Widget Image
Follow PPD Social Media
Saturday, March 1, 2025
HomeStandard Blog Whole Post (Page 775)

Egypt-explosion

Video purportedly showing an attack on an Egyptian army truck convoy appeared online Wednesday. (Screenshot)

U.S. allies in the Middle East are growing increasingly frustrated with White House policy in the region in the fight against the Islamic State.

Kurdish fighters have successfully pushed back Islamic State attempts to reclaim the Syrian border at Ebril and wrest back control over Iraq’s north-west. The Peshmerga, aided by the assistance of their Kurdish allies from Syria, forced ISIS back from the border despite U.S. officials halting expected shipments of heavy weaponry. Kurds, who have become the most effective fighting force against Islamic State militants, are beating back assaults with outdated, provisional armory that the White House has promised to replace.

Meanwhile, the Egyptian government launched a major campaign against jihadists affiliated with the Islamic State after the terrorist group struck the Sinai Peninsula with sophisticated weaponry, including Russian-made Kornet anti-tank missiles. The el-Watan Daily reported that the Islamic State assault also used mortars, anti-aircraft guns and other guided missiles. Egypt’s security and military officials say they have never seen such an attack, which targeted a minimum of six military checkpoints in the northern part of Sinai.

ISIS killed at least 50 soldiers during an attack that shocked Egypt and led to suspicions that the Islamic State is providing more than just ideological inspiration to Egypt’s jihadists. Egyptian officials acknowledged that the terrorists also took soldiers captive and seized several armored vehicles. These attacks come just two days after the assassination in Cairo of the country’s top prosecutor.

The Egyptians killed 23 ISIS militants as they went going door-to-door in an effort to rid themselves of the growing ISIS infestation, removing road mines and other explosive devices along the way. Israeli Defense Forces confirmed they have increased their military presence along the Egyptian border due to these attacks.

“The actions that we see from ISIS are nothing compared to the capabilities being built by the Iranian regime,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said during an address on the threat of ISIS in the Sinai. “We are standing before two threats, the threat of ISIS and Iran. We don’t have to strengthen one at the expense of the other; we have to weaken both of them.”

Major General Mordechai, Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories, noted in an interview that Israel uncovered significant evidence that implicates Hamas in the brutal attacks by the Islamic State against Egyptian security forces. Hamas military commanders were not only coordinating, but also supplying militants involved in the attacks in the Sinai.

While U.S. President Barack Obama, British Prime Minister David Cameron and Western leaders remain unprepared to meet the extreme threat around the world faces and in the region, the Kurdish Peshmerga continue to provide for their own defense. However, the latest decision to halt much-needed shipments has left allies increasingly frustrated with Washington.

“If the Americans and the West are not prepared to do anything serious about defeating Isil, then we will have to find new ways of dealing with the threat,” a senior Egyptian official who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said. “With Daesh [ISIS] making ground all the time we simply cannot afford to wait for Washington to wake up to the enormity of the threat we face.”

The Peshmerga and all of the Middle East are facing true dilemmas, with historic weaponry against ISIS modern U.S weaponry puts them at a disadvantage. Both the Peshmerga and the Kurds still manage to beat these terrorists back with all of their might. If President Obama and the West officials are unwilling to help then they should not interfere.

The White House is disabling its allies which is causing friction amongst the two hemispheres. Saudi Arabia, Jordan and the Gulf state observe that President Obama’s lack of a strategy and interference is hurting their advancement against these terrorists. Random airstrikes do not assist them when there is no purpose behind them.

One senior Gulf official dumbfounded by the lack of strategy from the United States, stated that limited airstrikes, half-measures and last-minute reneging of arms shipments will only prolong the inevitable defeat.

“There is simply no strategic approach. There is a lack of coordination in selecting targets, and there is no overall plan for defeating Daesh.”

The U.S. Senate voted down an amendment allowing for the U.S. to bypass what is left of the central government in Baghdad and send weapons directly to the Kurdish fighters. The vote came ahead of another brutal attack on a NATO convoy in Afghanistan that killed two people and wounded 26, including two U.S. soldiers.

Also, 11 workers from al-Miadin suffered live crucifixion and were forced to wear signs stating they were punished with seventy lashes after breaking the fast in Ramadan.

U.S. allies in the Middle East are

news-media

Back in 2010, I described the “Butterfield Effect,” which is a term used to mock clueless journalists for being blind to the real story.

“A former reporter for the New York Times, Fox Butterfield, became a bit of a laughingstock in the 1990s for publishing a series of articles addressing the supposed quandary of how crime rates could be falling during periods when prison populations were expandingm,” I wrote. “A number of critics sarcastically explained that crimes rates were falling because bad guys were behind bars and invented the term “Butterfield Effect” to describe the failure of leftists to put 2 + 2 together.”

Here are some of my favorite examples, all of which presumably are caused by some combination of media bias and economic ignorance.

  • A newspaper article that was so blind to the Laffer Curve that it actually included a passage saying, “receipts are falling dramatically short of targets, even though taxes have increased.”
  • Another article was entitled, “Few Places to Hide as Taxes Trend Higher Worldwide,” because the reporter apparently was clueless that tax havens were attacked precisely so governments could raise tax burdens.
  • In another example of laughable Laffer Curve ignorance, the Washington Post had a story about tax revenues dropping in Detroit “despite some of the highest tax rates in the state.”
  • Likewise, another news report had a surprised tone when reporting on the fully predictable news that rich people reported more taxable income when their tax rates were lower.

Now we have a new example for our collection. Here are some passages from a very strange economics report in the New York Times.

There are some problems that not even $10 trillion can solve. That gargantuan sum of money is what central banks around the world have spent in recent years as they have tried to stimulate their economies and fight financial crises. …But it has not been able to do away with days like Monday, when fear again coursed through global financial markets.

I’m tempted to immediately ask why the reporter assumed any problem might be solved by having governments spend $10 trillion, but let’s instead ask a more specific question. Why is there unease in financial markets?

The story actually provides the answer, but the reporter apparently isn’t aware that debt is part of the problem instead of the solution.

Stifling debt loads, for instance, continue to weigh on governments around the world. …high borrowing…by…governments…is also bogging down the globally significant economies of Brazil, Turkey, Italy and China.

So if borrowing and spending doesn’t solve anything, is an easy-money policy the right approach?

…central banks like the Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank have printed trillions of dollars and euros… Central banks can make debt less expensive by pushing down interest rates.

The story once again sort of provides the answer about the efficacy of monetary easing and artificially low interest rates.

…they cannot slash debt levels… In fact, lower interest rates can persuade some borrowers to take on more debt. “Rather than just reflecting the current weakness, low rates may in part have contributed to it by fueling costly financial booms and busts,” the Bank for International Settlements, an organization whose members are the world’s central banks, wrote in a recent analysis of the global economy.

This is remarkable. The reporter seems puzzled that deficit spending and easy money don’t help produce growth, even though the story includes information on how such policies retard growth. It must take willful blindness not to make this connection.

Indeed, the story in the New York Times originally was entitled, “Trillions Spent, but Crises like Greece’s Persist.”

Wow, what an example of upside-down analysis. A better title would have been “Crises like Greece’s Persist Because Trillions Spent.”

The reporter/editor/headline writer definitely deserve the Fox Butterfield prize.

Here’s another example from the story that reveals this intellectual inconsistency.

Debt in China has soared since the financial crisis of 2008, in part the result of government stimulus efforts. Yet the Chinese economy is growing much more slowly than it was, say, 10 years ago.

Hmmm…, maybe the Chinese economy is growing slower because of the so-called stimulus schemes.

At some point one might think people would make the connection between economic stagnation and bad policy. But journalists seem remarkably impervious to insight.

The Economist has a story that also starts with the assumption that Keynesian policies are good. It doesn’t explicitly acknowledge the downsides of debt and easy money, but it implicitly shows the shortcomings of that approach because the story focuses on how governments have less “fiscal space” to engage in another 2008-style orgy of Keynesian monetary and fiscal policy

The analysis is misguided, but the accompanying chart is useful since it shows which nations are probably most vulnerable to a fiscal crisis.

wriggle-room-ranking-countrie

If you’re at the top of the chart, because you have oil like Norway, or because you’re semi-sensible like South Korea, Australia, and Switzerland, that’s a good sign. But if you’re a nation like Japan, Italy, Greece, and Portugal, it’s probably just a matter of time before the chickens of excessive spending come home to roost.

P.S. Related to the Fox Butterfield effect, I’ve also suggested that there should be “some sort of “Wrong Way Corrigan” Award for people like Drum who inadvertently help the cause of economic liberty.”

P.P.S. And in the same spirit, I’ve proposed an “own-goal effect” for “accidentally helping the other side.”

[mybooktable book=”global-tax-revolution-the-rise-of-tax-competition-and-the-battle-to-defend-it” display=”summary” buybutton_shadowbox=”true”]

CATO economist Dan Mitchell explains what the


jobs-fair-line

Unemployment Americans stand on a job fair line. (Photo: Reuters)

The Bureau and Labor Statistics June jobs report found the U.S. added 223,000 jobs in June and unemployment fell to 5.3%, according to the Labor Department. Analysts had predicted a gain of 230,000 jobs and that the unemployment rate would hold steady at 5.5%.

“Incorporating revisions for April and May, which decreased nonfarm employment by 60,000, monthly job gains have averaged 221,000 over the past 3 months,” BLS Commissioner Erica L. Groshen said in a statement. “In the 12 months prior to June, employment growth averaged 250,000 per month.”

While the headline unemployment rate and the number of jobs created remain important economic indicators, wage growth remained non-existent and the labor force participation remain fell to an abysmal 62.6%.

The civilian labor force declined by 432,000 in June on a seasonally adjusted basis, after actually gaining 397,000 in May.

“At this time of year, a large number of people move into and out of employment and unemployment,” Groshen said. “On a not seasonally adjusted basis, the net labor force gain in June was unusually low compared with prior years. As always, we caution against placing too much emphasis on one month’s data.”

The commissioner’s attempt to smooth over the data is admirable, but ultimately flawed. The month of June is not a one-off regarding labor participation and the employment-to-population ratio, the latter of which is at just 59.3%, nor can the drop be attributable to baby boomers exiting the workforce. While the Federal Reserve has named near full employment as one of its targets to hit before raising interest rates, they will parse the data a bit more closely than most economists commenting in the media.

The number of Americans employed part time for economic reasons — those would have preferred full-time employment, but were working part time because their hours had been cut back or because they were unable to find full-time work — ticked up to 6.5 million in June.

The Fed will be concerns over the lack of wage growth when trying to determining whether the U.S. economy has gained enough upward momentum to absorb the increase in borrowing costs that will accompany a rate hike. When rates are hiked, borrowing costs will increase for consumers looking to buy big ticket items, businesses looking to borrow money for expansion and capital improvements and the government looking to continue to borrow money for deficit spending.

The Fed is looking for 3% annual wage growth is needed to lift inflation to the central bank’s 2% target rate, the former of which we have not yet seen. In June, average hourly earnings for all employees on private nonfarm payrolls didn’t increase, at all. They were unchanged at $24.95, while average hourly earnings of private-sector production and nonsupervisory employees increased by just 2 cents to $20.99.

The Fed has been reluctant to raise rates for fear that prematurely raising borrowing costs could push the economy back into recession.

The Bureau and Labor Statistics June jobs

Hillary-Clinton-Newscom

Hillary Clinton at a campaign event in Iowa. (Photo: Keiko Hiromi/Polaris/Newscom)

In the course of my work at Fox News, I am often asked by colleagues to review and explain documents and statutes. Recently, in conjunction with my colleagues Catherine Herridge, our chief intelligence correspondent, and Pamela Browne, our senior executive producer, I read the transcripts of an interview Browne did with a man named Marc Turi, and Herridge asked me to review emails to and from State Department and congressional officials during the years when Hillary Clinton was the secretary of state.

What I saw has persuaded me beyond a reasonable doubt and to a moral certainty that Clinton provided material assistance to terrorists and lied to Congress in a venue where the law required her to be truthful. Here is the backstory.

Turi is a lawfully licensed American arms dealer. In 2011, he applied to the Departments of State and Treasury for approvals to sell arms to the government of Qatar. Qatar is a small Middle Eastern country whose government is so entwined with the U.S. government that it almost always will do what American government officials ask of it.

In its efforts to keep arms from countries and groups that might harm Americans and American interests, Congress has authorized the Departments of State and Treasury to be arms gatekeepers.

They can declare a country or group to be a terrorist organization, in which case selling or facilitating the sale of arms to them is a felony. They also can license dealers to sell.

Turi sold hundreds of millions of dollars’ worth of arms to the government of Qatar, which then, at the request of American government officials, were sold, bartered or given to rebel groups in Libya and Syria. Some of the groups that received the arms were on the U.S. terror list. Thus, the same State and Treasury Departments that licensed the sales also prohibited them.

How could that be?

That’s where Clinton’s secret State Department and her secret war come in. Because Clinton used her husband’s computer server for all of her email traffic while she was the secretary of state, a violation of three federal laws, few in the State Department outside her inner circle knew what she was up to.

Now we know.

She obtained permission from President Obama and consent from congressional leaders in both houses of Congress and in both parties to arm rebels in Syria and Libya in an effort to overthrow the governments of those countries.

Many of the rebels Clinton armed, using the weapons lawfully sold to Qatar by Turi and others, were terrorist groups who are our sworn enemies. There was no congressional declaration of war, no congressional vote, no congressional knowledge beyond fewer than a dozen members, and no federal statute that authorized this.

When Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., asked Clinton at a public hearing of the Senate Armed Services Committee on Jan. 23, 2013, whether she knew about American arms shipped to the Middle East, to Turkey or to any other country, she denied any knowledge. It is unclear whether she was under oath at the time, but that is legally irrelevant. The obligation to tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth to Congress pertains to all witnesses who testify before congressional committees, whether an oath has been administered or not. (Just ask Roger Clemens, who was twice prosecuted for misleading Congress about the contents of his urine while not under oath. He was acquitted.)

Here is her relevant testimony.

Paul: My question is … is the U.S. involved with any procuring of weapons, transfer of weapons … buying, selling … anyhow transferring weapons to Turkey … out of Libya?

Clinton: To Turkey? … I will have to take that question for the record. Nobody’s ever raised that with me. I, I…

Paul: It’s been in news reports that ships have been leaving from Libya and that they may have weapons … and what I’d like to know is … the (Benghazi) annex that was close by… Were they involved with procuring, buying, selling, obtaining weapons … and were any of these weapons transferred to other countries … any countries, Turkey included?

Clinton: Senator, you will have to direct that question to the agency that ran the (Benghazi) annex. And I will see what information is available and … ahhhh…

Paul: You are saying you don’t know…

Clinton: I do not know. I don’t have any information on that.

At the time that Clinton denied knowledge of the arms shipments, she and her State Department political designee Andrew Shapiro had authorized thousands of shipments of billions of dollars’ worth of arms to U.S. enemies to fight her secret war. Among the casualties of her war were U.S. Ambassador to Libya Chris Stevens and three colleagues, who were assassinated at the American consulate in Benghazi, Libya, by rebels Clinton armed with American military hardware in violation of American law.

This secret war and the criminal behavior that animated it was the product of conspirators in the White House, the State Department, the Treasury Department, the Justice Department, the CIA and a tight-knit group of members of Congress. Their conspiracy has now unraveled. Where is the outrage among the balance of Congress?

Hillary Clinton lied to Congress, gave arms to terrorists and destroyed her emails. How much longer can she hide the truth? How much longer can her lawlessness go unchallenged and unprosecuted? Does she really think the American voters will overlook her criminal behavior and put her in the White House where she can pardon herself?

Judge Andrew Napolitano exposes Hillary Clinton's secret

Supreme Court Hears Arguments On California's Prop 8 And Defense Of Marriage Act

WASHINGTON, DC – MARCH 27: Eric Breese (L) of Rochester, New York, joins fellow George Washington University students and hundreds of others to rally outside the Supreme Court during oral arguments in a case challenging the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) March 27, 2013 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

This column is in response to my fellow Christians who insist they’re not bigots just because they oppose marriage equality. I’ve been hearing from them a lot after writing a short essay and posting it on Facebook in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to legalize same-gender marriage.

I don’t usually quote from my own Facebook posts, but plenty of newspaper readers aren’t on social media. Even if you are, I don’t assume you’re hanging on my every word there.

First, a little background: I wrote the essay the day after the Supreme Court ruling, on Saturday, July 27. I posted it less than an hour before my husband and I, now 11 years into our second marriages, drove to a friend’s wedding, which was not the first for either the bride or the groom. How easily each of us was allowed to try again in this country.

My Facebook post:

I’ve seen quite the flurry of social media posts suggesting those of us who are celebrating the U.S. Supreme Court’s marriage equality decision are not behaving as gracious winners. We should show more understanding toward those who are disappointed, the critics say. We should not “rub it in.” Other commonly spotted criticisms of our joy: We are gloating. We are insensitive. We are being poor sports.
For decades, I have seen the bigotry of homophobia break up families, ruin careers and destroy lives. I’ve read — and written — too many stories about gay teens who chose suicide over another day of bullying — from classmates and strangers, and sometimes from their own family members. Children. Killing themselves because they felt unlovable as the human beings they were born to be.
Over the years, I hosted so many gay friends for holiday celebrations because their own families made clear they were not welcome to come home. I have sat and cried with too many gay friends whose hearts were broken after their fellow citizens passed one hateful piece of anti-gay legislation after another. I have watched so-called Christians pray publicly for the death of people I love. I have seen them do this outside of funerals, their young children holding signs that say, “GOD HATES FAGS.”
This is not a sports championship we’re celebrating. We are not victors in a political campaign.
We are cheering for something that will not harm the lives or the marriages of anyone like me, a heterosexual who got not one, but two government-sanctioned tries to form a more perfect union. We are overjoyed, and we are relieved. America really is better than our worst behavior.
As a straight ally, this has been our shame to bear, this government endorsement of second-class citizenship to people we know, people we love. How many times have I tried to assure my friends and loved ones that most of us don’t feel this way about them? How many times have I fallen silent to their rebuttals, their ability to point to what sometimes seemed to be overwhelming evidence to the contrary?
All of that is now history.
I don’t want to harness my joy to make the bigots feel more comfortable. I will not temper my celebration to make those who oppose same-gender marriage feel better about their self-righteousness. I am not celebrating their misery. They didn’t lose anything.
I am rejoicing for my gay brothers and sisters. I am welcoming them home.

Tens of thousands of readers have responded positively to the post, but a significant minority who identify as Christian objected. Some posted the vile sort of stuff that always prompts the happy exercise of my index finger over the “delete” button. Others offered the usual rant of God hating the sin but loving the sinner, often ending with a string of Old Testament citations.

Many were particularly defensive about my use of the word “bigots.” How dare I disparage all Christians, they said. They were following God’s word, they insisted.

This was a fascinating sub-thread of commentary, for its assumptions as much as its assertions. I never said all Christians are bigots. I’m a Christian, flawed and forever practicing. I know so many other Christians who, like me, have long supported same-gender marriage.

My objection is to those Christians who wield their Bible as a weapon to oppress others. When we talk about marriage equality, the difference between “I don’t approve” and “it ought to be illegal” is the difference between intolerance and bigotry.

I am embarrassed to hear narrow minds masquerading as God’s spokesmen. I am outraged to see them co-opt my religion to rain down harm on innocent people. And let’s be clear: If you feel free to say to others that God doesn’t approve of who they were born to be, you are inflicting nothing but pain.

You can say it’s just your opinion, just you being Christian, but I suggest you take a look around. Love is bursting out all around you. With or without you, justice is marching on.

Connie Schultz: This column is in response

Advocates of economic liberty, free market, and small government haven’t enjoyed many victories in the 21st Century.

Government got bigger and more expensive during Bush’s reign, starting in his first year with the No Bureaucrat Left Behind legislation and then ending in his final year with the odious TARP bailout.

Then Obama came to office, promising “hope and change,” but then proceeded to act like Bush on steroids, giving us the faux stimulus his first year and then the ObamaCare boondoggle his second year.

But there have been a few victories since 2010.

The sequester unquestionably was Obama’s biggest defeat, and that policy helped contribute (along with debt limit fights and shutdown battles) to a much-needed five-year slowdown in federal spending between 2009 and 2014.

Obama-Spending-GDP

Federal Spending from start of Obama administration to the present. (Source: Dan Mitchell)

That’s certainly not a permanent victory, particularly since our long-run fiscal crisis will still be enormous in the absence of genuine entitlement reform.

But better to have some short-run spending restraint than none at all.

And since we’re looking at victories, we have something new to celebrate. Today (July 1) is the first day in decades that America is freed from a very misguided form of corporate welfare known as the Export-Import Bank.

This bit of cronyism was created to give undeserved wealth to big companies by guaranteeing some of their sales to foreign customers, and I argued in 2012 and earlier this year that shutting down the Ex-Im Bank was a test of seriousness for the GOP..

They sort of passed the test. The Ex-Im Bank needed to be authorized by midnight on June 30 to stay in operation and that didn’t happen.

However, this victory also isn’t permanent. Cronyists in the business community plan to push for re-authorization later this year, so it’s still an open question on who will prevail. Particularly since there are some GOPers who like big business more than free markets.

But at least for today, we can enjoy this image from the Ex-Im Bank’s website.

Ex-Im-Bank-website-reauthorization-Msg

 

For more information why the Ex-Im Bank should not be re-authorized and instead should be permanently shut down, here are some excerpts from a column by Veronique de Rugy of Mercatus.

Ex-Im Bank puts millions of consumers, firms and workers at a disadvantage. As such, closing it down is an important first step in the battle against the unhealthy marriage between the government and corporate America. …Over 60 percent of the bank’s financing aids 10 giant beneficiaries, like Caterpillar, Bechtel, and General Electric. On the foreign side, the cheap loans go to state-owned companies like Pemex, the Mexican government’s oil and gas giant, or Air Emirates, the airline of the wealthy United Arab Emirates. …More than 98 percent of all U.S. exports occur with no Ex-Im Bank subsidies at all. And considering who the beneficiaries of Ex-Im on the domestic and foreign sides are, there’s no chance that all Ex-Im supported exports will disappear.

Ex-Im-Bank-cartoonAnd let’s not forget the costs imposed on the rest of the economy thanks to this bit of corporate welfare.

Economists have shown that while export subsidies boost the profits of the recipients, it tends to have a negative impact on economy as a whole by shifting capital, economic growth, jobs and profits from unsubsidized firms to subsidized ones. …victims are taxpayers who now bear the risk for $140 billion in liabilities. These victims are consumers who pay higher prices for the purchase of subsidized goods. These victims are unsubsidized firms competing with subsidized ones. They not only pay higher financing costs but also lose out when private capital flows to politically privileged firms regardless of the merits of their projects. Some are even victimized multiple times: first as taxpayers, then as consumers, then as competitors, and finally as borrowers.

Speaking of economic costs, you definitely should click here and watch a video by another Mercatus expert of why the Ex-Im Bank undermines economic efficiency.

Like Veronique, Tim Carney of the Washington Examiner is one of the unsung heroes in the fight against the Ex-Im Bank. Here’s some of his column from yesterday.

The Export-Import Bank is down. …Legally, Ex-Im’s officers, employees and board members must cease their typical work of subsidizing Boeing, J.P. Morgan and Chinese state-owned enterprises. Instead, under the law that authorized it, Ex-Im is allowed to exist only “for purposes of orderly liquidation, including the administration of its assets and the collection of any obligations held by the bank.” …This week’s knockdown of Ex-Im should be seen in exactly this light: It is an early and visible victory for the GOP’s free-market forces over the forces of K Street, which for so long held a monopoly on the party.

I should also point out that some of my colleagues at the Cato Institute have been working hard for years to explain why the Ex-Im Bank should be abolished. Kudos also to Heritage Action for fighting against this corrupt cronyist institution.

Last but not least, here’s a video Nick narrated last year on why the Ex-Im Bank should not be re-authorized. I like how he starts with a clip of Obama the candidate citing it as wasteful corporate welfare. Now that he’s in power, though, he’s decided the cesspool of DC corruption is really a hot tub.

[mybooktable book=”global-tax-revolution-the-rise-of-tax-competition-and-the-battle-to-defend-it” display=”summary” buybutton_shadowbox=”true”]

The Export-Import Bank needed to be authorized

Greek-Prime-Minister-Alexis-Tsipras

Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras (Reuters/Marko Djurica)

Less than 24 hours after Greece became the first country in the modern developed world to default on its debt, the socialist leader caved on key demands. In a letter to Greek creditors sent late Tuesday, Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras indicated that he was willing to accept several keys components of a deal that he had rejected in recent days.

Investors continue to monitor developments out of Greece, as well as recent economic data. But the news helped to send markets higher Friday afternoon.

As of 1:10 p.m. ET, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 78 points, or 0.45% to 17698. The S&P 500 added 7 points, or 0.34% to 2070, while the Nasdaq Composite climbed 8 points, or 0.17% to 4995.

The letter, which was first obtained by the Financial Times, requests an extension of the country’s expired bailout program and a new loan program, worth just short of 30 billion euros. Among the revisions requested by Tsipras are a delay in implementing pension reforms, cutting military spending in 2017 instead of this year, and granting Greek islands a 30 percent discount on the country’s VAT, or value-added tax.

Overseas markets also saw a bounce on Wednesday amid optimism over a Greek debt deal. The Euro Stoxx 50, which tracks large-cap stocks in the eurozone, surged 2.10% to 3496. Meanwhile, the German Dax jumped 2.15% to 11180, the French CAC 40 jumped 1.94% to 4883, and the UK’s FTSE 100 rose 1.24% to 6601.

In Asia, the Shanghai Composite, which fell into bear-market territory this week, dropped 5.23% to 4053. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng rose 1.79% to 8058, while Japan’s Nikkei saw a 0.46% tick higher to 20329.

In currencies, the euro fell 0.69% against the U.S. dollar.

Still, officials said the new terms in the letter were insufficient to bring them back to the negotiating table before Sunday’s referendum. Greece is scheduled to carry out a referendum Sunday on whether to accept a proposal of reforms offered by the country’s creditors.

On Wednesday, German Chancellor Angela Merkel was clearly unwilling to back down from the initial proposal or to agree to the Greek requests for concessions. Thousands of Greek citizens gathered in Athens to protest the prime minister — with many calling for his removal — and to stand in support of the European Union.

“With the expiration of the program, the basis for the offer has been removed,” Merkel said, referring to the expiration of the bailout program.

In a letter to creditors sent late

ISM-manufacturing-index

The Institute for Supply Management’s Manufacturing Report On Business Survey. (Photo: REUTERS)

The Institute for Supply Management’s (ISM) gauge of manufacturing activity rose to 53.5 in June from 52.8 in May, slightly beating Wall Street expectations for an increase to 53.1.

Readings above 50 point to expansion while those below indicate contraction.

However, the Chicago Business Barometer this week rose slightly, as well, but still came in contraction territory for the second consecutive month.

“While the latest increase in new orders is a tentative sign of a pickup in demand over the coming months, there is no getting away from the general softness in the data,” said Philip Uglow, chief economist of MNI Indicators. “The Barometer hit a 5½ year low in Q2 and the weakness is having a detrimental impact on the level of hiring.”

The Institute for Supply Management (ISM) said

jobs-search-station-reuters

Job Search Station (Photo: Reuters)

The ADP National Employment Report released Wednesday found that U.S. private employers added 237,000 jobs in June, the biggest gain since December. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast the ADP National Employment Report would show a gain of 218,000 jobs.

“June job numbers came in at their highest level since December 2014,” said Carlos Rodriguez, president and chief executive officer of ADP. “Small businesses continue to lead the way adding over half of the total jobs this month.”

Change-in-Total-Nonfarm-Private-Employment-by-Selected-Industry-June-2015

May private payroll gains were revised up to 203,000 from an initially reported 201,000 gain, which was the smallest rise since January 2014. The report is jointly developed with Moody’s Analytics, and come ahead of the U.S. Labor Department’s — allegedly more comprehensive non-farm payrolls report — on Thursday, which includes both public and private-sector employment.

“The U.S. job machine remains in high gear. The current robust pace of job growth is double that needed to absorb the growth in the working age population. The only blemish in the job market is the loss of jobs in the energy sector. Most encouraging is the healthy rate of job growth among the nation’s smallest companies.”

Economists polled by Reuters are expecting U.S. employment gains at 230,000 jobs in June, down from May’s 280,000 increase. The unemployment rate was forecast to slip to a seven-year low of 5.4 percent from 5.5 percent.

The ADP National Employment Report released Wednesday

axelrod-rahm-split

At left, Chicago Mayor and former Obama Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel; at right, former Obama adviser David Axelrod. (AP/Reuters)

Top White House aides, including David Axelrod, knew about at least one of Hillary Clinton’s private email accounts as early as 2009, despite claims. In other words, regardless of what Axelrod and White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest have said, President Obama’s staff knew about the secretary’s email account(s) in the president’s very first year.

Clinton’s chief of staff, Cheryl Mills, passed Clinton’s private email address to David Axelrod, then a senior Obama adviser, in June 2009, with a subject reading:

RE: axelrod wants your email – remind me to discuss with you if .i forget

“Can you send to him or do you want me to?” Hillary responded on June 08, 2009. “Does he know I can’t look at it all day so he needs to contact me thru you or Huma or Lauren during work hours.”

Weeks later, Axelrod sent a note of sympathy to the secretary after learning she had fallen and hurt herself.

Further, Mills ensured Clinton was comfortable sharing her private email address once again in September 2009 before giving it to Rahm Emmanuel, Obama’s chief of staff.

Top White House aides, including David Axelrod,

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