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Thursday, May 9, 2024

Biden: Economy's great because Americans 'have money to spend' on inflated prices of goods

 By Monica Showalter

Joe Biden is finally out campaigning, and despite reports that he's dropped the term 'Bidenomics,' as a selling point with voters, still says the economy is doing great because Americans 'have the money to spend.'

Naturally, he gave an interview with CNN:

 

According to the Daily Mail:

President Joe Biden stubbornly refused to admit Americans' struggles with inflation might cost him the election in a rare interview Wednesday. 

Biden, who was in Wisconsin to tout his record on the economy and to announce an investment by Microsoft to build a factory, defended his handling of inflation.

Polls show voters are nervous and critical of Biden's handling of the economy and anchor Erin Burnett reminded him that grocery prices are up 30 percent.  

But Biden, in his interview with CNN, claimed the polls are wrong and Americans struggling with inflation have more cash in their pockets, saying: 'They have the money to spend.'

Was he mixing up the voters with himself? We all know he has more money to spend, just ask Burisma or the Chicoms who hand it to his family business

Or was he just gaslighting the public into another solar system?

The idea that Americans have money to spend is nonsense all by itself, given the rise in grocery, gasoline, housing, consumer, medical, education and other goods they have no choice but to buy.

But even if they did have all that extra money to spend that he claims, does he really think that American like spending their extra cash on inflated prices of goods and services? Might they like to spend it on something else?

Here are the hard statistics:

Wages are down nearly 3% since he took office, while prices of groceries alone have gone up 30%.

According to Fox Business in an April 9 report:

The country's inflation-adjusted, or "real" average hourly wage, as of February 2024 is $11.11 per hour, a decrease of 29 cents from $11.40 in Jan. 2021, or minus 2.54%.

The first three months of Biden's term saw wages grow faster than inflation. But beginning in April 2021, American workers experienced 25 consecutive months of negative real wage growth, averaging -2.0%.

As for credit cards, well, one third of Americans are maxxing those out bigtime.

According to a report in Forbes, dated April 18, also citing Fox Business:

The increase in credit card debt signals that many Americans are struggling to pay for basic needs. Roughly 45% of Americans said that inflation and rising prices are why they've relied so heavily on credit cards, the Debt.com survey said. Nearly 9% of all respondents said they got a credit card to pay for a financial emergency. Moreover, 35% of Americans said they have maxed out their credit cards in recent years. Of those who had maxed out their credit cards, 85% said they were pushed to use their cards to the limit because of price increases from inflation. Approximately 22% of Americans said they now owe between $10,000 to $20,000 in credit card debt, and 5% have more than $30,000. [Fox Business]

How about those who've already maxxed their cards out, what do they do? Next stop, raids on 401(k)s for retirement. What do they look like under Bidenomics?

According to Investopedia, citing one major 401(k) provider:

As inflation and high interest rates pressure household budgets, more people are using their retirement plans as a kind of self-funded safety net, according to a new report.

Out of people with 401ks through Vanguard, 3.6% took “hardship withdrawals” in 2023, up from 2.8% in 2022, the financial company said in a report Monday. That was the highest level in at least the 19 years Vanguard has been keeping track.1

Does that sound like people who 'have the money to spend' as Joe Biden claims, proud of his 'accomplishments' on the economy?

Not to any American who has to live in his crappy economy. The man is profoundly out of touch with voters.

Here's the second half of his out-of-touch baloney, from the Daily Mail:

He blamed 'greedy corporations' for consumers' lack of confidence.

Would those be the same greedy corporations that donate to Democrats? Most corporate donations go that way. Maybe his Democrats can give back all those corporate donations so that corporations can restore prices to what they were?

Something tells me that's not something Joe's gonna propose.

But more to the point, the fundamental problem creating inflation is that Biden has expanded the size and scope of government to unsustainable levels. Inflation, as economist Milton Friedman has said, is "always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon." It doesn't come from oil. It doesn't come from egg farms. It doesn't come from corporate "greed" when companies are forced to raise their prices. It comes from Biden's compulsive spending. The national debt is growing by $1 trillion every three months, and interest payments from all that borrowing and money printing it takes to borrow now exceed defense expenditures.

That's money for nothing, money to service the debt, money that could go to something productive but not with the Biden ball-and-chain of unchecked spending and gaslighting going on in the economy. That's where inflation comes from, not from candy-bar sizes, but from monster money-printing going in an economy that doesn't produce enough growth to cover it.

He's shut the economy down, but kept the money printing, and taken America down the road to Argentina. Yet still he blames gas station owners and "greedy" corporations instead of himself for his own spendathons that fuel the inflation Americans must pay for. Then he says Americans have more money to spend. Note also that wealth is created by savings, not spending, something Biden, based on what he taught Hunter, wouldn't have the first clue about.

If this isn't economic idiocy of the most embarrassing sort, coming from the so-called leader of the free world, what is? One can only hope that Republicans are watching and can use this out-of-touch-old fool's campaign statements to the public in their own campaign ads instead.

https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2024/05/joe_biden_says_economy_s_great_because_americans_have_the_money_to_spend_on_inflated_prices_of_goods.html 

CISA, FBI Resuming Talks With Social Media Firms Over Disinformation Removal, Senate Intel Chair Says

 by David Dimolfetta via nextgov.com,

Key federal agencies have resumed discussions with social media companies over removing disinformation on their sites as the November presidential election nears, a stark reversal after the Biden administration for months froze communications with social platforms amid a pending First Amendment case in the Supreme Court, a top senator said Monday.

Mark Warner, D-Va., who chairs the Senate Intelligence Committee, told reporters in a briefing at RSA Conference that agencies restarted talks with social media companies as the Supreme Court heard arguments in Murthy v. Missouri, a case that first began in the Fifth Circuit appellate court last July. The case was fueled by allegations that federal agencies like the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency were coercing platforms to remove content related to vaccine safety and 2020 presidential election results.

The Supreme Court is expected to decide whether agencies are allowed to stay in touch with social media firms about potential disinformation. Missouri's then-Attorney General Eric Schmitt filed the suit on the grounds that the Biden administration violated First Amendment rights pertaining to free speech online in a bid to suppress politically conservative voices.

According to Warner, communications between agencies and social platforms resumed roughly around the same time that multiple justices appeared to favor the executive branch’s stance on the issue, he said. 

“There seemed to be a lot of sympathy that the government ought to have at least voluntary communications with [the companies],” he said, adding that, in the event of election interference attempts akin to Russia in 2016, the Biden administration should more forcefully call out nation-state entities that attempt to meddle in the U.S. election process.

Warner said his committee will convene a hearing on elections security in two weeks. The panel was supposed to hold the session with CISA Director Jen Easterly and Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines last month, but it was postponed amid GOP attempts to impeach Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas.

For around six months, agencies chilled their communications with social firms about election security and other disinformation flash points. Warner previously said that White House lawyers had been “too timid” in their legal interpretation of the case, especially given that the high court allowed the Biden administration to temporarily continue their talks until a ruling was made.

Officials fear that a loss of faith in electoral systems at home could lead to a repeat of the widespread voter fraud claims that occurred during the 2020 presidential election, which ended in the January 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol. On the domestic front, content moderator staff reductions at social media companies have also been deemed a major risk to election integrity, and election workers worry they will face threats of violence from voters who don’t accept the polling results.

Additionally, artificial intelligence tools have already been used to augment election disruption efforts around the world.

“If the bad guy started to launch AI-driven tools that would threaten election officials in key communities, that clearly falls into the foreign interference category,” said Warner, though it may not necessarily take a formal definition of misinformation, and may be deemed a “whole other vector of attack,” he added.

Foreign adversaries have been found deploying fake social media personas that have engaged with or provoked real-life users in an attempt to assess U.S. domestic issues and learn what political themes divide voters.

The U.S. has been putting its foot down in diplomacy talks on election interference, telling major economic adversaries like China to not intervene in election processes come November. Two weeks ago in Shanghai and Beijing, cyberspace and digital policy ambassador Nathaniel Fick and Secretary of State Anthony Blinken gave a stern warning to Chinese officials about election dynamics.

The secretary … delivered a very clear message that we view interference in our domestic democratic process as dangerous and unacceptable,” Fick said in a separate RSA briefing with reporters Monday. “Diplomacy is most important when it is most challenging, which is why the discussions with the Chinese at this moment matter a lot,” he said.

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/cisa-fbi-resuming-talks-social-media-firms-over-disinformation-removal-senate-intel-chair

People have chosen lower-cost items they buy online: report

 Shoppers have been trading down in online purchases.

placeholderThat was what Adobe Analytics said Thursday in a report that also showed online spending in the fourth-month period spanning January to April hit $331.6 billion in what represented a 7% year-over-year increase.

Its data indicated goods on the lower-cost end in categories like personal care, electronics, apparel, home/garden, furniture/bedding and grocery have been increasingly favored by online shoppers.

Online shopping using smartphone

Some retail experts and financial lending providers are saying "buy now, pay later" programs are the new layaway. (iStock / iStock)

Adobe said its findings about trade-downs came from it monitoring the "shares of units sold in the most expensive and least expensive quartiles" for prices of big e-commerce categories from January 2019 to April 2024. 

The personal care category saw a 96% jump in the share of the least-expensive goods, while electronics and apparel posted increases of 64% and 47%, respectively, in theirs, according to the company.

Adobe pegged the share of the cheapest goods for grocery as rising 33%. Meanwhile, there was an increase of 42% in the share of the cheapest goods for both home/garden and furniture/bedding.

There has also been trading down in sporting goods, appliances, home improvement and toys bought online, but to a lesser extent, according to Adobe.

placeholder
online shopping

Adobe Analytics says shoppers have been trading down in online purchases. (iStock)

"Months of persistent inflation has led shoppers to embrace cheaper goods across major e-commerce categories," the company said in its report.

In March, the consumer price index showed a 0.4% month-over-month increase and a 3.5% year-over-year increase. That index reached a peak of 9.1% in 2022, as FOX Business previously reported.

Nonetheless, Adobe’s report said growth in online spending "remains resilient," pointing to "stable spend" in electronics and apparel and more spending in grocery from January through April of this year.

In that time frame, those categories notched $61.8 billion, $52.5 billion and $38.8 billion in online shopping sales, respectively, according to the company. The categories’ figures also represented increases of varying degrees.

Buying online

"Months of persistent inflation has led shoppers to embrace cheaper goods across major e-commerce categories," Adobe Analytics said in its report. (iStock)

"In an unpredictable economic environment, the latest data from Adobe Analytics shows continued resilience in the digital economy, as consumers embrace new categories online," Vivek Pandya, Adobe Analytics Digital Insights lead analyst, said in a statement. "Groceries is a standout, and Adobe expects that in the next three years the category will be a dominant force in e-commerce that is on par with electronics and apparel in revenue share."

Overall, purchases by online shoppers will wind up amounting to more than $500 billion for 2024’s first six months, the company said.

It noted the online sales seen this year were thanks to "net-new demand" instead of higher prices.

https://www.foxbusiness.com/economy/people-have-chosen-lower-cost-items-buy-online-report

KUDLOW: Democrats are trying to spend and borrow to buy the election

 You would think that with consumer prices up nearly 20% since Joe Biden took office and with a Consumer Price Index snapback in recent months to nearly 5% annually — way above the Fed's 2% target — that Joe Biden, who's in a heap of trouble on the inflation issue to begin with, would want to do something to curb inflation and maybe somehow salvage the election. 

If you thought that, you would be totally wrong. Biden has no such intention. By the way, Biden is the guy who just told an interviewer that he inherited a 9% inflation rate. 

Actually, Donald Trump handed over a 1.4% inflation rate, which Joe Biden subsequently ran up to 9% with a massive federal spending and borrowing spree. 

Speaking of massive federal and borrowing, a bunch of recent articles have just come out showing that Biden would just love to spend the up to $1.6 trillion of money that Congress has approved, but the federal bureaucracy has not yet spent out. 

The unspent money covers clean energy, electric vehicles, various climate change giveaways, subsidies and tax credits, along with semiconductor manufacturing and who knows what. 

The misnamed Inflation Reduction Act is a big culprit in this story. It is still spending out, but even going back to March 2021, which some call the "original sin" of inflation, there's still COVID money spending out! 

Really, you can't make this stuff up, and actually, it would be a monumental task requiring some of the greatest minds alive today to devise ways to spend $1.6 trillion of federal money in the next six months. 

Judging from Joe Biden's overall performance, he is not in possession of the greatest minds today, but they are all trying their hardest to spend and borrow and somehow buy the election. There's even another $350 billion remaining under the guise of COVID-19 relief. This is for state and local governments. It's called the Coronavirus State and Local Fiscal Recovery Fund. 

It's bad enough that this thing is still kicking around as a holdover from the misbegotten American Rescue Place of March 2021, but this money is supposed to be spent before the end of this year. Now, the Biden Treasury has decided that if the states and localities plan to spend it after the statutory deadline, they can go on ahead and spend it.         

Is this a great country or what? Now, Republicans will have opportunities to stop this avalanche of inflationary spending, but they're going to have to get to work in the next 90 days. Meanwhile, the potential inflationary consequences of these dreadful policies could well lead to much higher interest rates and, of course, much greater deficits and borrowing and inflation, but Joe Biden does not care one whit about inflation. 

He thinks he's going to win the election this way. Well, Joe — remember this: FDR had four terms. You may only have one. 

https://www.foxbusiness.com/media/larry-kudlow-democrats-trying-spend-borrow-buy-election

100 Million Scripts Came Through Illegal Online Pharmacies Last Year

 Patients obtained nearly 100 million prescriptions through illegal online pharmacies in 2023, according to a report from the IQVIA Institute for Human Data Scienceopens in a new tab or window


That figure is up 47% from 2019, and represents about 2% of total prescriptions dispensed in the U.S., according to the report's lead research director Michael Kleinrock.

"People are going to these websites that don't have pharmacy licensing in the U.S.," Kleinrock told MedPage Today. "Maybe [the products] are counterfeit, maybe they're imported from another region."

People are driven there by a host of factors, he said. Maybe the online pharmacy is "offering a price lower than you've been getting on the market, or there's extreme demand, or maybe there's stigma or barriers to accessing the medicine."

"That 2% of overall volume is going through this illegal channel, that's a concern for us," Kleinrock said. "That's another crack in the system."

The most common medicines purchased this way include those that are highly regulated -- such as opioids and drugs for attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) -- and those where patient demand is high and shortages limit supply -- such as ADHD drugs and GLP-1 agonists, according to the report.

In fact, GLP-1 agonists account for an increasing share of drugs sold through illegal online pharmacies, growing from 1.1% in 2019 to over 7% in 2023, the report stated.

That's a concerning trend, as poison control centers received over 2,900 calls related to the GLP-1 agonist semaglutide (Ozempic, Wegovy, Rybelsus) in 2023 -- 15 times the number of calls in 2019, according to the report.

Since the pandemic began, the IQVIA Institute for Human Data Science has been publishing the Health Services Utilization Index, a composite view of many types of health services including patient visits, screenings and diagnostic tests, elective procedures, prescriptions, and vaccinations. These essential components of the health system show how "healthy" it is, Kleinrock said, as levels of utilization ensure that Americans are receiving all the preventive and treatment services that they need.

Overall, the 2023 index fell 3% from the year prior, due to fewer healthcare visits, screening and diagnostic tests, elective procedures, and vaccinations, the report found.

"We're using less of the health system than we did in 2022," Kleinrock said. "There's a degree of disengagement going on ... and that's a little concerning."

While most indicators had a 4% to 6% reduction, new prescriptions were up 4%, driven by the return of historic levels of seasonal respiratory illness following significant disruption through the pandemic, according to the report.

Total retail prescriptions reached 6.9 billion in 2023, about 3% growth from the year prior. GLP-1 agonists (for obesity and diabetes combined) accounted for 16% of prescriptions in 2023, the report found.

Vaccinations, on the other hand, aren't faring so well. Both routine adult and pediatric vaccination rates are below pre-pandemic levels, although adult vaccination rates have improved since 2021, the report found.

Notably, flu vaccination rates in 2023 fell by 17% from the year prior, according to the report.

Telehealth wasn't all that healthy, either, with virtual visits accounting for 5% of total visits in 2023, down from 26% at their peak in April 2020. Still, the figure is up from less than 1% of visits prior to the pandemic, "suggesting a larger role of telehealth post-pandemic," the report stated.

However, one caveat in the report is that "subscription-based telehealth services such as Hims & Hers Health, Ro, and BetterHelp, are paid for by patients out-of-pocket, and do not result in medical claims, potentially leading to an underestimate of the overall impact of telehealth on the health system."

Patients paid $91 billion in out-of-pocket costs in 2023, an increase of $5 billion over the year prior, and most of the increased spend was on retail drugs.

Manufacturers helped offset out-of-pocket costs by providing copay assistance, which totaled $23 billion last year.

While the out-of-pocket figure seems high, most prescriptions (92%) have a final out-of-pocket cost below $20, the report found. Just 1% of prescriptions -- though that translates to 71 million scripts -- cost above $125 out-of-pocket.

Data for the report come from numerous IQVIA sources, including its longitudinal prescription data, which handles nearly 4 billion prescription claims per year, and its medical claims data, which includes more than 205 million patients and over 1.7 billion claims.

https://www.medpagetoday.com/special-reports/features/110030

'83% of Adults With Generalized Anxiety Disorder Symptoms Are Undiagnosed'

 Almost a quarter of surveyed U.S. adults met criteria for generalized anxiety disorder (GAD), though the vast majority of them were undiagnosed, a retrospective cross-sectional study suggested here.

Out of 75,261 respondents to the online 2022 National Health and Wellness Survey, 23.3% screened positive for anxiety using the 7-Item GAD Questionnaireopens in a new tab or window, Daniel Karlin, MD, chief medical officer of MindMed in New York City, reported here at the American Psychiatric Associationopens in a new tab or window annual meeting.

Of those who screened positive, 83.1% had never received a GAD diagnosis. Most (55.1%) of the individuals screening positive had moderate symptoms while 44.9% had severe symptoms.

Last year, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommendedopens in a new tab or window that all adults up to age 64 be screened for anxiety in the primary care setting, including for GAD, in order to avoid delays in diagnosis and treatment. But Karlin explained that estimates of undiagnosed GAD had been outdated or based on small samples.

If the proportions identified by Karlin and his team were broadened to the entire U.S. population, it would represent around 59 million adults with GAD, 49 million of whom are undiagnosed.

"There are a lot of people walking around with symptoms that are severe enough for them to have moderate to severe GAD who've never been diagnosed," he told MedPage Today. "The burden of illness of undiagnosed GAD is remarkably high."

"These findings reflect something that we're missing as a healthcare system, that there are people who have this severe anxiety, they aren't sure what to do [or] what there is to be done about it," he said. "We need to be doing a better job of screening for anxiety disorders, and then intervening when we detect them."

Karlin said that for a long time there has been a greater focus placed on diagnosing and treating major depressive disorder (MDD), but GAD and MDD are "overlapping diseases," he noted.

"We need to continue to recognize that distress comes in different flavors, and that no single flavor is more important than any other," Karlin added. "Let's make sure we're paying attention to anxiety as well as depression."

A few characteristics stood out among adults with GAD who were undiagnosed. They were more likely to be younger, male, smokers, alcohol drinkers, employed, and have a higher income when compared with controls without GAD symptoms or those already diagnosed with GAD:

  • Age: 37.5 vs 51.8 vs 42.1 years, respectively
  • Male: 54% vs 49% vs 26%
  • Current smoker: 36% vs 15% vs 23%
  • Alcohol drinker: 72% vs 64% vs 65%
  • Employed: 75% vs 55% vs 50%
  • Income of $75,000 or higher: 59% vs 46% vs 26%

The group with undiagnosed GAD were also less likely to be white (51% vs 65% vs 69%, respectively) and less likely to have overweight or obesity (45% vs 62% vs 68%).

Karinn Glover, MD, MPH, a psychiatrist at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York City, wasn't surprised to see people with GAD report higher rates of alcohol use, pointing out how untreated anxiety is linked with substance use.

"I certainly wonder how many of those who screened positive for anxiety also have relied heavily on alcohol or cannabis to manage anxiety and to what extent that use might meet criteria for misuse or a disorder," Glover, who wasn't involved with the research, told MedPage Today.

In another poster presented here led by Karlin and colleagues, adults with undiagnosed GAD also tended to have a poorer quality of life. Compared with diagnosed adults, undiagnosed adults had significantly fewer healthcare provider visits in the past 6 months (3.0 vs 8.7) but had a significantly higher number of hospitalizations (1.2 vs 0.3) and emergency room (ER) visits (1.3 vs 0.5; P<0.001 for all).

The Work Productivity and Activity Impairment Questionnaire also showed that undiagnosed adults had scores for absenteeism, presenteeism, overall work productivity impairment, and activity impairment that were 3.1, 1.9, 1.9, and 1.6 times higher, respectively, than diagnosed adults (P<0.001 for all).

As for RAND-36opens in a new tab or window Physical, Mental, and Global Health Composite scores, undiagnosed adults trended toward lower but not significantly different physical (36.1 vs 39.6) and global health composite scores (32.3 vs 33.5), but higher mental health composite scores (32.8 vs 32.1).

Interestingly, adults with undiagnosed GAD were less likely to report certain comorbidities like depression (15% vs 79%) and pain (10% vs 44%) than diagnosed adults.

In order to catch more cases of undiagnosed anxiety, Karlin recommended healthcare providers screen patients using the 7-Item GAD Questionnaire. Agreeing, Glover said these findings support the use of the collaborative care model -- a brief anxiety screening at every primary care visit followed by a warm handoff to a clinician providing evidence-based treatment in the primary care setting for each patient who screens positive and is interested.

"Collaborative care decreases barriers like waitlists and avoids some of the stigma often associated with obtaining care in more specialized psychiatric settings," Glover said. "Additionally, screening in primary care has been shown to decrease healthcare costs like ER visits in the long run."

Disclosures

Both studies were funded by MindMed.

Karlin and several co-investigators reported employment with MindMed. No other disclosures were reported.

Glover had no disclosures.

Primary Source

American Psychiatric Association

Source Reference: opens in a new tab or windowKarlin D, et al "Screening adults in the U.S. general population to detect cases of undiagnosed generalized anxiety disorder" APA 2024; Poster P03-020.

Secondary Source

American Psychiatric Association

Source Reference: opens in a new tab or windowKarlin D, et al "Quantifying the burden of undiagnosed generalized anxiety disorder in the U.S. general adult population" APA 2024; Poster P03-019.


https://www.medpagetoday.com/meetingcoverage/apa/110032

Security Scandal: Chinese Drone Hovers Over US Nuclear-Powered Supercarrier In Japan

 A major security scandal is developing at Japan's Yokosuka Naval Base, where drone footage was recently filmed above an American nuclear-powered supercarrier without any activated anti-drone systems to intercept hostile unmanned aerial vehicles. This comes as loitering munitions, also known as kamikaze drones, are the hottest weapon on the modern battlefield in Eastern Europe and the Middle East.

X account "这是我小号4", translated in English from Chinese as "This is my trumpet number 4," uploaded aerial videos and images of Yokosuka Naval Base. Some of the footage was directly over the USS Ronald Reagan. 

The X account wrote in English, "For anyone who thinks it's fake...." They attached a screenshot of the drone's flight path of the naval yard on a map to the post. 

The latest data from intel research firm Strategic Forecasting shows USS Ronald Reagan was recently moored at Yokosuka Naval Base. Footage from the drone was taken in early April. 

The account posted additional images of the naval yard and US warships. 

Where are the anti-drone systems to guard against this type of aerial security breach? 

In English again, the account said, "It took a month for the Japanese army to just realize…" The person was referring to a news story by the Japan Broadcasting Corporation, also known as NHK, covering his activity on social media about posting drone videos of US and Japanese warships. 

NHK cited Ministry of Defense officials who said drone videos were "likely genuine." Other sources we spoke with confirmed the videos are likely real and noted the possibility that this could've been a Chinese-made DJI drone. 

Why didn't the US and or Japan activate electromagnetic counter-measures against the drone?

The next question: Did a Chinese spy - pilot this drone?

https://www.zerohedge.com/military/security-scandal-chinese-drone-hovers-over-us-nuclear-powered-supercarrier-japan