Monday 23 June 2014

Headlines

## Global Ponzi meltdown/House of Cards ##

## Airline Death Spiral ##
Overall, some 44 per cent of Europe's airports are making losses and the industry's average rate of return on invested capital (ROIC) is five per cent.

## Iraq ##
Obama has demanded more ‘effective’ leadership and Iran looks set to follow as Isis militants threaten Baghdad
Hurried flight of Iraqi soldiers from battle is more understandable if you consider that a lot of them are only on the roster to pad their commanders' pockets.

## Fault lines/flashpoints/powder kegs/military/war drums ##
Military forces will be using a lot more horses in the future. -- RF
"It is downright harmful, because it creates a false sense of security. Complete bullshit. We'll get in conflict with the Germans, Russians and we'll think that everything is super, because we gave the Americans a blow job. Losers. Complete losers."
Rouhani did not name any country, but officials and media in mainly Shiite Iran have hinted that insurgents from the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) are being financially and militarily supported by Saudi Arabia and Qatar.

## Global unrest/mob rule/angry people/torches and pitchforks ##
Police shot dead 13 attackers in China's restive Xinjiang region after they rammed a car into a police station and detonated explosives, the official Xinhua news agency reported on Saturday, in the latest of a series of attacks to worry Beijing.
Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal on Saturday night accused President Barack Obama and other Democrats of waging wars against religious liberty and education and said that a rebellion is brewing in the U.S. with people ready for "a hostile takeover" of the nation's capital.

## Energy/resources ##
Royal Dutch Shell has blamed air strikes by the government in Kiev against its own citizens in southern Ukraine as the reason it decided to declare a halt to its shale oil projects in the troubled region. In reality, the truth may be closer to the fact that company is disappointed with the economic viability of what it once thought was a large shale deposit and is looking for a way out.
The prospect of cheap natural gas prices fueling an industrial renaissance in the United States is at odds with the needs of gas producers, an energy economist said this week.
For those who hadn't noticed, energy-savvy people have been saying this from the outset. -- RF
Non-EU nation Norway will only help the European Union with any supply crisis caused by the Russia-Ukraine gas price dispute if it makes commercial sense, officials told a meeting called in Brussels on Friday to address energy security.

## Infrastructure scavenging ##

## Got food? ##
Heavy rains across the northern U.S. Midwest this week flooded corn and soybean fields, damaging crops, and raised river levels which could slow some grain shipments by barge for the next two weeks.
This article is a pile of organic fertilizer. Industrialized agriculture, owing to its reliance on ever-more-costly fossil fuels and on poisonous chemicals, is hardly sustainable. And the argument that a too-heavy load of nitrate means organic agriculture is unsustainable is misleading. Organic or not, it means people are applying more fertilizer than needed. For example, I would venture to say that virtually all the nutrients flowing from the Mississippi River into the Gulf of Mexico are from chemical fertilizers. So that is a specious argument. Organic is the only way to go, because in the future it will be all we've got. -- RF
Industrialized agriculture has always been touted as highly efficient, but in terms of energy input per calorie of food produced, nothing could be farther from the truth. This is sustainable? -- RF 

## Environment/health ##
An "out of control" outbreak of Ebola in West Africa that’s being called the deadliest ever is far from over and it’s likely to get worse before it gets better, experts predict.

## Intelligence/propaganda/security/internet/cyberwar ##
Sixteen news oganizations file motion to release video evidence of forcible cell extractions, force-feedings of Guantanamo prisoner

## Systemic breakdown/collapse/unsustainability ##
The Status Quo is not sustainable. Here are some resources on the many reasons why.
Breakdown of the cold chain. The more energy costs rise, the more perishable food will be unrefrigerated. -- RF

## Japan ##
This video (in Japanese) shows the farmers making their demands with bovine in tow. -- RF
It will be a money-loser, like shale gas. -- RF

## China ##
More than 10,000 owners of Chinese steel trade firms are behind on credit card payments with several billion yuan involved, and banks in Ningde in southeastern China's Fujian province are giving discounts to help debtors pay back what they owe, Guangzhou's Time Weekly reports.
Shaken by a fraud investigation into metal financing in the world's seventh-busiest port, banks and trading houses have been made painfully aware of the risks they face storing commodities in China's sprawling warehouse sector.

## UK ##
Taxpayers have already spent £90 million on 150 homes to clear the way for the railway, a figure experts warn is just the “tip of the iceberg”.
Cut, baby, cut! -- RF

## US ##
Real weekly earnings were $825 in 1973. Today they are $690.
This is just so sad. I shall pray for the Clintons tonight. -- RF

Crooks are stealing anything they can grab: fuel from wind machines, copper from water pumps, crops and animal feed. Even tractors are being stolen.

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