##
Global Ponzi meltdown/House of Cards ##
Pensioners
lose savings in government cash grab (Australia)
The
federal government has bagged an unprecedented $360 million from
household bank accounts since a controversial change
to unclaimed money laws, figures from the Australian Securities
and Investments Commission show. Pensioners and others
saving for a rainy day have reported trying to access their
savings only to discover their money had been seized by the
government because it had been dormant for three years or more.
Safaris
have come a long way since the days of canvas tents, water flasks and
bumpy jeep rides. For the super rich, safaris now
include private-jet hops, chef-cooked meals, two-bedroom tents
with shows and toilets, balloon rides and endless
champagne.
##
Airline Death Spiral ##
##
Fault lines/flashpoints/powder kegs/military/war drums ##
Israeli
Economy Minister Naftali Bennett defended his proposal to annex West
Bank territory as “the only sane plan,” even as it
threatened to tear apart the government.
Witnesses’
accounts from Iraq said insurgents belonging to the Islamic State
of Iraq and Syria had taken control of military bases,
government offices and television stations and had released
thousands of prisoners from local jails.
##
Global unrest/mob rule/angry people/torches and pitchforks ##
London
mayor justifies the speed of the £218,000 purchase by saying the
machines are needed in case of disorder this summer
##
Energy/resources ##
The
strains on labor capacity in oil and gas construction
markets worldwide are becoming increasingly well known.
These strains continue to affect forecasted project costs,
and several large capital projects have already been
delayed or canceled.
Delhi's
government is cutting power to shopping malls, switching off
street lights and turning off air conditioning in
government offices, after the highest temperatures in 62 years
forced the city to take emergency measures to conserve power.
Petrol
Shortage Hits IOC Pumps (India)
Fuel
shortage, especially of petrol, was experienced in the Indian
Oil Corporation (IOC) pumps in the state on Monday.
Majority of the 1,300 IOC pumps in the state are said to be running
short of stock.
The Canadian
Association of Petroleum Producers said 2014 estimates for
oil production to 2030 are down more than 7 percent from the
previous year.
##
Infrastructure scavenging ##
Cable
thieves cause water crisis (South
Africa)
Durban
is facing a water crisis because a major pipeline collapsed into
the uMngeni River on Monday after cable thieves stole its
supports.
Cable
thieves set to put Joburg in the dark (South
Africa)
##
Got food? ##
Supermarket
price wars hurting growers (Australia)
Pesticide
use is surging among U.S. corn farmers who are worried that some
insects have become resistant to genetically modified
versions of the crop. That’s an unexpected reversal. One of
the promises of engineered corn when it was introduced 17 years
ago was that its ability to kill pests would reduce the
need for soil insecticides.
They're
not always optimistic about the future of Camden, N.J. But
they're committed to it anyway, and they've created one
of the nation's fastest growing networks of urban farms.
##
Lifestyle Solutions ##
Learn
more about this growing U.S. movement to achieve financial freedom
and create a smaller ecological footprint.
##
Environment/health ##
##
Intelligence/propaganda/security/internet/cyberwar ##
Sounds
great... except that it assumes everyone will have computers or
access to them, that the internet will exist (no one will steal
cables or sabotage the system), and that there will always be
electricity to run everything. In light of growing systemic failure
everywhere, I'm not betting on this. It makes more sense to prepare
for life in a neo-feudalistic world ruled by super-rich aristocrats
and brutal warlords. -- RF
In
a new survey of more than 1,500 U.S. adults, Fox News was the
most trusted television news source “to provide
accurate information about politics and current events.”
##
Systemic breakdown/collapse/unsustainability ##
Hospitals
across the country are struggling to deal with a shortage of one
of their essential medical supplies. Manufacturers are
rationing saline — a product used all over the hospital to
clean wounds, mix medications or treat dehydration.
Now drug companies say they won’t be able to catch up
with demand until next year.
##
Japan ##
Financially speaking,
Japan is fast becoming a Keynesian dystopia. Its entire economy
is now hostage to a fiscal time bomb. Namely, government
debt which already exceeds 240% of GDP and which is growing
rapidly because even the recent traumatic increase in the
sales tax from 5% to 8% does not come close to filling the
fiscal gap.
This
is incredibly short-sighted, but you can expect governments to make
wrong-headed choices like this. -- RF
In
view of Japan's severe overpopulation, the government should levy
fines for third and subsequent children. -- RF
##
China ##
Amid
ongoing central government curbs, China’s property market is
cooling off dramatically despite the onset of the sector’s
traditionally “hot season,” as both land sales and
transaction values plunged in May across 300 major Chinese
cities.
##
UK ##
National
Grid to begin recruiting businesses who will be paid to switch off
if needed to protect consumer supplies as a "last resort"
##
US ##
Millennials
Have Got One Thing Right: Only 8% Expect Full Social Security
Benefits & 51% Expect None
Four
in 10 millennials are overwhelmed by debt, with almost half
spending at least 50 percent of their monthly paycheck paying
off debt, a new study by Wells Fargo found. More than
half—56 percent—reported living paycheck to paycheck.
For
two consecutive quarters, state income tax revenues
have disappointed. And in the first quarter of 2014, state
income tax revenue actually declined.
“At
least they’re doing something – they are more productive than
the politicians,” Paul said. “They’re not going to
hurt anybody. They are just going to eat all the grass and
the weeds and the garbage.”
It's
just the setup for the next crash. -- RF
And
finally...
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