
It is getting hard and harder to laugh these days. But not totally impossible.
The local morning sports radio guys really got me this week with something along the lines of: “Mickey Mouse’s lawyer told him that he cannot divorce Minnie just because she is crazy. Mickey replied that he did not say she was crazy, he said that she was f-ing Goofy.” But if that is too juvenile for your sensibilities, I will point you to the funniest thing – actual ha-ha funny – that I read on the intertubes this week. From RedState, this is part of the discussion about Jeffrey Toobin appearing on CNN to wax philosophically about the sad state of legal affairs down in Georgia:
While we should always be grateful for any appearance in which Mr. Toobin manages not to be caught having a threesome with a couple of no-shows, …
Sure it was low hanging fruit. But quality low hanging fruit at that.
But, then, there is always that category of funny that really makes one snort out loud and then mumble a couple of choice bits of profanity under the breath. (No, I will not here pick on the representative of the Ricochet Upper Crust who attempted to push the “Biden did not throttle crude production” talking point. He may still be sticking by that one for all I know.) For this I offer these six pathetically unserious words:
While Ms. Yellen’s remarks are noteworthy…
This was brought to our attention by Powerline’s Scott Johnson…who then sets the matter straight:
When Yellen adopted the administration line on inflation being “transitory,” nobody had led Yellen astray. She killed her own reputation. … Why anyone should even believe anything she says is not exactly a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma. No one should.
[Emphasis added]
True. But I will disagree with something said earlier in that article: “Janet Yellen holds the venerable office of Secretary of the Treasury. Former chairman of the Federal Reserve, Yellen is well qualified for the job and an ostensibly serious person.” If her mere presence in the Biden Cabinet isn’t proof enough today that she is not intellectually serious in any way, shape, or form, history will eventually certainly record her rather large part in the slow, managed decline of the once great American Republic. Of course, we touched on that quite some time ago:
___ ___ ___
The Worst Economy in Eighty Years – Lords of Finance Vol 2? (October 1, 2022)
Author Liaquat Ahamed started the last paragraph of Lords of Finance – The Bankers Who Broke the World (2009) with:
More than anything else, therefore, the Great Depression was caused by a failure of intellectual will, a lack of understanding about how the economy operated. …

There will be no such excuse this time around. That paragraph in Volume 2 of the series as written at some future date about our current economic downturn will need to reference a lack of intellectual seriousness in our credentialed class and an intentional disregard for how the economy operated. That future tome will record the true beginnings of the Great Biden Recession (or Depression, time will tell) as the necessary results of a decade and a half of unserious central banking in reaction to (or cynically under the cover of) the 2008 housing bubble crisis. (And that, of course, was the economic reckoning made necessary by two decades of intellectual unseriousness from our elected class and an intentional disregard for how the mortgage banking system operated. But I digress.) There will be many main characters to cover and many primary faces on the cover – don’t forget the many faces of TARP, the auto bailout, PPACA, QE 1-4 (and then forever), etc. – but one face must be quite prominent:

It seems it may be about time to start putting some of the details into her chapters:
Scoop: White House mulling potential Yellen departure after midterms
White House officials are quietly preparing for the potential departure of Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen after the midterms, the first and most consequential exit in what could be a broad reorganization of President Biden’s economic team …
The world’s presidents, central bankers and finance ministers are deeply concerned about the state of the global economy, giving it an ominous feeling with parallels to 2007…
One might think that an orchestrated exit is simply a matter of acknowledging the growing impossibility of hiding the poor performance of a hollow-credentialed buffoon. But that would be wrong. It turns out she also doesn’t do overt politics that well:
Yellen, an economist by trade and at heart, has been reluctant to make overly political arguments when they violate her core academic beliefs.
Note that “reluctant to” does not mean she didn’t try…and, in the end, flush those “sterling credentials” down the toilet anyway. As wholly deserved, history will not be kind.
Unfortunately, the source material for the future writing of history is growing darker all the time:
‘WORSE THAN 2008’: ‘BIG SHORT’ GURU SEES HORRIFIC DOWNTURN
Famed investor Michael Burry delivered arguably his most dire warning about the current US economy to date late Thursday – suggesting he is concerned the ongoing downturn could be worse than the Great Recession. …
“Today I wondered aloud if this could be worse than 2008,” Burry said in a now-deleted tweet. “What interest rates are doing, exchange rates globally, central banks seem reactionary and in [cover your a–] mode.” …
Earlier this week, ex-Treasury Secretary Larry Summers, a frequent critic of the Fed’s delayed response to inflation, warned that global economic risk levels are similar to those seen in 2007 ahead of the Great Recession.
Like Burry, Summers noted that there is widespread uncertainty about the policy actions of central banks as they attempt to stabilize economies.
The Bank of England was forced to intervene this week after the value of the British pound crashed to an all-time low. Investors were rattled after the UK government backed sweeping unfunded tax cuts and increased spending — a plan that sparked fears of even worse inflation.
I must repeat a line that I quoted back in April: “…Joe Biden and his team are in total denial about economic reality and have no plans that will address the inflationary wave in any direction except to make it worse.” That is just as true today. Shuffling the deck chairs and rearranging the members of the band are hollow gestures and just part of this larger presidential charade.
Somewhere I have a quote from Orwell about the flattening of history…I will have to find it…but following that thought, the perspective required for the proper writing of the history of our times will force the focus onto the enormity of the coming Biden economic disruption and render the marketing of 2008 as a “Great Recession” to the same level of import we now view the Depression of 1920-1921. Unfortunately, that gives little comfort to those of us about to struggle through it. Hold on tight.
Into the abyss…
___ ___ ___
P.S. I have mentioned many times here about the dark age of sorts that we are headed for. Unfortunately, my larger point is not directed at this kind of hollow-credentialed buffoonery at the very top of the food chain. I fear more about the heavily credentialed yet still worthless (HCYSW) phenomenon that now permeates so much of American business and industry. I suspect we are starting to see the signs of this mostly irreversible breakdown with the current headlines surrounding the Boeing company. There will be more.
The great questions concerning us are not whether bad (worse) times are coming, but when will things threaten to immiserate all but the very wealthy? how best can we preserve those assets necessary for food, shelter and security? how long until freedom returns?
LikeLiked by 1 person