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Thu, 03 Oct 2024 12:45:00 +0000 Judge Finds Newsom's New California Deepfake Ban Unconstitutional
Judge Finds Newsom's New California Deepfake Ban Unconstitutional
Judge Finds Newsom's New California Deepfake Ban Unconstitutional
Authored by Brayden Lindrea via CoinTelegraph.com,
A federal court judge issued a preliminary injunction against a two-week-old California law that effectively bans election-related deepfakes.
The law — AB 2839 — allowed any person to sue for damages over AI deepfakes within 120 days of an election and up to 60 days after if the perpetrator’s post resembled a political candidate.
Judge John A. Mendez said artificial intelligence and deepfakes pose significant risks but ruled that the law was “unconstitutional” as it likely violated the First Amendment.
“The Court finds that AB 2839 is also unconstitutional under California’s free speech provision.”
The decision comes from a case involving Christopher Kohls, known as “Mr Reagan” on X. Kohls created a controversial AI-altered campaign video in July mocking United States Vice President Kamala Harris that was later shared by X’s executive chairman Elon Musk.
A lawyer representing Kohls filed a lawsuit against California Attorney General Rob Bonta and Secretary of State Shirley N. Weber to block the new law a day after California Governor Gavin Newsom signed it into law on Sept. 17.
The law allowed California judges to order distributors of AI deepfakes to take them down or potentially face monetary penalties.
Mendez said Kohls is “likely to succeed on his state constitutional claim” and granted the motion for a preliminary injunction on Oct. 2.
“Most of AB 2839 acts as a hammer instead of a scalpel, serving as a blunt tool that hinders humorous expression and unconstitutionally stifles the free and unfettered exchange of ideas which is so vital to American democratic debate.”
Excerpt from Judge John A. Mendez’s decision in the Kohls case. Source: Election Law Blog
Mendez further agreed with Kohls’ lawyer that the AI deepfake of Harris was merely “satire” that should be protected by the First Amendment.
“While a well-founded fear of a digitally manipulated media landscape may be justified, this fear does not give legislators unbridled license to bulldoze over the longstanding tradition of critique, parody, and satire protected by the First Amendment.”
Tesla CEO Elon Musk viewed the court ruling as a win.
Source: Elon Musk
AB 2839 is one of several new AI-related laws that has recently hit Newsom’s desk.
Newsom on Sept. 30 vetoed the Safe and Secure Innovation for Frontier Artificial Intelligence Models Act — SB 1047 — which proposed mandatory safety testing of AI models.
Newsom said that “while well-intentioned,” SB 1047 could place unnecessary restrictions on emerging AI companies in California.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 10/03/2024 - 08:45 Close
Thu, 03 Oct 2024 12:36:47 +0000 Jobless Claims Remain Low Despite 50%-Plus Surge In Job Cuts
Jobless Claims Remain Low Despite 50%-Plus Surge In Job Cuts
On the heels of a 53.4% YoY rise in job cut announcements (released by Challenger, Gray, & Christmas), initial jobless claims remain in a world of their o
Read more.....
Jobless Claims Remain Low Despite 50%-Plus Surge In Job Cuts
On the heels of a 53.4% YoY rise in job cut announcements (released by Challenger, Gray, & Christmas), initial jobless claims remain in a world of their own, rising very modestly to 225k from 219k...
Source: Bloomberg
Initial claims (SA and NSA) remain rangebound - showing absolutely ZERO indication of labor market stress...
Source: Bloomberg
Continuing claims were flat at 1.826mm Americans
Source: Bloomberg
Additionally, jobless claims are also completely decoupled from the BLS' official unemployment rate ...
Source: Bloomberg
So, JOLTS and Claims are super strong while 'soft' survey data (ISM/PMI/UMICH/CONF BOARD ) all show labor market indicators tumbling...
Source: Bloomberg
...take your pick to support your political pundit's choice of how many more rate-cuts we get this year (with stocks and home prices at record highs).
Tyler Durden
Thu, 10/03/2024 - 08:36 Close
Thu, 03 Oct 2024 12:19:01 +0000 Futures Drop As Record Hong Kong 13-Day Rally Finally Ends
Futures Drop As Record Hong Kong 13-Day Rally Finally Ends
US stock futures are lower, but off session lows, in line with declines seen across Europe and Asia, while yields, the dollar and oil rise as the risk of escalating conflict
Read more.....
Futures Drop As Record Hong Kong 13-Day Rally Finally Ends
US stock futures are lower, but off session lows, in line with declines seen across Europe and Asia, while yields, the dollar and oil rise as the risk of escalating conflict in the Middle East damps risk appetite. As of 8:00am ET, S&P futures are down 0.1% after closing up 0.01% on Wednesday; Nasdaq futures slide 0.3% with MegaCap Tech mixed: NVDA is up +0.7%, while TSLA extends yesterday selloff and is down -1.6% pre-market. Bloomberg’s dollar index gained for a fourth day, bolstered by a rise in Treasury yields; market snapshot: RTY -70bps // UST10yr +2.5bps @ 3.80bps // WTI +2% @ $71.50 // Bitcoin unch @ $60,900 as global equities trade mixed with escalating geopolitical tensions/ the awaiting of the size/scale Israel’s response to Iran weighs on markets, which has pushed oil prices up another 1.9% this morning; elsewhere in commodities base metals are also higher, while precious metals and ags are lower: Jobless claims, factory orders and the ISM services reading (est 51.7, Last 51.5) are all on the slate as traders prepare for Friday’s jobs report, while the Federal Reserve’s Jeff Schmid, Neel Kashkari and Raphael Bostic are all scheduled to speak.
In premarket trading, Levi Strauss shares plunged 11% after the apparel company lowered its revenue growth outlook for the full year. Here are some other premarket movers:
EVgo (EVGO) rises 12% after JPMorgan upgraded the EV charging firm on the view that companies like EVgo, which have an owner-operator model, will outperform peers.
Hims & Hers Health (HIMS) drops 9% as the FDA said Eli Lilly’s weight-loss drugs are no longer considered to be in shortage in the US, a ruling that threatens to upend knockoffs that became popular when patients couldn’t find the brand-name medicines. Hims has been selling compounded semaglutide to treat obesity.
Wolfspeed (WOLF) declines 5% as Mizuho cut its recommendation of the semiconductor device company to underperform, noting slower global EV sales in second half and next year.
Global equities are on course for their first weekly loss in four as the world awaits Israel’s response to a missile strike by Iran. Israel’s warplanes bombed Beirut overnight, after eight of its soldiers were killed in southern Lebanon in battles against Hezbollah. Amid the geopolitical uncertainty, investors are also bracing for a raft of US data, including jobless claims today, for signals on the health of the economy. In other news, Warren Buffet’s sales of Bank of America shares slowed, fetching some of the lowest prices since he began a spree of liquidations in mid-July. Meanwhile, OpenAI has raised $6.6 billion in a new funding round that gave the company a valuation of almost $160 billion
International conflict has returned as a driver for markets, which have lately been directed mainly by the US economic cycle, said Michael Metcalfe, head of macro strategy at State Street Global Markets. “There might be a pressure to rebalance, because markets are stretched and I don’t see that as being particularly positive for US equities,” he said.
Richmond Fed President Tom Barkin on Wednesday noted progress on inflation and added the labor market is in “good shape,” but cautioned it’s too early for the central bank to declare victory. Stronger-than-expected ADP jobs data on Wednesday led traders to pare bets on aggressive Fed rate cuts. Swaps traders were penciling in some 34 basis points of policy easing at the central bank’s November meeting, down from 44 basis points just last week.
Fed officials will see fresh labor market data Friday. The unemployment rate is forecast to hold steady at 4.2% in September while payrolls are expected to rise by 150,000.
“I am of course nervous heading into tomorrow’s jobs report,” Kallum Pickering, chief economist at Peel Hunt, said on Bloomberg TV. “If the unemployment rate ticks up, I wouldn’t be surprised that markets would shift back toward expecting 50 basis points and then it is a question of how the Fed may react.”
European stocks fall for the third time in four sessions with the Stoxx 600 down 0.9%. Auto, mining and construction shares are underperforming in Europe; utilities was the only sector in the green. The Stoxx 600’s automotive subindex was the biggest underperformer, weighed down by a number of bearish cuts in the sector from Barclays. France’s CAC 40 stock benchmark underperformed, falling as much as 1%, after French President Emmanuel Macron endorsed a temporary tax on the country’s largest companies. German software maker SAP SE dropped after US prosecutors broadened a probe of potential price-fixing. Stellantis NV shares were down more than 3% after the company slashed vehicle production in its key Italian market. Here are the biggest movers Thursday:
Stora Enso gains as much as 6.0% after the Finnish paper and forest products firm said it will sell about 12% of its total forest assets in Sweden to strengthen its balance sheet and reduce debt
Tesco shares rise as much as 2.6%, bouncing off a one-month low, after the UK’s largest supermarket chain raised its full-year profit outlook alongside first-half results
Voltalia shares rise as much as 4.4% after Stifel initiated coverage of the French renewable-energy producer with a recommendation of buy, citing a fast growing market
Stellantis falls as much as 4.9% and Porsche Automobil Holding as much as 3.2% after the stocks were downgraded alongside Mercedes-Benz at Barclays in a review of European carmakers
FDJ shares slide as much as 5.9% after CIC Market Solutions analysts downgrade the lottery operator to neutral from buy, citing the potential for incoming tax rises on gambling in France
Bouygues shares drop as much as 6.1%, the most since November 2022, after the French company said its telecoms business will launch a new brand and product range targeting families
VP plunges as much as 12% after the equipment rental firm’s profit guidance for the year came in below expectations. Analysts at Peel Hunt warned they expect the stock to remain under pressure
Asian stocks also fell as Hong Kong shares took a breather after a record rally fueled by Beijing’s stimulus blitz. Japanese equities rose boosted by the plunge in the yen. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index dropped as much as 0.9%, weighed down by Chinese tech shares including Alibaba and Tencent. A gauge of Chinese stocks in Hong Kong fell 1.6%, snapping its 13-day winning streak.
While there’s growing optimism that the current rally may be different from previous short-lived rebounds, some skepticism remains over the effectiveness of the government’s stimulus measures. The mainland Chinese market is closed through Oct. 7 for the Golden Week holiday.
“The stimulus momentum has stalled with China away on holiday, ” said Charu Chanana, global markets strategist at Saxo Markets. “While undervaluation has helped, markets still remain uncertain about the impact of the announcements to address China’s structural headwinds.”
In FX, the pound tumbled over 1% against the dollar, on course for its worst day against the euro since 2022 after the Guardian reported Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey saying the central bank could be a “bit more aggressive” with interest-rate cuts. Money markets fully priced in a quarter-point cut by the BOE in November and assigned a 70% probability to a reduction in December, an increase from about 40% Wednesday. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index rises 0.3%. The yen falls 0.4% to near 147 as PM Ishiba’s unexpected warning against raising rates is pushing back bets of another hike this year.
In rates, treasuries are under modest pressure as the US trading day begins, amid steeper declines for most euro-zone bond markets and rising oil prices. US yields are higher by 2bp-3bp, with intermediate sectors leading losses and curve spreads narrowly mixed; 10-year at 3.81% is about 2.7bp higher on the day vs increases of at least 5bp for most euro-zone 10-year yields. UK bonds outperform led by the short-end after BOE Governor hinted at more aggressive rate cuts; UK two-year yields dropping 5 bps to 3.96%. US session includes weekly jobless claims and September ISM services index (factory index released Tuesday showed notable weakness in employment and prices paid).
In commodities, oil prices rise for a third day as traders await Israel’s response against Iran. Brent crude climbed near $75 a barrel, on course for the longest run of daily gains since August, while West Texas Intermediate was above $71. Investors are concerned that, should Israel strike key Iranian assets, the Islamic Republic will lash out and escalate their conflict, dragging in more countries and potentially disrupting global energy shipments. Spot gold falls $13 to around $2,645/oz.
Looking at today's calendar, US economic data calendar includes September Challenger job cuts (7:30am), weekly jobless claims (8:30am), September final S&P Global US services PMI (9:45am), August factory orders and September ISM services index (10am). Fed speakers scheduled include Kansas City’s Schmid (10am) and Minneapolis’s Kashkari and Atlanta’s Bostic (together at 10:40am)
Market Snapshot
S&P 500 futures down 0.4% to 5,735.75
STOXX Europe 600 down 0.9% to 516.57
MXAP down 0.5% to 194.77
MXAPJ down 1.2% to 622.17
Nikkei up 2.0% to 38,552.06
Topix up 1.2% to 2,683.71
Hang Seng Index down 1.5% to 22,113.51
Shanghai Composite up 8.1% to 3,336.50
Sensex down 2.1% to 82,503.93
Australia S&P/ASX 200 little changed at 8,205.19
Kospi down 1.2% to 2,561.69
German 10Y yield little changed at 2.14%
Euro little changed at $1.1045
Brent Futures up 1.1% to $74.73/bbl
Gold spot down 0.6% to $2,644.02
US Dollar Index up 0.15% to 101.83
Top Overnight News
A leading economist in China said the country has room to ramp up fiscal support for the economy by issuing as much as 10 trillion yuan ($1.4 trillion) in special debt, reflecting rising expectations for Beijing to expand public spending as part of its stimulus package: BBG
BOJ board member Asahi Noguchi sees a need for the central bank to maintain an accommodative monetary policy stance given Japan’s long history of deflation, he said Thursday, echoing remarks from the country’s new prime minister. WSJ
Softbank’s Son says artificial general intelligence will be achieved within 2-3 years, with artificial super intelligence occurring within 10 years. WSJ
The pound tumbled after Governor Andrew Bailey told the Guardian that the BOE may become a “bit more aggressive” in cutting rates if news on inflation remains good. Money markets fully priced a quarter-point reduction in November and assigned a 70% chance of a consecutive move in December, up from about 40% yesterday. BBG
Swiss inflation weakened to the slowest pace in more than three years, pointing to further monetary easing by the country’s central bank. Consumer prices rose 0.8% from a year ago in September, Switzerland’s statistics office said Thursday. That’s much lower than the 1% median estimate in a Bloomberg survey and compares with 1.1% in August. BBG
France, Greece, Italy and Poland will vote on Friday in favor of tariffs of up to 45% on imports of electric vehicles (EVs) made in China, sources said, enough to push through the European Union's highest profile trade measures, risking potential retaliation from Beijing. RTRS
OPEC has enough spare oil capacity to compensate for a full loss of Iranian supply if Israel knocks out that country's facilities but the producer group would struggle if Iran retaliates by hitting installations of its Gulf neighbors. RTRS
Iran would require not weeks but many months, and possibly as long as a year, to construct a nuclear weapon. NYT
After Israel invaded Lebanon to confront Iran’s strongest ally, Hezbollah, and Iran’s second massive missile attack on Israel in less than six months, Israel seems ready to strike Iran directly, in a much more forceful and public way than it ever has, and Iran has warned of massive retaliation if it does. NYT
Israel’s warplanes bombed Beirut overnight, after eight of its soldiers were killed in southern Lebanon in ongoing ground battles against Hezbollah: RTRS
Long lines of container ships queued up outside major U.S. ports on Thursday as the biggest dockworker strike in nearly half a century entered its third day preventing unloading and threatening shortages of everything from bananas to auto parts. No negotiations were scheduled between the International Longshoremen's Association and employers, but the port owners, under pressure from the White House to hike their pay offer to land a deal, signaled late on Wednesday they were open to new talks. RTRS
A more detailed look at global markets courtesy of Newsquawk
APAC stocks traded mixed amid the backdrop of several holiday closures and ongoing geopolitical tensions, while Hong Kong participants booked profits. ASX 200 lacked direction alongside varied data releases including downward PMI revisions and mixed trade figures. Nikkei 225 outperformed on the back of a weaker currency after yesterday's dovish-leaning remarks from Japanese PM Ishiba who said they are not in an environment for an additional rate hike following a meeting with BoJ Governor Ueda, while Ueda said the BoJ will adjust the degree of monetary easing if the outlook is realised, but will take careful steps to determine that as it takes time. Hang Seng suffered heavy losses amid profit taking and in a possible sign that the China stimulus euphoria has finally worn out.
Top Asian News
BoJ Board Member Noguchi said they must patiently maintain loose monetary conditions and it will take a considerable time for the public to shift to a mindset where inflation can sustainably hit 2%, while he believes the consumption uptrend is likely to become clearer and noted the cost pressure from wage hikes is gradually being reflected in service price rises. Furthermore, he said the BoJ will likely gradually adjust the degree of monetary support while cautiously examining whether inflation stably hits 2%, accompanied by wage gains, as well as noted that the BoJ can spend time and move cautiously, in reducing its balance sheet. Does not comment of PM Ishiba's remarks on monetary policy; expects BoJ to adjust degree of monetary policy if economy moves in line with forecast, even at a very slow pace. "personally feel we need to proceed very carefully in adjusting degree of monetary support". "Need to scrutinise whether consumers' sentiment will shift to one where they can swallow price hikes.". "As Governor Ueda has said, we have time to scrutinise economic developments, before contemplating rate hike.". "The current financial environment is sufficiently easy." "Japan’s economy can withstand if the JPY becomes stronger gradually.". "Will not deny there is room to adjust the degree of monetary support further.". "Given it is hard to come up with a concrete estimate on the neutral rate, the BoJ must check the impact of the past rate hike before carefully proceeding with the next one.". "The one-sided, sharp JPY fall seen in July has subsided.". "The upside inflation risk from a weak JPY has subsided."
Japanese PM Kishida is to direct a compilation of economic package on Friday, according to Kyodo.
Japan's Finance Minister Kato has affirmed the government, BoJ will continue to coordinate closely; also said he wants to watch the FX market with a sense of urgency including speculative moves. "We will communicate thoroughly with markets". Will aim to exit deflation soon, working closely with BoJ.
Japan's Economy Minister Akazawa said in broad terms, policy rate of 0.25% is an accommodative state. "We are moving towards monetary policy normalisation but existing deflation is a top priority". "We must not cool down the economy".
European bourses, Stoxx 600 (-0.7%), opened modestly in negative territory and continued to edge lower as the morning progressed, with indices now generally just off lows. The FTSE 100 (+0.2%) remains in positive territory after BoE Governor Bailey's dovishly-received comments. European sectors are negative across the board with Energy also turning red following a positive open. There is no clear theme or bias across European sectors. Autos and Parts once again lag. Basic Resources also resides as one of the losers amid the pullback in base metal prices. US Equity Futures (ES -0.4%, NQ -0.5%, RTY -0.7%) are softer across the board amid the broader risk-averse mood despite the lack of any fresh drivers during the session, but ahead of risk events including the weekly jobless claims and ISM Services PMI ahead of tomorrow's US jobs report. Barclays has upgraded the EU Autos & Parts sector to neutral from negative
Top European News
BoE Governor Bailey said the bank could be a "bit more aggressive" in cutting rates provided the news that inflation continues to be good, in an interview with The Guardian.
UK PM Starmer conceded during his first visit to Brussels that his "reset" with the EU won't be easy, according to AFP.
Riksbank's Jansson said the bank is not too worried about a consumption driven uptick in inflation as a result of rate cuts. Need to see an economic recovery if inflation is not undershoot. Would be good for the economy if fundamental factors were reflected in the value of the crown.
BoE Monthly Decision Maker Panel data (September 2024). Expectations for CPI inflation a year ahead declined by 0.1 percentage point to 2.6% in the three months to September. The corresponding measure for three-year ahead CPI inflation expectations was also 2.6% in the three months to September, and 0.1 percentage points lower than in the three months to August. Expected year-ahead wage growth remained unchanged at 4.1% on a three-month moving-average basis in September.
FX
USD is broadly stronger vs. peers with DXY up for a fourth consecutive session in a week that has been characterised by geopolitical tensions and comments from Fed Chair Powell guiding markets towards a step down to a 25bps rate cut next month. DXY is currently eyeing the 102.00 mark, and may take impetus from today's US busy data docket, with ISM Services likely the highlight.
EUR is softer vs. the USD but to a lesser extent than most peers. ECB officials seemingly endorsing a rate cut later this month has definitely acted as a drag on the pair, with attention now on if the pair can hold above the 1.10 mark.
GBP is the standout laggard across the majors following dovishly-received comments from BoE Governor Bailey; he said in an interview with The Guardian, the bank could be a "bit more aggressive" in cutting rates provided the news that inflation continues to be good.
JPY is softer vs. the USD after breaching the September peak for USD/JPY at 147.21 overnight. As a reminder, on Wednesday, PM Ishiba downplayed the likelihood of another immediate BoJ rate hike. USD/JPY currently stands at around 146.83.
Both antipodes are struggling vs. the broadly firmer USD. After an indecisive session yesterday, AUD/USD has extended its move lower on a 0.68 handle.
Fixed Income
USTs are extending on yesterday's downside that was triggered in part by Wednesday's strong ADP release in the run-up to Friday's NFP print. Today's US data docket is a busy one with ISM Services PMI the likely highlight. US 10yr yield is currently just above the 3.8% mark but below Wednesday's 3.817% peak.
Bunds are lower in an extension of Wednesday's US-led price action, but it remains to be seen how long the downside can continue given the increasingly dovish tones seen out of the ECB with comments from hawk Schnabel helping to cement expectations of an increasingly dovish ECB. The German 10yr yield is back above the 2.1% after delving as low as 2.01% earlier in the week.
Gilts the standout outlier across the fixed income space on account of dovish comments from BoE Governor Bailey who said the bank could be a "bit more aggressive" in cutting rates provided the news that inflation continues to be "good". The UK 10yr yield is currently holding just above the 4% mark.
Spain sells EUR 4.54bln vs exp. EUR 4-5bln 2.50% 2027, 1.45% 2029 and 4.70% 2041 Bono and EUR 0.512bln vs exp. EUR 0.25-0.75bln 2.05% 2039 I/L.
France sells EUR 11.98bln vs exp. EUR 10-12bln 1.25% 2034, 3.00% 2034, 3.00% 2049, and 3.25% 2055 OAT.
Commodities
Crude is firmer intraday in a continuation of the upside seen since the recent geopolitical escalation. Updates from the region has been light thus far, as markets still await Israel's response which will reportedly be "harsh". Brent Dec briefly rose above USD 75/bbl to trade in a current USD 74.46-75.11/bbl parameter.
Softer trade across precious metals as the firmer Dollar and lack of fresh geopolitical escalations (as we await Israel's response) allow traders to book some profits before scheduled risk events such as the US jobless claims and ISM Services PMIs.
Base metals are softer across the board against the backdrop of a risk-averse mood across the market. Newsflow has been light this morning but the angst surrounding a wider geopolitical escalation in the Middle East remains. As a reminder, Chinese markets were closed overnight as they observe their Golden Week Holiday.
Kinder Morgan (KMI) reports a mechanical failure on gasoline pipeline repaired at Sacramento County, California; pipeline is shutdown, personnel is on route to the site to get eyes on assessment.
Kazakhstan's 400k BPD Kashagan repairs reportedly postponed, now due to start on Oct 7th, according to Ifax.
Geopolitics
IDF orders another 25 villages evacuated in southern Lebanon, according to ELINT News
"An Israeli infantry group and vehicles retreat beyond the Blue Line after infiltrating towards the town of Maroun al-Ras", according to Al Jazeera
"Private sources for Sky News Arabia: A positive atmosphere prevailed in the meeting in Doha between Abbas and Hamas leaders", according to Sky News Arabia.
Israeli Military said it assassinated head of Hamas government Rawhi Mushtaha in Gaza strip.
Hezbollah said it confronted an attempt by Israeli forces to advance at Lebanese border's Fatima Gate.
"US sources say Washington is ready to sell F-15s to Ankara", according to journalist Soylu; "Sources say if Turkey finally returns to F-35 program, Ankara might be involved in production line", "Turkey’s F-16 deal is still being finalised".
Pro-Iranian factions target an international coalition base in north-eastern Syria, via Sky News Arabia.
Israel conducted raids on 3 sites in the neighbourhoods of Mouawad, Al-Amrikan and Zaghloul in Beirut. It was also reported that an Israeli strike hit central Beirut, while a building targeted by the Israeli raid in Bachoura reportedly housed the office of Beirut's Hezbollah deputy Amin Sherri.
Israeli army called on residents of several buildings in Haret Hreik, Burj al-Barajneh and Hadath West in the southern suburbs of Beirut to evacuate and a Sky News Arabia correspondent reported a new series of Israeli raids targeting the suburbs of Beirut.
Israeli Home Front announced sirens sounded in several areas of the Golan and that sirens sounded in Shlomi in the western Galilee in northern Israel. Furthermore, Israeli media reported that 4 marches launched from Yemen exploded at a low altitude in the airspace of Tel Aviv, according to Asharq News.
Clashes were reported between Hezbollah and Israeli soldiers on the outskirts of Aitaroun, southern Lebanon, according to an Al-Arabiya correspondent.
Israeli press cited an official who stated that the response to Iran may include more than one option and not necessarily through airstrikes. The official added it is not certain that Washington will agree with them but it knows that they have to respond, while they should not go too far in our response although it will be much stronger than the response to the April attack.
Israeli official cited by Yedioth Ahronoth said there are no limits to the response to Iran, according to Al Arabiya.
Iran’s President vowed a stronger response if Israel retaliates.
US Event Calendar
07:30: Sept. Challenger Job Cuts 53.4% YoY, prior 1.0%
08:30: Sept. Initial Jobless Claims, est. 221,000, prior 218,000
Sept. Continuing Claims, est. 1.83m, prior 1.83m
09:45: Sept. S&P Global US Services PMI, est. 55.4, prior 55.4
Sept. S&P Global US Composite PMI, est. 54.4, prior 54.4
10:00: Aug. Durable Goods Orders, est. 0%, prior 0%
Aug. Durables-Less Transportation, est. 0.5%, prior 0.5%
10:00: Aug. Factory Orders, est. 0.1%, prior 5.0%
Aug. Factory Orders Ex Trans, est. 0.2%, prior 0.4%
Aug. Cap Goods Ship Nondef Ex Air, prior 0.1%
Aug. Cap Goods Orders Nondef Ex Air, est. 0.2%, prior 0.2%
10:00: Sept. ISM Services Index, est. 51.7, prior 51.5
DB's Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap
Morning from Amsterdam after a day in The Hague yesterday. Markets remained on edge over the last 24 hours, but better US jobs data than the previous day took the edge off fears of a potential escalation in the Middle East following Iran’s strikes on Tuesday. So far we haven’t seen any fresh escalation since those strikes, but Israeli PM Netanyahu has said they intend to retaliate, warning that Iran “will pay” for its actions. So the big fear is there could be a further ratcheting up of hostilities if you get repeated rounds of retaliation from each side, raising the risks of a broader regional conflict. However late in the day, we heard US President Biden urging Israel to not to attack Iran’s nuclear facilities. So there doesn't seem to be a desire from the US at the moment for a sizeable escalation.
In terms of the market reaction, that’s already led to a further rise in oil prices, and early in yesterday’s session Brent crude had been on track for its biggest 2-day gain of 2024 so far. Those gains (+3.5% to above $76/bbl at the highs) were mostly pared back into the afternoon, but it rose slightly again late on and is a further +1.03% higher this morning at $74.66/bbl as I type.
Whilst investors awaited any geopolitical news, the other main story yesterday was a substantial bond selloff. That was primarily driven by the ADP’s latest report of private payrolls from the US, which came in at +143k in September (vs. +125k expected). So that was an important sign of strength in the US labour market, particularly ahead of tomorrow’s all-important jobs report, and it also ended a run of 5 consecutive months where the ADP reading had kept slowing down.
The stronger numbers in the ADP report led investors to dial back the chance of aggressive rate cuts over the coming months. For instance, the amount of cuts priced by December 2025 was down -4.4bps on the day to 188bps. This came also amid somewhat cautious comments from Fed’s Barkin, who noted that while progress has been made, “It remains difficult to say that the inflation battle has yet been won”. This backdrop helped to spark a decent selloff for US Treasuries, with the 10yr yield ending the day up +5.1bps at 3.78%.
Those moves were evident in Europe as well, where yields on 10yr bunds (+5.5bps) moved back up to 2.09%, having closed at their lowest level since January in the previous session. That went alongside a fresh round of curve steepening, as investors became increasingly confident that the ECB would cut rates again in a couple of weeks’ time, with overnight index swaps giving that a 96% probability by the close. ECB commentary did little to dissuade October rate cut expectations. Later on in the day, we heard from Schnabel, one of the most prominent hawkish ECB voices in recent years, who said that “we cannot ignore the headwinds to growth” and that “a sustainable fall of inflation back to our 2% target in a timely manner is becoming more likely, despite still elevated services inflation and strong wage growth”. Elsewhere in European rates, there was a slight tightening in the Franco-German 10yr spread, which came down by -1.0bps to 77bps.
Whilst bonds were selling off, for equities it was a pretty subdued session as geopolitical fears came up against the stronger-than-expected data, meaning that the major indices saw little change overall even if sentiment improved as the US session progressed. The S&P 500 (+0.01%) was essentially flat on the day, despite a drag from the Magnificent 7 (-0.66%). The latter came amid a -3.49% decline for Tesla, which posted slower than expected quarterly vehicle sales. More broadly, both the NASDAQ (+0.08%) and the small cap Russell 2000 (-0.09%) saw muted moves. In Europe, the STOXX 600 (+0.05%) was also little changed, with a decline for the DAX (-0.25%) but slight gains for the CAC (+0.05%) and FTSE 100 (+0.17%).
Over in Asia, yesterday brought a clear weakening in the Japanese Yen after new PM Shigeru Ishiba said that “I don’t think the environment is ready for an additional rate hike”. So among investors, that led to a bit more scepticism about the chances of another BoJ hike anytime soon, and it meant that the yen weakened by -1.97% against the US Dollar yesterday and is down another quarter percent this morning. But the weaker yen has also led to a sharp surge in the Nikkei overnight (+2.18%).
In contrast, the Hang Seng is down by -3.20% this morning as the rally from China’s stimulus has finally abated for now, while the S&P/ASX 200 is just below flat, down by -0.08%. Meanwhile, markets in Mainland China and South Korea are closed for holidays. S&P 500 (-0.18%) and NASDAQ (-0.30%) futures are lower even as Nvidia's CEO has said the demand for their Blackwell chip is "insane". They were up around +1.6% after hours.
Early morning data showed that Japan’s service sector activity expanded for the third consecutive month, although the pace slowed slightly in September. The final estimate of the au Jibun Bank services PMI fell to 53.1 in September from 53.7 in August. Additionally, Australia’s trade surplus was A$5.64 billion in August, slightly above the expected A$5.50 billion, compared to a downwardly revised A$5.63 billion surplus the previous month.
There wasn’t too much other data yesterday, but we did get the latest weekly data from the Mortgage Bankers Association in the US. That showed the average rate on a 30yr fixed mortgage ticked up to 6.14% in the week ending September 27, up from 6.13% in the previous week, which is significant as that ends a run of continuous weekly declines in mortgages rates throughout August and early September. Over in the Euro Area, we also found out that the unemployment rate remained at 6.4% in August, in line with expectations, and still its joint-lowest since the single currency’s formation.
To the day ahead now, and data releases from the US include the ISM services for September, the weekly initial jobless claims, and August’s factory orders. We’ll also get the final services and composite PMIs from around the world, and Euro Area PPI inflation for August. From central banks, we’ll hear from the Fed’s Schmid, Kashkari and Bostic.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 10/03/2024 - 08:19 Close
Thu, 03 Oct 2024 11:45:00 +0000 Iran's High-Value Oil Assets In IDF Crosshairs As Israel Vows "Painful" Response
Iran's High-Value Oil Assets In IDF Crosshairs As Israel Vows "Painful" Response
For months, oil traders shrugged off any threat of a supply shock in the Middle East, betting on softening demand from China and the West, along with
Read more.....
Iran's High-Value Oil Assets In IDF Crosshairs As Israel Vows "Painful" Response
For months, oil traders shrugged off any threat of a supply shock in the Middle East, betting on softening demand from China and the West, along with hopes of increased production from OPEC+. Bearish sentiment dominated the global market in late summer and early fall. But this week, the oil market faced a rude awakening after Iran launched several waves of ballistic and hypersonic missiles against Israel, sending bears scrambling and prices jumping above $75/bbl.
The broadening war in the Middle East comes as Israel has vowed a "painful" response to Iran's attack early in the week. Brent prices rose 4.5% in the last three days, with further gains likely ahead as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu could use stealth fighter jets to neutralize the Islamic Republic's oil infrastructure export capabilities.
On Tuesday, Helima Croft, head of the global commodity strategy at RBC Capital Markets, joined CNBC's "The Exchange," informing hosts and audience, "There has been a lot of complacency about this war," adding, "We do need to think about a scenario where Iranian oil supplies are at risk.
Citigroup analyst Francesco Martoccia told clients that any IDF strike on Iran's export capacity could reduce 1.5 million barrels of crude per day from the global market overnight. He said a minor attack on energy infrastructure, such as downstream assets, could remove 300,000 to 450,000 barrels of daily output.
For energy research desks, it is unclear how the IDF will respond to Iran. Scenarios include hitting energy infrastructure to high-value military assets and nuclear sites.
Bloomberg provided readers on Thursday morning with a detailed map showing Iran's major energy installations, including oil and gas fields, pipelines, refineries and storage terminals:
Source: Bloomberg
We tend to agree with Ross Schaapp, head of research at GeoQuant, who told CNBC's "Squawk Box" on Wednesday that Israel might try to cripple Iran's ability to export oil. As the saying goes, 'follow the money'... and if Israel wants to neutralize Iran, in terms of paralyzing financial networks, start with crude export abilities.
GeoQuant's Schaapp noted that any IDF attack on Iranian energy infrastructure would send Brent prices higher "dramatically."
This week, Brent's implied volatility gauge climbed to its highest level in nearly a year. In options markets, a surge in Brent call options shows traders forecasting $100/bbl.
Bloomberg noted on Wednesday, "The equivalent of almost 27 million barrels of Brent December $100 calls traded by 11:20 am in New York while more than 7 million barrels worth of US crude December calls changed hands."
Meanwhile, Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Henik Fung told Terminal users, "Traders unwinding short bets could push crude prices higher on a wider war-risk premium," adding, "WTI could retest $80 in the short term."
Scott Shelton, an energy specialist at TP ICAP Group Plc., noted, "The odds are against a material loss in production, but when it comes to geopolitics, it's always a hard call."
Not anymore...
The world awaits Israel's response. One top energy research desk emphasized to us on Wednseday that it's almost guaranteed Israel will make a retaliatory strike against Iran. The big question is, what will IDF stealth jets strike?
Tyler Durden
Thu, 10/03/2024 - 07:45 Close
Thu, 03 Oct 2024 10:55:00 +0000 Industrial-Size Staffing Firms Reportedly Support Biden-Harris' Mysterious Nationwide Migrant Network
Industrial-Size Staffing Firms Reportedly Support Biden-Harris' Mysterious Nationwide Migrant Network
Large staffing companies that thrived during the Afghanistan and Iraq wars under the Bush-Obama years retooled their business mode
Read more.....
Industrial-Size Staffing Firms Reportedly Support Biden-Harris' Mysterious Nationwide Migrant Network
Large staffing companies that thrived during the Afghanistan and Iraq wars under the Bush-Obama years retooled their business models as the US involvement and war funding in the Middle East wound down. Now, these staffing firms seem to be profiting off the Biden-Harris administration's open-border migrant invasion by providing essential services, such as private security, transportation, and many other services, to ensure the fed's migrant network nationwide operates smoothly.
These companies are likely awarded handsome federal contracts, paid for by the US taxpayer.
Bussing and housing millions of illegal and legal aliens is big business for staffing companies and non-profits. Americans have to realize their tax dollars are paying for all of this while the migrants displace and replace blue-collar workers in small-town factories nationwide. The folks in Springfield, Ohio, and Charleroi, Pennsylvania, know firsthand just how devastating globalist open border policies can be for them.
Real America's Voice host Ben Bergquam posted on X, "More breaking footage of the Democrats harboring illegals in Chicago. Now using unmarked brand new hotels like this Holiday Inn at [XXXXXXX] to disguise Kamala and Biden's illegal invasion operations."
Bergquam's video of the Holiday Inn filled-migrant hotel in the Chicago metro area is very intriguing. First, the security guards appear to be sourced from staffing firm GardaWorld.
Second, a person who seems to be another worker said the Holiday Inn is "federal property."
The focus should be on industrial-sized staffing companies that provide security and other services to keep the fed's migrant network operational.
But let's take a step back and realize that some of these staffing companies could be part of the DC swamp that profited off the endless wars in the Middle East.
In 2012, the head of GardaWorld told Reuters that Middle East conflicts had kept the staffing firm "busier than ever and has never been greater," adding, "I don't want to say it's a gold rush, but business is very good."
Sticking with the staffing companies, just recently, Muckraker's Anthony Rubin dropped a bombshell in a report titled "Finding The Feds' Missing Children | CHILD TRAFFICKING IN AMERICA."
He provided intel that MVM, a private security contractor with ties to the CIA, NSA, FBI, and Homeland Security, was caught moving unaccompanied migrant children around the country.
There's a theme here because MVM is another big staffing firm that crushed it during the Middle East wars, providing personnel to the region to protect assets in the 2000s.
Read this story here...
However, when the war funding dried up in the Middle East, like GardaWorld, MVM pivoted to catering to the federal government's next big globalist idea: profiting off the migrant invasion by providing migrant solutions.
Their website reveals their 'Mission Solutions,' which include "Transportation and care for vulnerable populations [migrants]."
MVM has operated a migrant bus network nationwide.
Read this story here...
Even though we cited only two large staffing companies that profited off Middle East wars and pivoted to providing domestic migrant solutions to the Biden-Harris administration, smaller staffing companies are operating nationwide, providing transportation for migrants, and even some firms are providing housing solutions. Taxpayers must realize the feds are funneling their monies to support open borders and operate a complex network of transportation and housing for millions of migrants. Blue-collar workers across the country are waking up to the fact that the feds are perfectly okay with displacing and replacing them with low-cost migrants at factories across small town America.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 10/03/2024 - 06:55 Close
Thu, 03 Oct 2024 10:30:00 +0000 Trump's Opportunity For A Knockout
Trump's Opportunity For A Knockout
Trump's Opportunity For A Knockout
Authored by Tom Klingenstein via RealClearPolitics ,
In a very significant development — I am almost prepared to say the most significant development in the current presidential contest — it has recently been revealed that Brian D. Lozenski, an associate professor of urban and multicultural education at Macalester College and a leader in the development of Minnesota’s proposed ethnic studies curriculum, explicitly called for the “overthrow of the United States.” This goal has demonstrably shaped Minnesota’s ethnic studies standards, according to which students are taught as early as kindergarten that America is evil. The video recording of Lozenski was made two years ago but was taken down the day after it was spotted by Stanley Kurtz, senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center.
This finding is pertinent to the national electorate because Lozenski is one of many anti-American ideologues contributing the “liberated” ingredient to Democratic vice presidential candidate Tim Walz’s new ethnic studies requirements for public education in Minnesota . These requirements are decisively shaped by Critical Race Theory (CRT), of which ethnic studies is a variant.
As Kurtz aptly puts it, “…Essentially, ethnic studies is a kind of anti-civics in which students are taught to reject and replace America’s system of government.” CRT, of course, is part of the ideology Harris-Walz bring with them from the catastrophes of California and Minnesota straight to every schoolhouse in America.
Kurtz has provided a good overview of Walz’s education policies and the Lozenski connection . As Kurtz writes:
In a 2020 piece, “The Black Radical Tradition Can Help Us Imagine a More Just World ,” Lozenski touts the work of Cedric Robinson and Robin D. G. Kelley — leading thinkers of the radical ethnic-studies movement — as the answer to Minnesota’s education woes. To Lozenski, the George Floyd “uprising” of 2020 presages the “inevitable death” of the current “social order.” Lozenski oozes contempt for “the egoistic pursuits of U.S. society and its desperate cling to individualism.” Educationally, he adds, transforming the social order requires reforms like agitation for defunding the police and an end to all standardized testing.
Shockingly, other than the Center of the American Experiment and Kurtz, this topic has been lightly covered, though the Trump campaign is aware of it. We shall probably know in the upcoming Vance/Walz debate whether the Trump campaign will highlight this issue. If it doesn’t, others must. There is a real danger that this issue will vanish down the memory hole.
To make as explicit an assertion as did Lozenski is extremely rare; indeed, I have never seen or heard such an admission. The destructive intent of ethnic studies or CRT has been very apparent and much commented upon for many years by the conservative commentariat. But Lozenski’s open, cavalier articulation makes the destructive nature of ethnic studies virtually impossible to deny.
Defenders of ethnic studies may claim that Lozenski is an outlier, but as he is the leading figure in Minnesota’s ethnic studies movement and the prime mover of Minnesota’s ethnic studies initiative, it will not be possible to sustain such an denial. Although Democrats might try to stonewall until the election, the Republicans and the conservative media must not allow it.
Lozenski not only admitted the goal of ethnic studies is American destruction, but also chastised his many fellow travelers for not revealing their purpose. Again, this is no surprise to those who have been paying even the slightest attention.
Lozenski is tethered to Governor Walz. Walz’s Education Department appointed Lozenski to the ethnic studies “implementation framework” committee and ethnic studies is a critical initiative for Walz. In 2021 he introduced what he called his “Due North” education plan, which featured funding for a major ethnic-studies initiative . Speaking about the initiative during his State of the State address, he said:
This plan would tackle the racial and geographic opportunity gap by dramatically reforming school financing, expanding access to rigorous coursework, and ensuring our curriculum and teacher workforce better reflect our increasingly diverse student body.
To the unsuspecting there is nothing in this anodyne sentence to which to object. But, in fact, it mandates quotas. Unless everyone agrees to quotas and works tirelessly to achieve them, which would be more miraculous than Walz not knowing about the ethnic studies program, quotas would have to be imposed by force. Those who object would called be “racist.” If this did not shut them up, they would be censored, humiliated, intimidated, fired, deprived of financial and other critical services, subject to lawfare, even imprisoned. Tyranny is the inevitable result.
In addition to Walz’s announcement of his Due North program, there has been a very public, high decibel debate about his ethnic studies curriculum that Walz has defended vigorously.
If Walz disavows a desire to overthrow America, which he naturally would, he would have to explain why he appointed a man to lead his ethnic studies program who apparently disagreed.
And as Lozenski is tethered to Walz, so too Walz is tethered to Kamala Harris. How is it possible for a presidential candidate to have as a running mate someone who wishes to overthrow America? One scratches one’s head and cries at the same time. The revelation of Walz’s commitment to ethnic studies makes Walz not just “extremely liberal,” “extreme,” or “radical” (the usual descriptors of Walz), but an out-and-out revolutionary. That Walz is a revolutionary at very least suggests that so too is Kamala. And there is plenty of direct evidence to boot. Encouraging the 2020 riots as she did (on video), and freeing rioters, as she also did, are examples.
Reporters, at least honest ones, will now comb Walz’s record thoroughly in search of more evidence of revolutionary intent. Reporters also will, or should, look at the education practices of other states where they will find similarly revolutionary intent.
But there is even more. If the leaders of the Democratic Party are revolutionary then it strongly suggests that so is the entire Democratic Party, which is controlled by the destructive Left. I hope we would look closely at Democratic ideas, policies, and behaviors in light of their intent to destroy America : open borders, transgenderism, CRT, DEI, the claim that America is systemically racist, social justice, 1619 Project, 2020 riots, defunding the police, and many others. Each one of these programs and historical events is revolutionary. The election will remain about the economy, immigration, crime, abortion, education and so on, but Republicans should explain that the Democratic version of each of these policies serves the overall goal of destroying America . Senator Josh Hawley is one of very few politicians, perhaps the only one, who has publicly connected these various strands of the Democratic agenda.
Most Democrats, and here I leave aside the destructive Left, are decent and patriotic and do not wish to destroy America; but these well-meaning Democrats endorse each element of the destructive Left’s agenda. No individual element will destroy America but the sum of them will. These Democrats, who have no desire to destroy their country, will wake up one day and find they have (mostly) unintentionally done exactly that. I rather doubt Walz wants to overthrow America, at least not consciously . On the other hand, most every step he has made, including the required ethnic studies curricula, and most every step he will end up making, will culminate in the destruction of the American way of life.
The Lozenski episode, if properly trumpeted, will be the gift that keeps on giving . Lozenski has provided the right narrative for Republicans: America is being attacked by a revolutionary regime, Kamalism, which aims to destroy America. There really is no alternative narrative.
Here Trump might refer to Kamala as “Destructive Kamala” and the Democratic Party as the “Destructive Party.” Other Republicans must be as vocal. Vikek Ramaswamy is a good candidate to lead on this issue. He has a good handle on Kamalism and is charismatic, someone who can galvanize a movement. Sen. Hawley can also serve this role. He understands that Kamalism wants to destroy America, and he has, in effect, framed his Senate campaign accordingly; as I noted, he understands that the various elements of Democratic agenda are all designed to serve a common end: the destruction of America.
Republicans must make it crystal clear that Walz’s ethnic studies program is emblematic of a future Harris-Walz regime. Republicans must tie this program to Kamala’s campaign and remind her and likely voters that she has chosen a man who wants to destroy America, whether he knows it or not.
Trump’s base is primed to go and with the proper leadership will meet the challenge. I pray that all Republicans and conservatives do the same.
Tom Klingenstein is the chairman of the Claremont Institute, a public speaker, a writer, a philanthropist, and a playwright. This article was first published at TomKlingenstein.com .
Tyler Durden
Thu, 10/03/2024 - 06:30 Close
Thu, 03 Oct 2024 10:01:00 +0000 Prosecutors Seek Indefinite Delay In Trial Of Alleged Trump Assassin Over "Complex" Evidence
Prosecutors Seek Indefinite Delay In Trial Of Alleged Trump Assassin Over "Complex" Evidence
Federal prosecutors on Wednesday requested an indefinite delay in the upcoming trial of Ryan Routh , the man accused of att
Read more.....
Prosecutors Seek Indefinite Delay In Trial Of Alleged Trump Assassin Over "Complex" Evidence
Federal prosecutors on Wednesday requested an indefinite delay in the upcoming trial of Ryan Routh , the man accused of attempting to assassinate former President Donald Trump, claiming that a massive trove of evidence has emerged in recent weeks rendering the case "complex," ABC News reports.
According to a Wednesday filing with Florida District Judge Aileen Cannon , prosecutors have gathered too much evidence to proceed to trial - including hundreds of witness interviews, 13 search warrants, and the seizure of "multiple electronic devices" from locations in Florida, Hawaii, and North Carolina. The overwhelming amount of digital data to review - around 4,000 terabytes - allegedly led to the request.
The FBI also continues to conduct forensic tests on other evidence , including "ballistics testing, and fingerprint and DNA comparisons," which will likely require them to prepare several expert witnesses to testify about in advance of Routh's eventual trial.
The filing states Routh's defense attorneys did not oppose the government's request to indefinitely delay his trial date.
Routh, 58, appeared in federal court in West Palm Beach, Florida, on Monday for his arraignment on attempted assassination charges. Routh's lawyers entered a not guilty plea on his behalf. -ABC News
The delay request came just one day after Judge Cannon had set a tentative trial date of November 18. But with prosecutors still awaiting over 100 subpoena responses and conducting forensic analysis, including ballistics and DNA testing, the government says their case is far from ready to proceed.
Routh allegedly staked out the Trump International Golf Course in Florida for 12 hours on September 15 , waiting for the former president to arrive. According to prosecutors, his attempt was thwarted when Secret Service agents spotted a rifle poking through the golf course fence. Routh was later apprehended on I-95.
The incident echoes a previous attempt on Trump's life just two months prior, when gunman Thomas Matthew Crooks opened fire at a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania. Crooks' attack injured Trump and left one attendee dead.
h/t Post Millennial
Tyler Durden
Thu, 10/03/2024 - 06:01 Close
Thu, 03 Oct 2024 09:45:00 +0000 Israel Cannot Fight A Multi-Front War Without Support From The US Military
Israel Cannot Fight A Multi-Front War Without Support From The US Military
The recent missile barrage striking Israel from Iran showcased a security reality that has startled many people in the west - Israel's "Iron Dome" defense s
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Israel Cannot Fight A Multi-Front War Without Support From The US Military
The recent missile barrage striking Israel from Iran showcased a security reality that has startled many people in the west - Israel's "Iron Dome" defense system is not as effective as they believed. Evidence suggests it was clearly overwhelmed, either by the sheer number of missiles (estimates vary but al least 200 were fired), or by new Iranian hypersonic technology. Either way, this one attack changed the prevailing perspective on Israeli air defense.
VIDEO
The media and government officials claim the Iranian salvo was "ineffective" and they have so far reported no casualties, but it's clear from the numerous videos circulating on social media that extensive damage was done from dozens of impacts. It's unlikely Israel will admit to any successful strikes as this would only be giving valuable intel to Iran, but using geo-location and the existing footage online it won't take Iran's military leadership long to figure out what worked and what didn't.
The escalation from Iran was in response to Israel's carefully planned assassination campaign against Hezbollah's military leadership in Lebanon, including Hassan Nasrallah. The attack, using pagers sabotaged with secretly planted explosive charges, then culminated in targeted missile strikes. The event came only two months after Israel assassinated Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh while he was on Iranian soil.
There are two ways to look at Israel's strategy: It was an attempt to decapitate enemy leadership and send their forces into disarray so that a larger war could be avoided. Or, it was intended to enrage Iran and draw them into a larger war.
If the latter option is the case, then Israel would have to be operating on the assumption that the US will supply military forces to the fight, because Israel will not be able to survive a multi-front war of this scale alone.
In the past Israel relied on its weapons superiority to dissuade potential attacks from neighbors, but that gap is obviously narrowing as we saw with Iran's missile strikes this week. Lessons from Ukraine should also be taken into account here - Israeli armor might not have the same battlefield presence it once did if cheap drones are so effective in destroying vastly more expensive tanks.
In 2006, Israel attempted a ground invasion of Lebanon with disastrous results, which is probably why this time they struck Hezbollah leadership first. However, Israel seems intent on fighting the whole of the Middle East at once and this changes the situation dramatically.
The ground game, as we have seen in Ukraine, does not favor maneuver warfare due to drones and other modern intel gathering technology. The nations with the greatest manpower have a significant advantage when it comes to attrition warfare and that is likely how this war will be fought. Iran by itself has a considerable manpower edge over Israel.
If we examine basic population, Iran has a massive advantage with over 88 million people vs Israel's 9.5 million people, and that's not counting Lebanon, Syria, the Houthis in Yemen, etc. Iran's ability to replenish their forces with new recruits through conscription will certainly outmatch Israel's conscription. Again, we have seen this with Russia's military in Ukraine.
No technology (except perhaps nuclear weapons) would level the playing field and give Israel the ability to win in a ground war on multiple fronts. This means the Israelis will need an allied effort, and guess which country is the only candidate for the task?
Joe Biden stated after the Iranian strikes :
“Make no mistake, the United States is fully, fully, fully supportive of Israel..."
Asked how he wanted Israel to respond, Biden said this was a matter in “active discussion” and that the consequences for Tehran “remain to be seen.” Kamala Harris released her own statement backing Biden's position:
“Iran is not only a threat to Israel, Iran is also a threat to American personnel in the region, American interests and innocent civilians across the region who suffer at the hands of Iran-based and backed terrorist proxies...We will never hesitate to take whatever action is necessary to defend US forces and interests against Iran and Iran-backed terrorists, and we will continue to work with our allies and partners to disrupt Iran’s aggressive behavior and hold them accountable.”
These statements fall in line with a joint military exercise and war game carried out in recent months called "Juniper Oak". The program was designed to prepare for inevitable war between Israel and the wider Middle East and requires participation by US forces by air, sea and land.
For those millions of Americans that want to stay out of foreign wars and entanglements, the situation does not look good. For those wondering what the October surprise would be, war with Iran and most of the Middle East could be the shoe-drop that everyone was waiting for.
The situation could very well upend the presidential election in November and change the voter landscape yet again. Even with a Trump win, Biden has plenty of time to embroil the US in a war with Iran before leaving office in 2025. The Harris camp argues that a change of leadership and policy in the mist of a geopolitical crisis would be damaging to US security. In other words, they get America involved in a quagmire in the Middle East and then claim the quagmire requires that they stay in office.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 10/03/2024 - 05:45 Close
Thu, 03 Oct 2024 09:45:00 +0000 Second "Gentleman" Doug Emhoff 'Forcefully Slapped' His Ex-Girlfriend So Hard 'She Spun Around', New Report Alleges
Second "Gentleman" Doug Emhoff 'Forcefully Slapped' His Ex-Girlfriend So Hard 'She Spun Around', New Report Alleges
Kamala Harris' husband Doug Emhoff reportedly assaulted his ex-girlfriend by hitting her in the face so hard "she sp
Read more.....
Second "Gentleman" Doug Emhoff 'Forcefully Slapped' His Ex-Girlfriend So Hard 'She Spun Around', New Report Alleges
Kamala Harris' husband Doug Emhoff reportedly assaulted his ex-girlfriend by hitting her in the face so hard "she spun around", according to a bombshell new exclusive by the Daily Mail.
Emhoff allegedly struck the woman, referred to as "Jane," in the face while waiting in a valet line after a 2012 Cannes Film Festival event, according to the DailyMail.com.
Jane, a New York attorney, reportedly called a friend sobbing in a cab after the incident and told others about the alleged assault at the time. Friends provided photos and documents from 2012 to support parts of the story but chose to remain anonymous, citing fear of retaliation.
Jane’s friends said she received tickets from wealthy connections to attend the exclusive amfAR Gala Dinner at Hotel du Cap in Antibes, France, on May 24, 2012.
The alleged assault occurred after the event, where celebrities like Heidi Klum and Harvey Weinstein were present. Jane, who brought Emhoff as her guest, later called a friend sobbing, saying her date had hit her.
The friend recalled Jane describing how Emhoff slapped her after she offered a valet money to skip a taxi line, which he misinterpreted as flirting.
'She slapped him back. My impression is that he had a lot to drink. She was sobbing [on the phone afterwards], but she wasn't slurring her words. She told me that she broke up with him that night,' one friend told the Daily Mail .
A second friend, also a New York attorney, said Jane recounted the incident, describing how Emhoff slapped her out of nowhere around 2-3 a.m. after a pleasant evening.
Emhoff and 'Jane' - Photo: Daily Mail
Jane said she was talking to a valet when Emhoff suddenly turned her around and slapped her hard, causing her to spin. Shocked, she slapped him back twice.
'She said she wanted to go back to the hotel without him. But while she was shutting the door, he forced himself into the car, which she did not want.' the friend said.
Jane was embarrassed and described it as a “trailer trash moment,” realizing it revealed his true character.
A third friend said Jane told her the story in 2018, telling the Daily Mail: 'She had never been hit in her life. [Jane] is a gorgeous, strong woman and you would never expect somebody to hit her.'
Recall, just days ago Jen Psaki swooned over Emhoff on MSNBC in a sit-down interview , stating he was reshaping masculinity and calling him a 'supportive spouse'.
"There is also an important, interesting part about how people have talked about your role is how your role has reshaped the perception of masculinity," Psaki said to Emhoff.
"I’m not sure you planned on that, but you are an incredibly supportive spouse. Has that been an evolution for you? Do you think that’s part of the role you might play as First Gentleman?"
Emhoff responded: "It’s funny. I’ve started to think a lot about this. I’ve always been like this . My dad’s always been like this. To me, it’s the right thing to do, support women. It is mutual with Kamala and I. We support each other, we have each other’s back,"
He continued: "I’ve said many times when we lift up women, we support women whether it’s pay equity, childcare, family leave, and all of these issues in this post-Dobbs hellscape. Women should not be less than. Women should not have less rights and be treated differently. That’s not the American way."
Ironically, Emhoff also said days ago about Trump: “Make no mistake, where he says I will be the protector of women, that is yet more lies and more gaslighting.”
Or said another way...
You can read the full Daily Mail report here .
Tyler Durden
Thu, 10/03/2024 - 05:45 Close
Thu, 03 Oct 2024 09:00:00 +0000 From Controversy To Cutting-Edge: The Fountain Of Youth
From Controversy To Cutting-Edge: The Fountain Of Youth
From Controversy To Cutting-Edge: The Fountain Of Youth
Authored by JP Errico via RealClearHealth ,
Over the past several years, I’ve watched with sadness as the reputation of medical science has taken it on the chin. The pandemic polluted the public’s opinion of the purity of science and nobility of medicine.
Worst of all, science was taken hostage as much as truth was.
True scientists and honest doctors, asking important questions, were ignored, or worse, canceled. It was replaced by political grandstanding and pharmaceutical profit-taking, and our fellow citizens took note.
Scientific journals of the highest regard were strongarmed into publishing articles generated by lawyers and PR firms , only to then have those papers exposed as lies and retracted. Recent admissions by the likes of Mark Zuckerberg have revealed that government bureaucrats exerted pressure on social media companies to dress up opinions as facts to serve an agenda.
Science has emerged from this hostage-taking as a scarred shell of its former self. Is it any wonder that the percentage of the general population who hold medical science in high regard dropped by a whopping 40% from 2020 to 2023?
Society’s lost reverence for science is a catastrophic turn. I am, therefore, going to attempt to resuscitate your fascination and hope in medical science. If you can’t find excitement and promise in the heroic advances I am revealing, I submit that you may require an imagination transplant.
Our hero story begins in the swirl of controversy that surrounds the use of embryonic stem cells (ESCs). Although everyone saw promise in their power to develop into any type of cell in the body, ESCs were typically sourced from aborted fetuses. Battle lines were drawn; and when politics and ethics said “No, find another way,” science stepped up and answered.
In 2006 and 2007, Shinya Yamanaka put the controversy to rest, through a stunning scientific breakthrough that enabled the creation of stem cells at least as powerful as ESCs, called induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) . While many scientists wait decades for their discoveries to receive the recognition necessary for a Nobel Prize, Yamanaka collected his in 2012. By the time he gave his lecture in Stockholm, however, the revolutionary door he had cracked opened was already being blown open with the possibility of so much more.
In a nutshell, what Yamanaka discovered was that all cells have buried in their DNA the genes for four proteins – now simply referred to as OSKM , or as the Yamanaka Factors. In adult cells that have gone through the process of becoming fully mature, the Yamanaka genes are normally silenced by mechanisms referred to as epigenetic controls . When re-activated, however, they induce the cells to reverse their maturation state, reverting all the way back to their original pluripotent state. For example, Yamanaka’s discovery enabled scientists to take an adult skin cell and turn it into a cell as powerful as an ESC.
Beyond Stem Cells: The Quest for Rejuvenation
This discovery was immediately hailed by everyone for its potential in medicine. Soon, however, a small collection of leading aging researchers began asking the question: If mature cells could be reprogrammed into ISPCs, could the process be harnessed to rejuvenate aging cells without turning them back into stem cells? In effect, could Yamanaka’s discovery be a map to the Fountain of Youth?
Juan Carlos Izpisua Belmonte of the Salk Institute in La Jolla, California was one of those asking this question. He and his team soon discovered the exciting answer, which is that short, controlled bursts activating the OSK genes (minus the M) could rejuvenate cells without reverting them from differentiated cells into stem cells. This process, which they called partial reprogramming, wasn’t simply a tune-up or a cosmetic makeover, partial reprogramming returned fundamental cellular structures and processes to a younger state, but it didn’t change them back to stem cells.
To understand how this works, I need to explain two key features of the aging process: epigenetic drift and telomere attrition . Epigenetics, as we introduced above, is the control systems that cells employ to ensure that mature cells only express the genes (i.e., make proteins from the genes) that that type of cell needs, locking away all the genes that make different types of cells actually be different. Aging slowly weakens and deteriorates these epigenetic controls, leading to cells producing proteins they shouldn’t, clogging them up, slowing them down, and even causing cancer and degeneration. The other feature of aging involves telomeres, which are protective endcaps on chromosomes, and their progressive shortening with age. Keeping telomeres robust and in place is believed to preserve cellular youth.
Belmonte’s partial reprogramming appears to reset both epigenetic drift and telomere attrition to a much younger state. Personally, I find it amazing that Belmonte’s discovery, frankly, didn’t have to be this way. As Vittorio Sebastiano of Stanford has marveled, there’s nothing that indicates that short bursts of the Yamanaka factor activation should restore cells to a youthful state before reverting them to stem cells. It’s as if Mother Nature went out of her way to gift cells with a natural ability to age in reverse, and we simply needed to discover it.
The Next Frontier: Small Molecule Drugs for Rejuvenation
Academic scientists like David Sinclair and Vadim Gladyshev of Harvard, are not wasting time in their pursuit of small molecule cocktails that can replicate partial reprogramming. Not surprisingly, investors and tech entrepreneurs (like Amazon’s Jeff Bezos) are pouring billions into start-ups, like Altos Labs, who have secured the services of Yamanaka and Belmonte (along with other big names in longevity research) to deliver the Fountain of Youth to the world. Not to be outdone, Alphabet (Google) is funding Calico, a competitor to Altos Labs, that has hired its own cadre of longevity scientists, like Cynthia Kenyon and David Botstein.
I hope America still loves a comeback story, especially one as heroic as the battle against aging. So, while enthusiasm for medical science has waned over the past few years, it is hard not to see how the promise of conquering death – at least in a battle or two – is worth giving actual scientists a chance to redeem their tarnished reputation.
* * *
JP Errico is a highly accomplished scientist with a diverse range of expertise as an executive, entrepreneur, and inventor. He is an expert on the Autonomic Nervous System. He is the Founder of ElectroCore, where he pioneered a non-invasive Vagus Nerve stimulator. JP has been credited as an inventor on over 250 issued US patents. He went to MIT for undergrad and holds graduate degrees in both law and mechanical/materials engineering from Duke University.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 10/03/2024 - 05:00 Close