Widget Image
Follow PPD Social Media
Tuesday, February 4, 2025
HomeStandard Blog Whole Post (Page 322)

A shopper passes a ''Sale'' sign at Quincy Market in downtown in Boston, Massachusetts, U.S. January 11, 2017. (Photo: Reuters)

A shopper passes a ”Sale” sign at Quincy Market in downtown in Boston, Massachusetts, U.S. January 11, 2017. (Photo: Reuters)

The Survey of Consumers, the University of Michigan’s gauge of consumer sentiment, came in at 97.6, the strongest reading since the post-election surge. The strong reading comes as stronger-than-expected consumer spending data pushed the GDPNow model forecast for third-quarter (3Q) growth at the Atlanta Federal Reserve to 3.8%.

Consumer confidence rose in the first half of August to its highest level since January due to a more positive outlook for the overall economy as well as more favorable personal financial prospects,” Survey of Consumers chief economist Richard Curtain said. “The two component indices moved in opposite directions, with the Current Conditions Index falling slightly from its decade peak, and the Expectations Index posting a more substantial rebound.”

Inflation expectations were unchanged at 2.6% for the 1-year outlook and down 0.1 for the 5-year outlook at 2.5%.

“As with the overall Sentiment Index, the component indices nearly regained the peak levels recorded earlier in 2017,” he added.

However, Mr. Curtain cautioned that “too few interviews” were conducted after the violence in Charlottesville, Virginia, when white supremacists clashed with violent leftist groups.

“Too few interviews were conducted following Charlottesville to assess how much it will weaken consumers’ economic assessments,” he said. “The fallout is likely to reverse the improvement in economic expectations recorded across all political affiliations in early August.”

The partisan difference between the optimism of Republicans and the pessimism of Democrats continues, with Independents remaining the swing/bellwether group. At this point, the data continue to indicate a gain of 2.4% in personal consumption expenditures in 2017.

Until this month, the Survey of Consumers reflected stronger activity for consumer spending, which represents roughly two-thirds of all gross domestic product (GDP), than other surveys and government data. As it turns out, it might have been closer over the last few months than other surveys indicated.

For instance,the forecast for personal consumption expenditures increased from 1.91% to 1.97% after the U.S. Census Bureau report on U.S. retail sales. U.S. retail sales not only bounced back in July, increasing by 0.6 and doubling the median economic forecast calling for 0.3, but also saw sizable upward revisions to the prior few months.

The Survey of Consumers, the University of

From L-R: Former U.S. President Bill Clinton, Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and Vice Chair of the Clinton Foundation Chelsea Clinton, discuss the Clinton Global Initiative University during the closing plenary session on the second day of the 2014 Meeting of Clinton Global Initiative University at Arizona State University in Tempe, Arizona March 22, 2014. (Photo: Reuters)

From L-R: Former U.S. President Bill Clinton, Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and Vice Chair of the Clinton Foundation Chelsea Clinton, discuss the Clinton Global Initiative University during the closing plenary session on the second day of the 2014 Meeting of Clinton Global Initiative University at Arizona State University in Tempe, Arizona March 22, 2014. (Photo: Reuters)

Andrei Derkach is demanding an investigation into his government’s role in a scheme to help Hillary Clinton, orchestrated by Democratic National Committee (DNC) allies in Ukraine.

Tsarizm News Network reported the independent member of the Ukrainian parliament wants to expose collusion between the Ukrainian government and the Democratic Party, which sought to prevent Donald Trump from being elected to the presidency of the United States.

As People’s Pundit Daily reported in August 2016, the National Anti-corruption Bureau of Ukraine (NABU) pushed back on a New York Times story claiming Paul Manafort, then the campaign chairman for Mr. Trump, was “named” in a corruption probe in Kiev by Mr. Sytnyk’s office.

We contacted several people at the NABU, including press secretary Svitlana Olivera, and what we found out was shocking to say the least.

Officials did confirm they were investigating documents provided to them in May of this year, which concerned millions of dollars in illegal cash payments made by the regime of ousted President Viktor Yanukovych, a client of Mr. Manafort. These documents were provided to detectives of NABU from a Ukrainian member of parliament, who claimed to have acquired them from a “source.”

Shockingly, the document published by the New York Times, which showed the page of a ledger allegedly detailing black payments, were not part of these original documents provided. The document used by the Times to validate the story was apparently provided to NABU at the same time it was “provided” to the newspaper.

We now know Alexandra Chalupa, a veteran DNC operative who previously served in the Clinton White House, worked with Ukrainian government officials and journalists from both Ukraine and America to dig up Russia-related opposition research on President Trump and Mr. Manafort.

Ms. Chalupa met with Ukrainian Ambassador Valeriy Chaly and an aide, Oksara Shulyar, at the Ukrainian Embassy in March 2016. Their conversation surrounded talking points about Russian connections. Ukraine disseminated documents implicating Mr. Manafort in a corruption scandal and suggested they were investigating the matter.

However, it appears to have been an intentional effort to mislead the American public and Ukraine subsequently abandoned the claim after the U.S. presidential election. In other words, it appears the evidence reported by the New York Times was potentially manufactured in order to damage Mr. Trump’s candidacy.

Mr. Derkach sent a letter in late July to Ukraine’s prosecutor general requesting authorities look into “illegal interference in the election of President of the United States organized by a criminal organization.”

“Only a transparent and thorough investigation into the unlawful interference of Ukrainian officials with the U.S. election campaign can restore the trust of our strategic partner,” wrote Derkach.

Andrei Derkach is demanding an investigation into

Job seekers adjust their paperwork as they wait in line to attend a job fair in New York February 28, 2013. (Photo: Reuters)

Job seekers adjust their paperwork as they wait in line to attend a job fair in New York February 28, 2013. (Photo: Reuters)

The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics said Thursday the youth unemployment rate fell to 9.6% in July, down 1.9% from 11.5% in July 2016. The number of employed youth 16 to 24 years stood at 20.9 million in July 2017, with the percentage of employed youth increasing from 53.2% the previous year to 54.8%.

The month of July typically is the summertime peak in youth employment. From April to June, high school and college students search for or take summer jobs, and graduates enter the labor market to look for or begin permanent employment.

During that period, the Labor Department said via the BLS that the youth labor force–16- to 24-year-olds working or actively looking for work–grew “sharply” by 2.4 million. From April to July 2017, 16 to 24 year-olds saw a 1.9 million-job gain. The total youth labor force increased to 23.1 million in July, or 11.6%.

The labor force participation rate for youth was 60.6% in July, largely unchanged from a year earlier. For two decades leading up to 2010, youth labor force participation was trending down. It has held firm since 2010 and peaked at 77.5% in July 1989.

The Labor Department said earlier this month the U.S. economy added 209,000 jobs in July, labor participation increased and the overall unemployment rate was 4.3%. The unemployment rate is now at the lowest level it’s been since May 2001.

The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics said

Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, D-Fla., the former Democratic National Committee (DNC) chair ousted after WikiLeaks revelations. (Photo: AP)

Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, D-Fla., the former Democratic National Committee (DNC) chair ousted after WikiLeaks revelations. (Photo: AP)

Imran Awan, a former IT aide to Debbie Wasserman Schultz and other House Democrats, has been indicted on four counts including bank fraud.

The indictment also includes his wife Hina Alvi., who already fled to their native Pakistan with more than $12,000 in cash. ederal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) agent Brandon Merriman wrote in the affidavit that federal officials do not believe she has any intention of returning to the United States.

A grand jury in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia made the decision roughly a month after Awan was arrested trying to flee the country. Authorities picked him up at Dulles Airport attempting to board a flight to Lahore, Pakistan.

The arrest came after the FBI seized a large number of “smashed hard drives” from Awan’s house. Worth noting, video shows Wasserman Schultz threatening Capitol Hill Police over the seizing of Democrats’ devices.

Awan was allegedly one of several involved in a scheme to defraud the Congressional Federal Credit Union by obtaining a $165,000 home equity loan for a rental property. It also involved double-charging the U.S. House of Representatives for IT equipment and suspected exposing House information online.

Those funds were then included as part of a wire transfer to two individuals in Faisalabad, Pakistan.

The indictments for Awan and his wife specifically cite the allegations they engaged in a conspiracy to obtain home equity lines of credit from the CFCU by giving false information about two properties. It also states that they sent that money to unnamed individuals in Pakistan.

Awan, who worked for more than two dozen House Democrats, was paid nearly $2 million since 2004. His wife and his brother, Abid Awan, were also each paid more than $1 million working for House Democrats. In total, since 2003, the family has collected nearly $5 million.

When asked why he remained on Schultz’s payroll as an “advisor”–despite being barred from accessing the House’s computer system since February–spokesman David Damron said he provided “valuable services,” to include working “on printers, trouble-shooting & other issues.”

Imran Awan, a former IT aide to

Missouri Democrat Sen. Maria Chappelle-Nadal. (Photo: AP)

Missouri Democrat Sen. Maria Chappelle-Nadal. (Photo: AP)

Missouri Democratic state Sen. Maria Chappelle-Nadal wrote in a Facebook response “I hope Trump is assassinated” before deleting her comments. The post was in response to another user’s comment and, despite calls for her to resign, she’s blaming President Donald Trump.

“It was wrong for me to post that,” Chappelle-Nadal told The Kansas City Star. “But I am not going to shy away from the damage this president is causing.”

Chappelle-Nadal stated that it was recently the 3-year anniversary of the fatal shooting of Michael Brown, an 18-year-old black man shot in Ferguson by Darren Wilson. She, along with a liberally biased media, repeatedly pushed the debunked “Hands Up, Don’t Shoot” narrative that crumbled under forensic and eyewitness scrutiny.

He was forced to resign from the Ferguson Police Department shortly after becoming a family man, and his life was destroyed. A grand jury, which included three African Americans, decided not to indict Mr. Wilson after spending more than three months reviewing evidence in the case.

They decided he was defending himself against Brown, a suspect in a strong arm robbery, who assaulted him and attempted to grab his gun. The decision led to widespread rioting by Black Lives Matter (BLM) and other so-called civil rights groups, during which dozens of businesses and cars were looted and burned to the ground.

Ferguson is a city Chappelle-Nadal represents in the Missouri Senate, one which suffered greatly from politicians like her using lies to foment hate. She personally held rallies that were precursors for violence later in the day, including one across the street from the fire department.

She once “wildly” accused Jeff Roorda of the St. Louis Police Officer Association of being a racist on CNN, a network that helped to push the hatred-breeding lie. The U.S. Secret Service field office in St. Louis is now investigating the University City Democrat.

Sen. Claire McCaskill, one of the most vulnerable Red State incumbent Democrats, called on her to resign. Stephen Webber, chairman of the Missouri Democratic Party, agreed.

“State Sen. Chappelle-Nadal’s comments are indefensible,” Chairman Webber said. “All sides need to agree that there is no room for suggestions of political violence in America — and the Missouri Democratic Party will absolutely not tolerate calls for the assassination of the president. I believe she should resign.”

Missouri Democratic state Sen. Maria Chappelle-Nadal wrote

Kelli Ward, a rival of Sen. John McCain and candidate in the Arizona Republican primary for U.S. Senate in 2018, speaks with a supporter of President Donald J. Trump. (Photo: Associated Press)

Kelli Ward, a rival of Sen. John McCain and candidate in the Arizona Republican primary for U.S. Senate in 2018, speaks with a supporter of President Donald J. Trump. (Photo: Associated Press)

President Donald Trump on Thursday morning tweeted support for Dr. Kelli Ward, who is challenging incumbent Republican Sen. Jeff Flake in Arizona. While it stopped short of an official endorsement, it’s fuels speculation before the president’s rally in Phoenix next week.

“Great to see that Dr. Kelli Ward is running against Flake Jeff Flake, who is WEAK on borders, crime and a non-factor in Senate,” President Trump tweeted. “He’s toxic!”

Dr. Ward, who ran a strong campaign against incumbent Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., recently spoke with People’s Pundit Daily (PPD) about her bid for the U.S. Senate in 2018. It was the first in a series of articles to appear on PPD highlighting upcoming primary battles in the 2018 midterm elections.

As she correctly noted during our interview, Sens. McCain and Flake are two of the most unpopular senators in the upper chamber.

In July, a Morning Consult Poll ranking senators by popularity found Sens. McCain and Flake behind only Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Kty., as having the highest disapproval ratings in their state, 47% and 45%, respectively.

Sen. Flake is one of the original NeverTrumpers and is on President Trump’s and conservative’s list of Establishment Republicans to be ousted in 2018.

President Donald Trump on Thursday morning tweeted

A manufacturing assembly line at the Heinz factory in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo: Courtesy of Heinz)

A manufacturing assembly line at the Heinz factory in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo: Courtesy of Heinz)

The Philadelphia Federal Reserve said the Manufacturing Business Outlook Survey came in at 18.9, once again stronger than the 17.0 median forecast. New orders and shipments indexes, showed noteworthy improvements.

The diffusion index increased from 2.1 to 20.4, while current shipments index increased 17 points to 29.4. Employment increases were reported by 15% of firms, while the percentage reporting decreases was just 5%. The employment index held near steady at 10.1 and average work hours rose in August.

The workweek index was positive for the 10th consecutive month.

Philadelphia Federal Reserve Manufacturing Business Outlook Survey

The diffusion index for future general activity rose from 36.9 in July to 42.3 in August, its highest reading in four months. Nearly 49% of the firms expect increases in activity, while only 7% expect decreases.

The indexes for future new orders and shipments increased by 10 points and 18 points, respectively. The future employment index gained 6 points, also the highest reading in four months. While more than 38% of the manufacturers said they expect to expand employment over the next six months, only 5% expect to reduce employment.

The Philadelphia Federal Reserve said the Manufacturing

Weekly Jobless Claims Graphic. Number of Americans applying for first-time jobless benefits.

Weekly Jobless Claims Graphic. Number of Americans applying for first-time jobless benefits.

The Labor Department said Thursday first-time claims for unemployment benefits fell by 12,000 to a seasonally adjusted 232,000, easily beating the most optimistic expectations.

The report shows that seasonal retooling in the auto industry has not stifled what has been an increasingly strong labor market.

The four-week moving average came in at 240,500, a decline of 500 from the previous week’s unrevised average of 241,000. No state was triggered “on” the Extended Benefits program during the week ending July 29 and continuing lagging claims continue to hover at all-time lows.

The highest insured unemployment rates in the week ending July 29 were in Puerto Rico (3.8), New Jersey (2.7), Connecticut (2.4), Alaska (2.2), Pennsylvania (2.2), California (2.1), Rhode Island (2.0), Massachusetts (1.9), Illinois (1.7), and New York (1.7).

The largest increases in initial claims for the week ending August 5 were in Kansas (+2,267), Missouri (+1,332), Pennsylvania (+1,215), South Carolina (+1,035), and Texas (+915), while the largest decreases were in California (-2,952), Delaware (-229), Tennessee (-225), Mississippi (-74), and New Mexico (-52).

The Labor Department said Thursday first-time claims

A confederate monument in North Carolina vandalized with spray paint and cement. (Photo: AP)

A confederate monument in North Carolina vandalized with spray paint and cement. (Photo: AP)

There has been a great deal of debate about the memorial to Confederate soldiers and statesmen that are still scattered around the country, and whether we should continue to memorialize those who died in the Civil War for the Confederacy.

For some, these are emblems of a dark time in American history, a time when we enslaved our fellow man. For others they represent a period of time when men were more free to govern themselves, and a more genteel society. For most, they are simply markers of a time best left to history texts and a reminder of a time when Americans fought each other to the death over the issues that then faced the nation.

In the American Civil war, we saw fathers fighting sons, brothers fighting with brothers, and friends fighting with lifelong neighbors. It led to a brutal war with communities razed to the ground, and more casualties than the entire population of slaves in the U.S. at that time.

Why on earth do we want to relitigate that war again?

Confederate soldiers lying dead after Gettysburg.

Confederates lying dead during the Civil War

By demanding that these historical markers be destroyed or torn down, we are in effect, reopening old wounds that never properly healed, or were never truly resolved. The debates that destroyed this nation once before, are now being reexamined and discussed both politely and unfortunately, with the same bombastic rhetoric that led us into the massive casualties of the Civil War.

Two sides of the coin; federalists and anti-federalist warring again, over the future of American society. It will end with the same predictable outcome that we had the first time, as well.

However, we do not have the same issues corrupting our democracy that we did 150 years ago. We do not have slavery or institutionalized bondage of any kind now in America. We have accepted the rights of states to self govern. We are a far more inclusive and opportunistic society than we were in the 1860’s.

We are fighting over a cause that simply does not exist the way it did back then.

We are arguing simply to argue.

Lincoln knew best when he talked about healing a nation in his second inaugural address, and we would do well to heed his words, lest we tread down this path again.

He spoke of letting go of the issues that drove us apart. He allowed Confederates to return home and rebuild their wrecked cities and homes. He demanded no reparations. He accepted and brokered nothing; except in the fact that we need to bury our dead and our passions that drove us apart.

Many monuments and markers were erected in the ensuing years– not a single one memorialized slavery or the issues that the Confederacy represented, only the facts that Americans fought and died and that we should not forget their loss.

Fair warning: If we continue along this path, it will result once again in a broken nation, culture and people in the same way it did all those years ago.

If you enjoyed this article, please listen to my radio show, Liberty Never Sleeps, on I Heart Radio, or subscribe via YouTube or our hosting site at Spreaker.com. You can follow me on Twitter at @realTomPurcell

You can support this show through our crowdfunding on Patreon.com and read more about us at LibertyNeverSleeps.com or follow us on Facebook.

By debating whether we should tear down

A monument to General George Washington, the nation's most prominent founding father, in Washington Park in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo: AP)

A monument to General George Washington, the nation’s most prominent founding father, in Washington Park in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo: AP)

Less than 24 hours after President Donald Trump was ridiculed for suggesting it would happen, calls to remove monuments to George Washington have begun.

Bishop James Dukes, pastor of the Liberation Christian Center, has asked Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel to remove the names of presidents who owned slaves and the bronze statue of George Washington on horseback. The Washington monument stands at the corner of 51st and King Drive, located at the northwest entrance to Washington Park.

Mr. Dukes told CBS Chicago Gen. Washington might be the nation’s first president and the leader of the Revolutionary Army, but “he’s no hero to the black community.”

“There’s no way plausible that we would even think that they would erect a Malcolm X statue in Mount Greenwood, Lincoln Park, or any of that. Not that say Malcolm X was a bad guy; they just would not go for it,” he said. “Native Americans would not even think about putting up a Custer statue, because of the atrocities that he plagued upon Native Americans. And for them to say to us ‘just accept it’ is actually insulting.”

On his Facebook page, he pitches names that are far more controversial, which CBS Chicago failed to mention.

“Do you really believe they would let me go into Lincoln Park and have a statue of Louis Farrakhan,Jesse Jackson [sic] or Huey P Newton,” he wrote on Facebook. “The answer is a resounding NO!!!”

Mr. Farrakhan is a bigoted, anti-semitic racist. His black supremacist remarks have been well-document by hate-watch group such as the Anti-Defamation League (ADL). During Part 2 of his 2015 Saviours’ Day keynote address at the Mosque Maryam in Chicago, Mr. Farrakhan said Israel and Jews orchestrated the 9/11 attacks, claiming “Israelis had foreknowledge of the attacks.”

He also said Jews were warned ahead of time not to come to work that day.

While Mayor Emanuel did not immediately respond to requests for comment, a Chicago Park District spokeswoman did note that the city has a formal process for renaming parks. It permits anyone to submit a request to the superintendent and the Park District board may vote on any such request after a 45-day public comment period.

On Monday, Reverend Al Sharpton suggested and supported the removal of the monument to Thomas Jefferson in Washington D.C. Rev. Sharpton has also made numerous racist and anti-gay remarks, including during a speech at Kean College in New Jersey.

“Well off [kill] them,” he urged the crowd. “Plenty of crackers running around here. Ain’t nobody gonna come at you and knock the gun out your hand.”

Less than 24 hours after President Donald

People's Pundit Daily
You have %%pigeonMeterAvailable%% free %%pigeonCopyPage%% remaining this month. Get unlimited access and support reader-funded, independent data journalism.

Start a 14-day free trial now. Pay later!

Start Trial