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Saturday, October 5, 2024

Dubai's Emirates Airlines Bans Pagers & Walkie-Talkies For All Flights

 Dubai's Emirates Airlines is the first major carrier outside of Lebanon to ban all passengers from carrying pagers and walkie-talkies on its flights, citing the dangers of last month's exploding pagers and electronic devices attacks in Beirut.

"All passengers traveling to, from, or via Dubai are prohibited from transporting pagers and walkie-talkies in checked or cabin baggage," the airline has announced in a statement on its website. It said this is part of enhanced security measures which will result in the confiscation of any prohibited items by Dubai Police.

Source: Emirates.com

The pager and walkie-talkie attacks, widely blamed on Israeli intelligence, were the result of the devices having been intercepted and manipulated during shipping. It's believed small bomb materials were placed inside them, and then detonated when a signal was sent simultaneously to thousands of the electronics.

The death toll from the September 17 and 18 attacks was at least 42 killed and over 3500 injured. At least 12 civilians were killed as a result of the operation meant to disrupt Hezbollah, including children.

One big concern in the aftermath was the possibility of booby-trapped pager and device proliferation outside the country. What if someone with one of the thousands of manipulated pagers got on a plane?

This appears to be the fear that Emirates is addressing. Other regional carriers could follow suit. Emirates is the largest airline in the Middle East.

It is one among many global airlines which have suspended flights in and out of Beirut, and currently flights to Iraq and Iran remain halted until Tuesday. Services to Jordan will resume on Sunday.

Israel has continued large-scale airstrikes on Beirut, not just focusing on the southern suburbs and Hezbollah strongholds, but in the past days hitting central Beirut as well.

An airstrike has also this week destroyed the primary border crossing between Lebanon and Syria, at Masnaa. Displaced refugees have since been seen walking over the mountainous and rough terrain border crossing.

https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/dubais-emirates-airlines-bans-pagers-walkie-talkies-all-flights

'23andMe Trouble Sparks Calls for Users to Delete Their DNA Data: Here's How'

 If you ever used 23andMe, you might want to consider deleting your data while you still can. The company’s financial troubles are prompting concerns about what could happen to customers’ DNA data if the firm goes under or is acquired by someone else. 

On Friday, Meredith Whittaker, president of encrypted messaging app Signal, joined other security experts who are warning 23andMe users about the privacy danger. “It's not just you. If anyone in your FAMILY gave their DNA to 23andMe, for all of your sakes, close your/their account now,” Whittaker tweeted.


 

23andMe has a page with instructions on how users can request an account closure. But in your 23andMe account, navigate to Settings, scroll down to the 23andMe Data section at the bottom, and click View on the right. Enter your birthday and then scroll to the bottom of the next page and click Permanently Delete Data.

23andme delete page
(Credit: 23andMe)

Once you submit your request, 23andMe will email you to confirm it. Doing so will prompt the company to discard a customer’s genetic testing samples and prevent the company from using their data for future research projects. It could take up to 30 days to go into effect, though.

Sold to the Highest Bidder?

Rachel Tobac, CEO of SocialProof Security, added: “If and when 23andMe sells to another company, your consumer DNA data sells with it. It won’t fix everything but you can request they remove your data now if you already used them.”  

But for now, 23andMe's CEO Anne Wojcicki said earlier this week she isn't considering third-party takeover proposals. "Importantly, I remain committed to our customers’ privacy and pledge to maintain the Issuer’s current privacy policy in effect for the foreseeable future," she said in an SEC filing, which also notes 23andMe is actually pursuing an acquisition.

23andMe was once valued at $6 billion. But the San Francisco company’s stock has since declined to less than 50 cents as demand for its DNA testing kits has waned. The financial troubles have gotten so bad that 23andMe’s board of directors resigned last month, saying Wojcicki had failed to produce a “fully financed, fully diligenced” business recovery plan. 

The uncertainty has caused some media outlets, including NPR, to question what might happen to 23andMe’s genetic testing data, which spans 15 million customers. The company hasn’t commented on the fate of the DNA data, merely saying: “For our customers, our focus continues to be on transparency and choice over how they want their data to be managed.” 

However, NPR notes there’s only a patchwork of state laws that cover genetic data, leaving a gap for third-party companies and law enforcement to potentially use the DNA information. In 23andMe’s case, the company has resisted US law enforcement requests for such data. But in 2018, the company reached a deal with pharmaceutical manufacturer GlaxoSmithKline to tap customers’ genetic data for drug development. That said, users can opt-out from the research. 

Although customers can request the company to delete their data, 23andMe won’t necessarily erase all your information. The company has been telling users who request an account deletion: “23andMe and the contracted genotyping laboratory will retain your Genetic Information, date of birth, and sex as required for compliance with legal obligations, pursuant to the federal Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments of 1988 and California laboratory regulations.”

23andMe didn't immediately respond to a request for comment about the data retention policy. In the meantime, users can also consider using California’s Consumer Protection Act, which covers genetic data and also includes a “right to delete” clause for companies to follow.

https://www.pcmag.com/news/23andme-trouble-sparks-calls-for-users-to-delete-their-dna-data-heres-how

'FEMA Issues Warning On False Helene 'Rumors', Launches Response Page'

 by Jack Phillips via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

The U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) released a “rumor response” page in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene, which caused significant damage across western North Carolina late last month.

An emergency crew returns from checking the mud-covered side roads near the destroyed Asheville Tunnel Rd Bridge, in Asheville, N.C., on Oct. 3, 2024. Richard Moore/The Epoch Times

In an update on Oct. 3, FEMA responded to statements issued online about the agency’s response to the disaster, including whether it is running out of funding due to payments and efforts made to fly illegal immigrants into parts of the United States.

FEMA has enough money right now for immediate response and recovery needs. If you were affected by Helene, do not hesitate to apply for disaster assistance as there is a variety of help available for different needs,” the agency wrote.

It also said that “no money is being diverted” from federal Helene disaster response efforts and that claims that “funding for FEMA disaster response was diverted to support international efforts or border related issues” are “false.”

The agency did not provide specific examples of the online claims about its funding that it described as false.

Earlier this week, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott wrote that Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, the Department of Homeland Security, and FEMA should “immediately stop spending money on illegal immigration resettlement and redirect those funds to areas hit by the hurricane” and “put Americans first.”

He was responding to Mayorkas’s comments to reporters that FEMA, overseen by his agency, “does not have the funds” to make it until the end of the 2024 Atlantic hurricane season, which is Nov. 30.

“We are meeting the immediate needs with the money that we have,” Mayorkas told a press gaggle on Air Force One. “We are expecting another hurricane hitting. We do not have the funds. FEMA does not have the funds to make it through the season and ... what is imminent.”

The Epoch Times contacted DHS and FEMA for comment on Friday but received no reply by publication time.

The Biden–Harris administration took more than a billion tax dollars that had been allocated to FEMA for disaster relief and used it to house illegal aliens,” Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) wrote on X. “Now, they’ve abandoned American hurricane victims in North Carolina, Georgia, Florida, South Carolina, and Tennessee.”

Rep. Tim Burchett (R-Tenn.) echoed that claim, saying FEMA’s move to spend “over a billion dollars on illegals while they leave Americans stranded and without help is treasonous.”

Another claim purportedly circulating online was that FEMA was asking for cash donations and is turning away volunteers in North Carolina. But FEMA’s website says it is false.

“FEMA does not ask for or generally accept any cash donations or volunteers for disaster response,” the agency wrote. “We do encourage people who want to help to volunteer with or donate cash to reputable voluntary or charitable organizations. After a disaster, cash is often the best way to help as it provides the greatest flexibility for these reputable organizations working on the ground to purchase exactly what is needed.”

The American Red Cross, meanwhile, wrote in a lengthy post on X that allegations the organization is throwing away or confiscating donated items is not true.

“We are not confiscating, removing or discarding donated items. We focus on providing shelter, food, and relief after disasters,” the Red Cross wrote. “While we don’t accept physical donations, as managing them takes time and resources away from our mission, we work with community partners who are better equipped with these resources to handle and distribute these items. For information on where donated goods are available, please call 211.”

It also addressed claims that the Red Cross is not available in North Carolina or is “taking over shelters.”

“We do not forcefully take over shelters. However, we do provide management support at the request of partners,” the organization said, adding that the claims it isn’t there are “simply not true.”

The death toll from Helene is at least 215, making it the deadliest storm to hit the United States since Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/fema-issues-warning-false-helene-rumors-launches-response-page

Behind Jobs Report: Record Surge In Government Workers

 At first glance Friday's jobs report was indeed impressive: the surge in jobs according to both the household and establishment surveys indicated a strong rebound from recent monthly weakness...

... which coupled with the drop in unemployment rate, and upward historical revisions suggested that much of the recent labor market weakness may have been transitory. The one fly in the ointment was the jump in wage growth which strongly hinted that inflation is also back, just as we have been warning for months (especially now that oil is once again surging) and we will cross that bridge eventually, but not yet.

Instead for now let's focus on the parts of the jobs report which the BLS has traditionally used to mask headline weakness, such as part-time workers used to mask weakness in full-time jobs, or foreign-born workers surging at the expense of native-born. Well, this month there was little of that as well, and in fact, part-time workers dropped modestly as full-time workers rose...

... while native-born workers actually rebounded from a five year low as foreign-born workers dropped from an all-time high

And yet, it didn't take long to find what the BLS did this time to make the jobs appear much stronger than expected, a political imperative for the highly politicized agency tasked with making the Kamala/Biden economy appear stronger than it was exactly one month ahead of the election.

The answer, ironically, was in the number of government workers, which exploded higher, and were not only instrumental in pushing the Household Survey print much higher, but meant the difference between a 4.1% and 4.5% unemployment rate.

Here is what happened.

In September, the number of government workers as tracked by the Household Survey soared by 785K, from 21.421 million to 22.216 million, both seasonally adjusted (source: Table A8 from the jobs report). This was the biggest monthly surge in government workers on record (excluding the outlier print in June 2020 which was a reversal of the record plunge from the Covid collapse months before).

While government workers soared by the most on record, private workers rose by just 133K, a far more believable number, and one which however would indicate that the recent labor market malaise continues.

What is odd is that while September traditionally sees a huge jump in not seasonally adjusted government workers (as teachers go back to school), the BLS has traditionally smoothed over this jump using seasonal adjustments.

Only not this time, because as noted earlier by Andrew Zatlin of Southbay Research, while historically the September adjusted number has been relatively tame, regardless of how large or small the unadjusted number was, this time something changed as the unadjusted number of government workers absolutely exploded by a record 1.322 million leading to a record September increase in adjusted government workers.

"It's remarkable to see a one-month 3% jump in government jobs. Perhaps these are the hall monitors for the polling booths.   Or perhaps these numbers are just wishful thinking. One thing is for certain, the Fed gets a hall pass next month when the ugly post-Hurricane numbers come out" said Zatlin.

Curiously, it wasn't just the Household survey that tracked an unprecedented increase in government workers: if one takes the Establishment survey unadjusted print (source Table B1 from the jobs report), one sees the exact same thing. Here, the number of not seasonally adjusted government workers soared by 918K (from 22.541 million to 23.459 million), while the number of not seasonally adjusted private sector workers plunged by 458K!

Why does any of this matter? For several reasons.

As the recent near-record downward revision in employment demonstrated, when some 818K jobs were magically eliminated, economic reports from the Biden admin has become unreliable to the point where even Fed chair Powell was questioning the credibility of BLS data and lamented that had he known how bad the labor market was, he would have cut in July. Well, same thing now, only in the opposite direction (which is to be expected with the election in just one month). So is the BLS now openly political and seeking to game the data to show Biden in a favorable light? That's a rhetorical question we leave to our readers.

And speaking of politicized government agencies, the BLS had a clear motive to add as many "government jobs" as it possibly could, not just to make the sequential increase in labor appear but to depress the unemployment rate further.

So to answer the question: why jam a record number of government workers in the September payrolls report? Two reasons: Unemployment rate drops to 4.1% instead of rising to 4.5%, assuring the Sahm Rule is indeed triggered and the US is officially in a recession, and also prevent the market from crashing. Both, one would say, pretty critical narrative pieces exactly one month before the election. As an aside, those wondering who is paying for all these government jobs, take one look at the US government debt which just soared to a record high, and that should answer all questions.

One final point: the BLS may have done everything it could to put lipstick on the jobs market (with data which will inevitably be revised lower after the election), but it forgot to change on data set: the number of people who need more than one job to make ends meet, just hit a new all time high as well.

Targeting Civilians, Rampaging Haitian Gang Slaughters 70, Including Women, Infants

 A blood-drenched, fiery horror scene played out in Haiti on Thursday, as a rampaging gang killed at least 70 people and injured 16 more. Mowed down by automatic weapons or choked to death by house-arson, the dead included three infants and 10 women, according to the UN's human rights office.

In a troubling indicator of gang violence sprawling beyond the country's capital, the bloodshed took place in the town of Pont-Sondé, which is located in the agricultural Artibonite department, about 60 miles north of Port-au-Prince. The carnage, which commenced around 3 am local time, prompted more than 6,000 to flee the town for their lives. 

“Today, once again, once too often, we are faced with the most absolute cowardice,” said Haitian Prime Minister Gary Conille in a social media post. “This heinous crime, perpetrated against defenseless women, men and children, is not only an attack on these victims, but on the entire Haitian nation.” 

In August, Haitian police disperse protestors demanding greater security after gangs attacked their homes and set them on fire (Reuters/Ralph Tedy Erol)
The pattern of gunshot wounds illustrated the pure viciousness of the massacre. As Frantz Alexis, the director of the hospital that received the majority of the casualties, told the Washington Post:

“The patients we admitted had gunshot wounds in almost every part of their bodies. They had been shot in the chest, abdomen, thigh, leg and other areas. … We often receive gunshot wounds in this area, but this is the first time we’ve had such a large number all at once. It’s unprecedented.”  

The rampage by the notorious Gran Grif gang targeted property as well, with the perpetrators setting fire to 45 houses and 34 vehicles. The gang's leader, Luckson Elan, claimed responsibility for the murderous mayhem, and said it was an act of retaliation against civilians who refused to prevent police and vigilantes from killing members of the gangReuters reports. 

Even though Haiti has been suffering through gang violence on a grand scale, the scope of Thursday's attack shocked the sensibilities of the country's citizens. The incident also underscored the impotence of security forces. Speaking for the Dialogue and Reconciliation Commission to Save the Artibonite Valley, Bertide Horace told Reuters that local police refused to leave their station, apparently confident they'd be no match for Gran Grif's firepower. "The gang did not meet any resistance," she said.

Kenyan police stand in formation before President William Ruto before departing to Haiti. (Presidency of Kenya)

In July, Kenyan soldiers deployed to Haiti in a UN-endorsed operation began patrolling Port Au Prince in US-supplied MRAP armored vehicles. They were promptly welcomed with gunfire, and have yet to have any significant impact on the security situation in the impoverished country.  Last month, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken visited Haiti, as a senior State official said the White House was considering a plan that would elevate the status of the Kenyans to official UN Peacekeepers

Last week, the UN Security Council unanimously approved an extension of the multinational security force's mandate, but refrained from the "peacekeeping" escalation. The current outside forces consist of a mere 400 Kenyans and a couple dozen Jamaicans. That's a mere fraction of the 2,500 total police officers pledged by countries like Chad, Bangladesh, Barbados and Benin, AP reports. About 80% of Port au Prince is said to be under firm gang control. 

"Washington will likely struggle to gain support for the UN Peacekeeping mission from both the Security Council and Haitians," noted the Libertarian Institute's Kyle Anzalone. "Peacekeepers have a dark legacy in Haiti, including causing a cholera outbreak that killed over ten thousand people and committing rampant acts of sexual violence against women." 

Thursday's attack came just days after the neighboring Dominican Republic announced it will start deporting up to 10,000 Haitians a week who are illegally in the country. Sharing the island of Hispaniola with Haiti, the Dominican Republic has forced 67,000 Haitians back into their native hellhole so far this year

https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/attack-targeting-civilians-rampaging-haitian-gang-slaughters-70-including-women

A Tax Tutorial for an Indebted Nation

 It is too bad most American historians have such depressive mindsets—as illustrated by their insistence on devoting far more attention to the 1930s, a.k.a. the Great Depression, than to the 1920s, a.k.a. the Roaring Twenties. While much can be learned from each of these sharply contrasting decades, the 1930s is mostly about what not to do. The 1920s is the story of what to do—an owner’s manual on how to run an economically successful country.

We will leave the 1930s to the Prozac school of historians and focus on what America can learn from the successful federal policies of the 1920s, particularly the approach to taxation.

AUTOS, PLUMBING, ELECTRICITY

The Roaring Twenties are so named to convey the extraordinary, one might say transformative, economic growth that took place during that period. The car replaced the horse and buggy; indoor plumbing became the norm, not the exception—as did electricity in the home. The age of Gatsby was indeed great.

A driving force behind this economic growth was President Calvin Coolidge’s tax policy. At the outset of his administration, Coolidge and Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon hypothesized that lowering marginal tax rates would stimulate economic growth sufficiently that total tax revenues, despite lower rates, would actually increase. History proved them right. And to think they did all this before Art Laffer was born.

But there is nothing random about this phenomenon. This pattern of economic growth following a tax rate reduction is as predictable as the sun rising in the east. Coolidge was simply the first president to demonstrate it.

It recurred after JFK’s tax cuts in the early 1960s, and even more so after Ronald Reagan’s cuts in the 1980s, when they lifted us out of the malaise. Most recently, President Donald Trump’s tax cuts, enacted in 2017, led to the boom that only COVID derailed.

Given the consistency of the historical record, it’s unclear why this model for tax policy isn’t universally recognized among economists. The inescapable arithmetic of this law of nature often seems obscured by political debate over fair share. And since fair share is in the eye of the beholder, or taxpayer, there is no right answer.

No one, except government, invests if the return doesn’t exceed the cost.

WHY LOWER TAXES WORK

So if we call this a law of nature, what are the explanatory and inevitable forces that make it work? Coolidge identified one of the key factors when he recognized the incentive factor in lower marginal rates. If you keep more of what you earn, you are likely to work more.

As Art Laffer likes to remind us, the more you tax something, the less you will get of it—and vice versa. By lowering marginal tax rates from 73 percent to 25 percent, Coolidge’s predecessor, Warren Harding, and Coolidge unleashed a tsunami of productive work. At 25 percent, tax revenues, along with all other boats, rose.

But work incentives alone fail to capture all the necessary ingredients of an economic boom. As most economists agree, economic growth requires investment.

Investments are made, whether by companies or individuals, to earn a return on the money invested. The key link of investment to tax policy is that return is calculated on an after-tax basis. Thus a lower tax rate will, as a matter of arithmetic certainty, increase the return on any given investment. Or put another way, a lower tax rate lowers the cost of capital.

The cost of capital is critical to economic activity—a.k.a. growth—because every investment made on an economic basis has an expected positive return. No one, except government, invests if the return doesn’t exceed the cost. Hence, the lower the cost of capital, the more investments will be made.

Plus, lowering marginal rates leaves more money in the hands of the investor. It’s fine to create incentives and lower the cost of capital, but it’s not sufficient. The would-be investor needs the money. Lower rates obviously leave him more with which to invest. From that investment comes tax revenues. Those revenues narrow debt and deficit. This virtuous cycle needs to be reestablished.

 

THE ROAD MAP

We said we would leave the 1930s to the economic nabobs of negativism, but let’s take one quick peek that proves our point. In the 1930s, FDR raised marginal tax rates to 79 percent. Who on earth would want to work or invest when three-quarters of the reward went to someone else?

No wonder the Depression continued until Hitler bailed us out. It isn’t just the arithmetic of an investment that was at play. The psychology of the would-be investor had to be deeply pessimistic, knowing that most of his efforts would be confiscated. High tax rates are a proven tranquilizer for the animal spirits that inform most booms.

Coolidge called overtaxation legalized larceny. There were always municipal bonds when tax rates became confiscatory. But there is no school of economists who think municipal bonds are an engine of healthy economic growth.

Incentive, cost of capital, greater availability of capital, and that sine qua non of growth investments, optimism, are all functions of lower tax rates. Coolidge figured it out, and his policies provide a brilliant road map for successful economic policy.  

John W. Childs is the founder and chairman of J. W. Childs Associates, LP, a private equity and special situation investment firm. This article originally appeared in the New York Sun.

https://www.coolidgereview.com/articles/tax-tutorial-indebted-nation