The Fit Minority

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A CDC Study shows that only 23% of Americans exercise on a regular basis.

About a quarter of US adults meet guidelines for both aerobic and muscle-strengthening exercise in their spare time, according to new data from the CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics.

The US Department of Health and Human Services recommends that people between the ages of 18 and 64 engage in at least 150 minutes of moderate physical activity or 75 minutes of vigorous physical activity each week, as well as muscle-strengthening activities at least twice a week.

Subtracting 23% from the whole (apologies to Detroit Public “School” grads) leaves 77% not exercising. Oddly, this remainder is roughly the same as that percentage of Americans who are either overweight and/or obese and/or severely obese.

Friends, this ain’t gonna cut it. Not unless you’re in the mortuary business should this news be seen as anything but evidence of decadence and decline.

Some suggestions for those majority heavies wishing to shed flab and tone it up a notch (or ten):

Eating right and exercise are obvious – and easier than many would imagine. Perrin agrees with a government agency here!!! Just walk 2 1/2 hours per week – 30 minutes or 2 miles, Monday through Friday will do. That and cut the sugar and carbs. Got 30 minutes? I’ll bet you do. Find the time by:

Turning off the G-D television!

Consider NOT checking the Tweets, texts, and cat videos for half an hour. You’ll live.

Allowing your fantasy sports team half an hour to play on their own. They do that anyway.

Postpone that next cool and I’m-sure-yours-is-so-meaningful tattoo. Especially if it’s a facial tat…

While you walk, think about what you’ve read here, today, or over at TPC – new column coming ASAP.

Alternatively, consider doing your family a favor and make those final arrangements yourself as you see fit. Otherwise, you’ll burden them with decisions like whether to go all wood or steel or to simply dump your fat ass in the closet ditch.

B-b-b-b but We Owe It to Ourselves…

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The CBO, even with obscured numbers, sounds a warning bell on US debt load: Roll Call Story, here, in its entirety for ease of access:

Debt as a share of the United States economy is on track to blow through the previous World War II-era record within two decades and keep rising from there, the Congressional Budget Office said in its annual long-term budget report.

Generally assuming no change in current laws, growing budget deficits would push debt held by the public from the current level of 78 percent of the economy to almost 100 percent of gross domestic product by 2028, and to 152 percent of GDP by 2048, according to the agency.

“That amount would be the highest in the nation’s history by far,” said the report, which estimates the growth of spending and revenue over the next three decades as a share of the economy. The current record for debt as a share of GDP was set in 1946 when it hit 106 percent. Debt as a share of the economy is projected to exceed that level in fiscal 2034 under the latest projections, one year earlier than in last year’s long-term budget outlook.

CBO highlighted the role that rising interest costs will have, along with the growth of Social Security and Medicare.

In a statement distributed with the report, CBO Director Keith Hall said that by 2048, “as interest rates rise from their currently low levels and as debt accumulates, the federal government’s net interest costs are projected to more than double as a percentage of GDP and to reach record levels.”

Hall said interest costs would equal spending for Social Security, currently the largest federal program, by 2048.

CBO has long warned that rising debt poses a risk to the economy, and Hall made the point again Tuesday.

“The prospect of large and growing debt poses substantial risks for the nation and presents policymakers with significant challenges,” he said in the statement.

Under current law, revenue is projected to be relatively flat over the next few years in relation to GDP, rise slowly and then jump in 2026 after certain tax cuts expire.

“After 2026, revenues are projected to keep rising in relation to the size of economy — though not to keep pace with spending growth — mostly because of increases in individual income tax receipts,” Hall said.

Compared to last year’s report, CBO’s projections of debt growth are higher through 2041 and lower thereafter. The agency projects debt as a share of GDP would be 3 percentage points lower in 2047 than projected last year. The increase in debt through 2041 stems primarily from the tax overhaul, the two-year budget deal and the fiscal 2018 omnibus spending bill, the CBO said.

If Congress extends the individual tax cuts and several other tax provisions that are set to expire at the end of 2025, as many House Republicans want to do, debt would grow even faster, according to the CBO.

Debt held by the public. What, exactly, does that mean? According to the Treasury, it’s: “The Debt Held by the Public is all federal debt held by individuals, corporations, state or local governments, Federal Reserve Banks, foreign governments, and other entities outside the United States Government less Federal Financing Bank securities.”

A refrain from the don’t-worry-about-it nitwits is that… Hold that a second. One notes, for all the dire and calamitous warning, the CBO reports no numerical dollar figures at all. Allow me to post some:

Gross federal government debt: $21.175+ Trillion (as of right now – the thing grows rapidly) (see: US Debt Clock);

Debt Held By the Public: call it $16 Trillion right now (St. Louis Fed.); and

US GDP (2018 est.): $18.5-ish Trillion (World Bank).

Okay, with that out of the way, a variety of idiots usually shrug their shoulders and murmur something like, “But, we owe it to ourselves. So what?” Rose-colored glasses are useless to the blind. Or the stupid.

One, with math skills not acquired in a Detroit public “school,” will notice that the Gross Debt already exceeds the GDP by  14+%. That’s bad. When, soon, and sooner than 2028, the Public Debt exceeds the GDP, things will be worse. We shall ignore TOTAL debt (all sources), unfunded liabilities, and future derivative betting bailouts as such surpasses the ridiculous for the purely hilarious.

Gross US Debt is a combination of Public Debt and Intragovernmental Debt: $21.175 T – $16.5 T = $4.675 T. Who owes what to whom, now? In a way, with the Intra Debt, we do owe it to ourselves. This assumes “we” own and control the government. “We” do not. But, if we did, or if we pretend we do, then there’s a little truth to it. And a little mystery. If we really owe it to ourselves, then why not cancel and dismiss it? We’d be in the same position, right? And, hey!, if we are the public, and the public holds the rest, then why not get rid of that too?

Because we are not the public. Individuals maybe. But notice that there’s also corporations, foreigners, other entities, and the private Federal Reserve. Therein lies the rub. The Fed is the reason all this debt (by any name) floats around. It’s how they make (a very, very, very good) living, by adding zeros in a computer. This simple trick allows political lowlifes easy money to buy votes and, thus, hold power. They, in turn, are happy to allow the banksters to grift away.

You’re not paying this off as that’s not the purpose. It’s not owed to you and, odds are, a few bonds aside, you don’t own any of it. But you will be on the hook. Some more figures:

Total Debt per person within the US:

Forget it. It’s more than you could pay however you slice it. And it’s meaningless. The point isn’t repayment. The point is enslavement. The entire US economy and most of the world is now absorbed into this system of fake, debt-based funny money. None of it is real, literally just being zeros in computers for me to recycle here. The elites make a profit and hold power based on lies and nothingness. The only thing real about it is the real labor stolen from you to make interest payments for the system.

If you’re an average American worker and taxpayer, then you devote a considerable part of your life and time to paying: taxes, a mortgage, and maybe other debts (car, education, cred cards). All of these payments are for alleged cash which never existed and never will. A grand and sick illusion.

Any money you have left over for living is devalued by the constant inflow of new funny money. See: Gresham’s Law. There’s a reason why the cost of everything keeps going up much faster than any raises you might receive. There’s a reason why people need 30-year mortgages. Why they need 7-year car loans. Why they finance increasingly useless degrees. Prices are artificially inflated.

The taxes pay for, in this order: welfare, warfare, interest on the debts, more welfare, some other BS, and, somewhere waaaay down the line, maybe a little needful governance.

This is a giant ripoff. In an economy based on real money, things would cost less, people would keep more money, and banksters and pols would have to seek honest work. As the whole system is bullshit and not intended to ever be paid off, the answer is simple. All the debt – all of it at all levels – should be repudiated. Cancel it. Heck, make it illegal to issue debt.

The “owe it to ourselves” crowd has no response to the common sense solution except a horrified resort to scare tactics. “That would crash the economy!” Maybe. For a short time. Then it would recover and improve – for real people. But, no, they’d prefer the long, slow bleeding we currently suffer. It kind of reminds me of the house slave reminding the field hands to keep singing. Enslavement with a smile.

If we really owe ourselves anything, then it’s honest reflection and, then, maybe a little righteous anger.

Or cat videos. A new tattoo. Some “reality” TeeVee. Whatever makes you sing happily.

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Think this was abolished in 1865? Boondocks/YouTube.

Trump Travel Ban Upheld in Full

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A year to the date after the temporary affirmance, the Supreme Court found the President still has the Constitutional authority to regulate immigration as determined by law.

THE FULL OPINION

Under the Immigration and Nationality Act, foreign
nationals seeking entry into the United States undergo a
vetting process to ensure that they satisfy the numerous
requirements for admission. The Act also vests the President
with authority to restrict the entry of aliens whenever
he finds that their entry “would be detrimental to the
interests of the United States.” 8 U. S. C. §1182(f). Relying
on that delegation, the President concluded that it was
necessary to impose entry restrictions on nationals of
countries that do not share adequate information for an
informed entry determination, or that otherwise present
national security risks. Presidential Proclamation No.
9645, 82 Fed. Reg. 45161 (2017) (Proclamation). The
plaintiffs in this litigation, respondents here, challenged
the application of those entry restrictions to certain aliens
abroad. We now decide whether the President had authority
under the Act to issue the Proclamation, and whether
the entry policy violates the Establishment Clause of the
First Amendment.

Under these circumstances, the Government has set
forth a sufficient national security justification to survive
rational basis review. We express no view on the soundness
of the policy. We simply hold today that plaintiffs
have not demonstrated a likelihood of success on the
merits of their constitutional claim.

Trump v. Hawaii, 17-965, 585 U. S. ____, at Slip 6 … 43 (June 26, 2018).

This is a major victory for the administration and a blow for the people of the US, if any now – it’s kind of late, who do not desire a new civil conflagration.

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Is There a Really Big, Ugly Building in Your Town?

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It might just be a big, ugly building. Or, it could be one of the NSA’s special spy centers:

Atlanta, Chicago, Dallas, Los Angeles, New York City, San Francisco, Seattle, and Washington, D.C. In each of these cities, The Intercept has identified an AT&T facility containing networking equipment that transports large quantities of internet traffic across the United States and the world. A body of evidence – including classified NSA documents, public records, and interviews with several former AT&T employees – indicates that the buildings are central to an NSA spying initiative that has for years monitored billions of emails, phone calls, and online chats passing across U.S. territory.

Big ugly buildings. Big, ugly purpose. Just kidding! Keeping the kiddies safe from cigars or whales or something…

I know I’ve covered this subject before … the first disclosed tower in NYC. Can’t find it. Hmm. Sure the NSA has a record of that somewhere.

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The Intercept.

Don’t Cruise Cuba, Don’t Suborn Theft

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Everyone I know, with maybe one exception, that has journeyed to Cuban has been disappointed. Still, I foresee the cruise liner set will still keep going, still keep eating, drinking, “playing,” showing off the tats, gracing the rest with that not-so-unique American obesity. And, yeah, those Cubans from the man on the dock, wrapped in cellophane, in the plexiglass-topped box, are real – real in that they physically exist…

The US Department of Justice [SIC] and some guy in England see the new travel ventures differently.

The United States government knows him as certified foreign claim number CU-2492. But he wants to make a more personal introduction to Tampa Bay.

He is Mickael Behn, a 43-year-old U.S. citizen residing in England, where he works in television production.

And, according to the U.S. Department of Justice’s Foreign Claims Settlement Commission, Behn is the rightful owner of Havana Harbor, the cruise ship terminal for Cuba’s capital city.

The harbor was taken from Behn’s family when the socialist government nationalized property without compensation.

So, Behn said, those who book a cruise from Port Tampa Bay to Havana support illegal activity. “This is an American crime on an American corporation,” he said. “Don’t go to Havana.”

The nonprofit Cuban Democratic Directorate recently put up billboards near Port Miami and is running radio ads that say those booking cruises to Cuba support the trafficking of stolen property.

How many damned offices, agencies, and programs can one government have?! Geeze.

Family from Cuba. Theft in Cuba. “American” living in England… I fail to see how this… Nevermind.

This case is especially interesting to a man whose family’s land was similarly confiscated by soldiers, at gunpoint, and without compensation. Do we get a claim? I think I already know the answer there. America and its laws are now for Cubans living in England. Got it.

It used to be a place for Englanders living in America. They’re, we’re completely out of fashion now. Even Laura Ingalls Wilder. She was an author. That is, for the new “Americans” and the tubby, tatted cruisers, someone who produces books. Books are the things they are tossing from libraries. Libraries are buildings taking up real estate needed for more sports watching venues, women’s African diversity centers, buffets, and tattoo shops.

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Wall-e. Diet Files.

Six Years of Mad Ravings

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Happy anniversary! Six years ago commenced the blogging excellence you know as this “highly respected web log,” http://www.perrinlovett.me.

It started with THIS Simple Post.

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Before a months-long hiatus, we visited upon the legal workings of Obamacare. You know, the law the GOP was going to repeal replace amend live with. The more things change…

1,820 posts later and the fun continues! Thank you all for all of your support. Here’s to another six great years.

The ravings will resume shortly… Have a great remainder of your weekend!

-Perrin

They Really Do Need a Stinking Warrant – Good News for the Fourth Amendment

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Today comes a reversal of a sad trend I’ve been following, here, since at least June of 2016. I’ve rarely been happier about being wrong – I had predicted an affirmance.

Yet, I was right about the overall trend against freedom:

The worn-out line of the sheep goes: “If you’re not doing anything wrong, you have nothing to worry about.” Two problems there: 1) you don’t know what they consider “wrong”, and; 2) how about when the government is wrong? What then? Move to a freer country? There are at least ten out there – one right next door to the U.S. Sit in your house and do absolutely nothing? That can be considered an indication of criminal intent or an invitation for a “welfare check-in” by the police.

The odds are you do not have anything to worry about. Obey the government in general, don’t make any waves, and they will probably leave you alone. Probably was not what the Founders had in mind with the Bill of Rights though. They desired protection from ALL government overreach.

Today, the Supreme Court put this issue to rest in a 5-4 decision upholding the right against unreasonable searches. Thank you, Justice Roberts and the Liberals.

2. The Government did not obtain a warrant supported by probable
cause before acquiring Carpenter’s cell-site records. It acquired
those records pursuant to a court order under the Stored Communications
Act, which required the Government to show “reasonable
grounds” for believing that the records were “relevant and material to
an ongoing investigation.” 18 U. S. C. §2703(d). That showing falls
well short of the probable cause required for a warrant. Consequently,
an order issued under §2703(d) is not a permissible mechanism for
accessing historical cell-site records. Not all orders compelling the
production of documents will require a showing of probable cause. A warrant is required only in the rare case where the suspect has a legitimate
privacy interest in records held by a third party. And even
though the Government will generally need a warrant to access
CSLI, case-specific exceptions—e.g., exigent circumstances—may
support a warrantless search. Pp. 18–22.

819 F. 3d 880, reversed and remanded.

Carpenter v. The Empire, No. 16–402, 585 U. S. ____, at Slip. 3-4 (June 22, 2018).

THE WHOLE OPINION

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cnet.com.

Good news to start the hot weekend.

More good news: TPC is now available in print!

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TPC/MBM/Facebook.

From TPC, Today: Who Separates Kids?

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My latest at TPC: on the illegals, the kids, etc.:

This is an ongoing trend of which you are surely aware. America (and the West) is currently undergoing the largest mass migration of humans in recorded history. Since 1965, when US immigration and naturalization law was … tweaked… scores of millions of newcomers have come forth, changing the face of our country. Europe has seen a similar phenomenon.

 

Trump is correct about the Dems, at least as it concerns their affinity for bad policy. Sen. Dianne Feinstein’s Keep Families Together Act, S. 3036, as currently (poorly) drafted would literally exempt almost all parents (illegals, immigrants, or citizens) in the country from federal criminal prosecution. Given what’s become of federal law and law enforcement, that may not be such a bad idea; I doubt it’s what the author originally intended, however.

 

Much of this mess can be traced back to another Democrat’s bad law. Emanuel Celler’s hideous Immigration and Naturalization Act of 1965 shifted America’s immigration and demography from the traditional to the radical and the globalist. Celler, Ted Kennedy, and other proponents at the time lied when they assured the nation that nothing would change.

 

And, when did liberals start caring about immigrant children and keeping them together with families in the United States? You might recall the following picture and the young child, Elian Gonzalez, featured therein – the one crying and with the submachine gun aimed at him – courtesy of Bill Clinton and Janet Reno:

 

Recall Feinstein’s defense of Elian? Me neither. Historycollection.co/CNN.

READ THE WHOLE ARTICLE AT TPC

 

More on the New Age of After Literacy

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Building on what I mentioned the other day, Linh Dinh has some more depressing news for readers and writers.

I was just interviewed by two Temple journalism students, Amelia Burns and Erin Moran, and though they appeared very bright and enterprising, with Erin already landing a job that pays all her bills, I feel for these young ladies, for this is a horrible time to make and sell words, of any kind, and the situation will only get worse. We’re well into postliteracy.

With widespread screen addiction, hardly anyone buys books or newspapers anymore. My local newspaper, the Philadelphia Inquirer (Inky), no longer has a book review section. Its retired editor, Frank Wilson, was never replaced. Frank had three of my books reviewed, Night, Again, Fake House and Blood and Soap, but the last was in 2004.

We’re both right, kind of, about books sales. I say the sales are up. They are, or were the last time I checked, by the numbers. He’s right in that the quality of WHAT is sold has utterly collapsed. I think most buy the books now to have something to rest those screens on. Newspapers are dying.

Welcome to postliteracy, America.

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Yep. Is this “legal” under Article 13???

 

Garfield at 40 and Happy Summer

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Missed this the other day. The world’s favorite cartoon cat turned 40 on Tuesday.

And, Jim Davis says he’s “still trying to get it right.” So, if you’re having problems with a project, consider that the best selling comic creator in the world is having the same issues, four decades in.

The 40th Birthday Strip!

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Jim Davis, 6/19/2018.

Also the first official day of Summer, 2018. Have some lasagna.