 am

      Rick – If that plays out good luck to the west, sheesh! anyhow, that’s MO…..

  • tommyd December 2, 2014, 7:02 am

    Mava – I did read once upon a time that muslims were not in favor of the poppy fields in Afghanistan. Your reason could make sense. Never could figure out how the most powerful military the world has ever seen needed 2+ decades groveling about over there stirring up local resentment while essentially getting no where, with none to minimal anti-war press sentiment even. Is it even in the news anymore? Perhaps they are getting somewhere. Recent opium production up 50%, damn good economy for somebody at the retail level, and 2 presidents so far and a do nothing congress that tops it all off. LOL-I thought there was a war ON drugs, not FOR drugs!….Just raises more ?’s….

    • mava December 2, 2014, 5:56 pm

      You’re right. It’s ON drugs. At home. Because, without the war ON drugs, the retail prices would not support anywhere near current levels. Drugs are magical, in a way that anyone can easily grow them, so without the government, the drug prices can never go up.

      It’s been the governments hidden business since 50-ies worldwide, all governments partake it in and fight for the retail markets among themselves. The funds are used to support their private incomes and to further the business.

      It’s what some movies are about when they explore the theme of “selling the air” to the people. Except, they never dare calling that air what it is, drugs. It’s a nifty business, as it requires no effort (compared to other activities) and with prohibition is capable of sustaining astronomical (as compared to same without prohibition) price levels.

      • tommyd December 2, 2014, 11:39 pm

        Mava – Sadly, you may be right…..decades ago I watched all the drugs suddenly appear on the street, and gosh golly darn with all the federal/local law enforcement battles against them, drugs flourished. Their potency today even has so much more ‘zonking power’ than yesterday, after decades of govt’s ‘war on drugs.’ LOL Sheesh! Maybe without gov’t interference with their ‘war on drugs,’ availability may have just collapsed anyway, who knows? On a relative basis, the enormous availability of street drugs are a recent phenomon….

  • John Jay December 2, 2014, 5:20 am

    Mava,

    “So, it is exactly the same as what you have already, wind and solar – is where your actual energy originally has to come from. The limitation is therefore exactly as that with wind and solar, the original sources.”

    Well in that case, Iceland can become the new energy powerhouse of the planet!
    Volcanoes creating free, abundant heat and CO2!
    Surrounded by the ocean, and covered in ice and snow!
    All they need is a deep water port for the super tankers!
    Go long and strong Iceland real estate!

    • mava December 2, 2014, 5:42 pm

      May-be. For as far as we are limited to using up the energy already stored in some medium, such as atom or hydrocarbons, or using the energy we take away from the balance of our ecosystem such as solar and wind, hydroelectric or thermal, then such projects are our best hope.

      There is a lot of energy that could be taken from a volcano, or an ocean tide, or even continental drift. The problem is in figuring out how to do it, and of course that it will alter our world in the ways unknowable to us.

      Viewed this way, hydrocarbons are by far the most harmless option we might ever have. People are just too stupid and believe the left green state-bakers to realize that the hydrocarbons are stored, not participating in everyday energy exchange like solar and wind for instance. So, this means that as long as we keep rising the combustion efficiency (not possible to do by a government edict but only by allowing true market unsubsidized pricing), and convert that stored energy into mechanical movement, the system will be the least affected.

      As is always is with the idiots on the left, they will probably succeed into pushing the world into doing something really horrible, like consuming all of the sunlight energy, and ruining this planet forever.

  • tommyd December 1, 2014, 10:25 pm

    I have to agree with wayne’s post. unfortunately so often when the rubber meets the road reality takes control of the wheel and idealism gets run over. For decades now the debate has been about what should be done and how it could be done to make life so much better. In the mean time for decades now we often watch politics play out 180 in the real world and life does not seem better today inspite of all the techno advances. Life somehow seemed much safer and better yesterday when I grew up 40/50 years ago with all the radio and television static. ‘Techno world advances in spite of political and social world interference!’ perhaps could be the title of this piece today. The mess in most real world issues is mostly the results of political intrusion by ponderous bureaucrats of dubious intent. Ricks recent article about Health Care is spot on, it rages out of control in spite of who is president. Bureaucratic regs forcing financial upheaval are the 800lb gorilla sitting atop 85lb doctors trying to practice health care and can’t. And it gets worse. The Health Care industry is no longer run by health care professionals! And speaking of the real world, there is a rising new class of ‘evil desert shieks’ in the making. What have we created here? Yes we, though one doesn’t see much of this in MSM broadcasts. Another trend of, ‘In spite who is president.’ Is this a new cpi indicator in the making to incite ‘feel good’ euphoria in tv landers and at the same time lower SS increases to 1.7%? Afghanistan is now the leading narco-state on planet Earth…..In 2013, it upped its opium poppy cultivation by 36%, its opium production by an almost whopping 50%, and drug profits soared. All under the very eyes of our own military! Wow nifty! How many $trillions and lives lost did that cost US in the real world not broadcast to us? I know it makes for a better day personally to ignore reality and focus on the ‘what should be done part,’ but reality, in all it’s depressing acts of playing out sometimes does ‘interfears’ with my day, though I try not to let it. And what does this all have to do with Ricks article?

    Rick is right. Economics is much larger than presidents. A long term trend has been playing out right before our eyes. That should concern us all. Are solar panels, terrabytes of hard drive storage etc. really gonna make our life better if our cities are in decay, social structure dissolving while we are getting gunned down on our own streets today while installing all this new stuff?

    Ya’ll gonna have to cut me some slack today with this post. My team lost badly last night. I think it was one first down in the entire 1st half. Sheesh! Anyhow…..cheers, if I may borrow Mario’s phrase, I’m off to the gym.

    http://original.antiwar.com/engelhardt/2014/11/25/iraq-war-4-0/

    • mava December 1, 2014, 11:11 pm

      That is why we invaded Afghanistsan in the first place. To control and guard the fields. Everyone wants the same thing from that country. Every emperor wanted the drugs. But they never ever tell it to their people like it is.

  • wayne siggard December 1, 2014, 5:38 pm

    Using CO2 for fuel will leave us oxygen rich and feeling really heady– until all the plants die.
    If Facebook and government propaganda lead us into a wonderful new Information Age, then we can all live on lies and eat ideas. Perhaps we can get into the cloud and live in the mansions we dream of.
    In the real world, someone has to farm to provide real food. Someone has to mine the ore, process the ore, machine the metal, and fabricate the metal, plastic, leather, etc. to make a car. How long the world will sell us real goods and let us pay for it with Facebook and Twitter is anybody’s guess. How long Elon Musk will be accounted a genius for getting the government to fund for his company and getting people to valuate a company which fabricates 35,000 cars at the same value as GM, which sells about 10,000,000, is also anybody’s guess.
    You can pay an extra 7-12,000 dollars to buy a LEED certified house. It has nothing in it that code and good building practices won’t provide, but you need to pay off the right people and have them monitor your house in order to get the “label”.
    Life is a lot different and easier since the computer came along, and there seems to be a lot of innovation which can improve efficiency, but the information age is being manipulated by unscrupulous people to promote whatever will keep the ruling clique in power. There is not a single governmental statistic that is not being twisted to suit some agenda.
    In the end, reality will prevail, and the can will hit the canyon floor. But what will reality look like when it does, and when will it come? If only I knew; I could become a billionaire, one of the elite and fight for the status quo. Meanwhile, thank you Rick for a little guidance along the way.

    • John Jay December 1, 2014, 6:07 pm

      Wayne,

      If you take CO2 from the atmosphere to make a synthetic hydrocarbon fuel, as soon as someone combusts it, the CO2 goes right back into the atmosphere.
      It should all net out more or less.
      If you use solar power to run the synthesis process, it should put an end to the drilling, transportation and refining of smelly, dangerous crude oil and all the pollution crude oil generates.

      Not to mention stripping the desert sheiks of the power, wealth, and influence they have been enjoying since oil was discoverd over there almost one hundred years ago.
      I will gladly accept at least a glimmer of hope for the future for a change!

      • mava December 1, 2014, 11:07 pm

        Don’t worry about CO2, as there is no way that fuel will become available. This is just another “free energy” idea. BS.

        Energy must exist in the fuel in the first place. If you are talking about the energy that you pack in by combining some atoms into a molecule, then you can certainly use that energy by using the fuel you created but not all of it, therefore you actually are wasting the energy by creating the fuel in the first place. This is why we always use already existing fuels: solar power, fossil fuels, etc. Electric is not one of these as we waste energy creating electric power, it’s just that we do not yet see the consequences of removing that wasted energy from our ecosystem, such as in the case of hydro-electric power (and by the way, solar too).

      • Jason S December 2, 2014, 7:56 am

        JJ,

        For what it is worth, solar is still a long way from becoming a viable alternative energy source. It is too costly without sizable government subsidy and it is still very inefficient at about 30% of the solar energy converted into electricity. I have a 1500 sq/ft house and an electricity bill of about $90/mo and Southern California Electric estimated I would need a $36,000 solar system to cover my energy needs. Even with rising electricity rates that is about a 20 year break even assuming a 4% opportunity cost and not counting maintenance expense and loss of output over time from the solar panels.

        http://cleantechnica.com/2014/02/02/which-solar-panels-most-efficient/

      • mario December 2, 2014, 1:31 pm

        Its really sad Jason, that $36,000 solar system costs $12,000 here in China. The cost of such “equipment” , same as things like washing machines, refrigerators, etc is ridiculously high in the states…

        Cheers, Mario

    • mava December 1, 2014, 11:08 pm

      Why would you want to buy a LEED house? And then put a LABEL on it? Mysterious…

      • John Jay December 2, 2014, 12:35 am

        Mava,

        For what is worth, here is the link with an explanation of the process:
        http://www.cnet.com/news/miracle-tech-turns-water-into-fuel/
        Still in the prototype stage, but you have to start somewhere.

      • mava December 2, 2014, 4:03 am

        “The SOECs are used to convert electricity — supplied by renewable sources such as wind and solar — to steam.”

        What this means is they are packaging the energy. Not creating it. They are packaging the sunlight and wind energy into hydrocarbon molecular structure.

        So, it is exactly the same as what you have already, wind and solar – is where your actual energy originally has to come from. The limitation is therefore exactly as that with wind and solar, the original sources. For solar, its the low energy density – to substitute just half or US energy needs, you’d have to cover entire US coast to coast with solar panels of 100% efficiency (no such thing). With wind its even less fun, there is a lot less wind energy available than solar.

        Don’t forget that this process will also have to have its own efficiency rate. Meaning that it necessarily will be more wasteful than just using solar and wind.

        It does solve one problem – the energy density as packaged. This is where all the fuel cells fail as compared to gasoline. Since it packages the already available energy in hydrocarbons, the resulting fuel will be as powerful as gasoline (potentially) per pound of fuel weight.

      • Oregon December 3, 2014, 6:13 am

        mava, I think you are spot on, exactly what I thought when I read about the water/CO2 to gas. The process is a net loss of energy, probably more so than others, but it will be “green” and very loveable.

        If more people would just place their focus toward conservation…

  • mr December 1, 2014, 2:45 pm

    Rick, this article is spot on. You inferred the impact of political interference on the systems-dynamics of the (cyclical) process. If more of the public were sufficiently educated and were to become more aware of the ‘meta’ of what occurs systemically (including that having to do with stakeholders, the wanting of power, the dynamics of thirst and fear driving greed, etc.) instead of focusing on the more obvious and getting sucked into emotionally charged debate — shift may be able to begin to occur. Such an occurrence (as described herein) would be met with staunch resistance from the stakeholders (congress, lobbyists, others of power and influence, etc.) currently involved with shaping policy (be it political, economic, etc.)

  • John from Australia December 1, 2014, 12:16 pm

    I would suggest that the title of this post could be expanded, in light of what is about to begin in the next few years, to read “The Economic/Financial-Technological-Hegemonic Cycle Is Far Bigger than Presidents”.

    “it is incumbent on every generation to pay its own debts as it goes. a principle which, if acted on, wou[ld] save one half the wars of the world; and justifies, I think our present circumspection.”

    – Thomas Jefferson, third US president, in a letter to Antoine Louis Claude Destutt de Tracy of 26 December 1820.

    [Jefferson was writing at the beginning of the British post-Napoleonic War boom, which in the Anglo-American Hegemonic Cycle [http://www.members.optusnet.com.au/futurewatch/20d8bad0.png] is compared to the post WW1 boom].

    This is what Moses was getting at in regard to debt:

    “And you shall count…seven times seven years…forty-nine years. Then you shall cause the trumpet of the Jubilee to sound on the tenth day of the seventh month; on the day of Atonement [Yom Kippur] you shall make the trumpet to sound throughout all your land. For the fiftieth year shall be holy, a time to proclaim liberty throughout the land to all enslaved debtors, and a time for cancelling of all public and private debts. It shall be a year when all the family estates sold to others shall be returned to the original owners or their heirs” (Leviticus 25:8-10, NKJV/Living Bible).

    [“The United States’ economy has been in recession only nine times in the last 60 years, or roughly once every seven years. Before the last recession in 2001, the economy even expanded for a full ten years. And the average recession has only lasted for about four quarters” (Joachim Fels, Recession 2007, morganstanley.com, November 18, 2005)].

    The President Harding recession, though it started in President Wilson’s last days, was a recession that is a type of the close of the seven times seven years recessions, which is not comparable to the Hoover recession which was a type of the fiftieth [Jubilee] year great recession.

    The Jubilee year was a reset year for the next cycle to begin afresh; it was more than just dealing with debt.

    And so the crisis before the world today is also a reset crisis that not only deals with debt but involves a technological and hegemonic reset.

    The future Great Depression will contribute to the restructuring of society for the Information Age proper; (compare also Peter Drucker, A survey of the near-future – The Next Society, economist.com, November 1, 2001).

    But that new society will not occur until there is a hegemonic reset, the conflict of which will last around three and a half years, cp. also the years December 1941-August 1945 during the transition from British to American hegemony. But in a twist of history the initial losers will end up as the hegemonic power of the next society.

    The car and radio of the post-WW1 boom have types in the computer and the internet in the post-Cold War boom; technologies foreshadowing the possibilities of the post-WW2 and post-WW3 societies, respectively.

    Society though, in light of the movie “Exodus: Gods and Kings,” has to get through its Red Sea and over its River Jordan to enter its promised land that history, and other things, suggests is coming.

    • mava December 1, 2014, 10:52 pm

      You do understand that if we have accepted the 50 year debt write-offs, that would set in a cyclical interest rates pattern, where the rates climb sharply on all newly issued loans the closer it get to the “jubilee”?

      And what do you mean by “the enslaved debtor”? If you come to me for a loan, because you want to spend already what you have yet to produce, and I have already produced that, and I issue you a loan, which you do not care to repay in fifty (!) years (meaning that you never decided to produce what you have already spent), then you are the enslaved debtor? And you should be relieved of your obligations? Why don’t you do yourself and other a favor and do not borrow in the first place, so as to not become enslaved?

      Who is going to lend anything at the year, say 45 of the 50 year cycle? At what interest rates?

      The suggestion of the debt forgiveness is by far the most stupid of all Biblical suggestions on how to build an economy. It will create interest rates that are too low in the beginning of a cycle, where no one has any debts (but not because they have now established an income), and are lower than that of the rate of economic production, meaning that the capital will be burned (as it is today). At the end of a cycle the rates will be higher than that of the economic production meaning that the capital would sit idle.

      This system is only applicable to fiat / counterfeit credit system, as the one we have now, but it is already in place (bankruptcy law). The reason it is not unloading the unwashed masses of their accumulated debts is only that the said masses are too lazy to do it and too stupid to know or to read a book, and too greedy to abstain from excessive mindless credit-fueled consumption even for a little while to get through the bankruptcy term.

  • mario December 1, 2014, 12:06 pm

    Rick, pleasantly and wisely allowing some space for the middle ground.

    Let me reference a pop over to Madhedgefundtrader John Thomas’ view who seems to make a wise case for the ten year muddle along scenario. And let me add to it that IF China’s current supportive state of affairs wasn’t on the table serving the economic “west”, I would more quickly agree with you that the U.S. might not make it through the muddle. Yes intentionally used the word muddle as a noun there :).

    I stick with my view the US is not going to have its version of “collapse” . In fact, we might surmise it already did. The country is truly nothing like it was just 30 years ago at its deepest core. But I suggest so much because of the descriptive paradigm of collapse as much to suggest it is being intricately “absorbed” or “morphed” into the “world economy”. I am comfortable suggesting this paradigm along with the rise of Asia led by China, all driven by today’s online-tech advances, is creating an utter transformation of the global economy and way we live.

    Mark my words, just ten years from now, we will be astonished at how different the way of the world for relatively modern societies has become.

    Note soft stock market, crappy retail sales and the Russell getting definitively slapped back from its test at resistance.

    Cheers, Mario

    • John jay December 1, 2014, 2:33 pm

      Mario,

      I believe we are on the verge of some major breakthroughs in energy technology.
      I am seeing more houses out here with solar panels on their roofs.
      My friends had them installed, and their electric bill went from $300 a month to zero.
      I have read of even more advanced solar energy technology in the experimental stage.
      Including photo-voltaic paint to cover your house with!
      In North Africa, they are working on huge solar panel farms out in the desert that will feed power to cities on the other side of the Mediterranean.

      Germany is perfecting a method of creating synthetic liquid fuel from the hydrogen in water and the carbon from the CO-2 in the atmosphere!
      If perfected, that means you would have that system in place where it is needed, say at an airport, and enable fuel independence for the airlines.
      Germany was creating gasoline from coal during WWII, and pioneered the science back in the 1930s.

      This means that in the near future, we might see all the wealth that is currently flowing to big oil and electric utility companies begin to flow to someone else.
      This will change the global balance of power and wealth that has been in place for the last 125 years.
      Scientists are in the process of separating the wheat from the chaff in the energy area right now.
      A little hope ahead on the horizon!

      Rick,

      Yes, the next POTUS will very likely preside over a bigger mess than Obama has.
      Because he will have even less of an economy and even more debt.
      He will be looking at the can that Obama kicked down the road for him to deal with.
      All the next POTUS will be able to do is give it another kick!

      &&&&&&&

      Click here to read an article about graphene that promises the most important energy breakthrough since the splitting of the atom. RA

      • Shawn Brown December 2, 2014, 10:17 pm

        Couldn’t agree more and an easy and inexpensive way to play the breakthrough is Alabama Graphite Corp. OTCQX: ABGPF. Not only could the Coosa Project support Graphene technology but Elon Musk’s commitment to building a $5 billion giga battery factory, as well. After all, Graphite is the second largest component in Lithium Ion battery manufacturing.

      • John Jay December 4, 2014, 5:09 am

        Rick,

        Yes, we are truly on the cusp of amazing applications of science to everyday life.
        With a population of 7 billion people, the number of humans with an IQ at 160 and beyond is very likely at an all time high.
        And if you leverage that high IQ with the advances in all areas of science in just the last 100 years, wow, the young and super intelligent start out with a huge knowledge base as a given.

        Look at aerospace since Kitty Hawk and the Wright brothers in 1903, just 111 years ago.
        From a wood and fabric biplane to the Saturn 5, A-380, and a sky full of satellites.
        In 111 years.
        Amazing, to say the least.

        The same parabolic progress in medicine, electronics, manufacturing, and, sadly, warfare.
        So, if we don’t “Blow ourselves up” as Admiral Rickover predicted, what a time to be alive!

  • Democritus December 1, 2014, 8:06 am

    The flaccid “black Friday” retail sales can be linked to a 7% increase of residential rents nationally. With a year-on-year 1.67% increase of CPI, rising rents are curbing consumer spending and could send the economy back into a low-grade recession. Falling oil prices hardly put a dent into the ever increasing share of income that millennials have to dish out for monthly rent. With that share heading toward 35% on monthly income, there is little disposable income left for shopping.

    &&&&&


    And let’s not overlook the huge-and-still-metastasizing growth in healthcare premiums paid by most middle class Americans under Obamacare.
    RA