Lessons From Hurricane Helene – Part 1

by A.F., Survival Blog: The following recounts some Hurricane Helene lessons learned from Western South Carolina. Our power went off for the final time around 5:30 on Friday morning. It had blinked on and off twice earlier in the night, but I didn’t pay the warnings any attention. In the end, we were without power […]

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US Deficit Explodes: Blowout October Deficit Means 2nd Worst Start To US Fiscal Year On Record

US Deficit Explodes: Blowout October Deficit Means 2nd Worst Start To US Fiscal Year On Record

It is only fitting that the twilight days of the Biden admin would exhibit more of the same fakeness that defined not only all of the past four years, but certainly the fakeness of that Kamala Harris presidential campaign which had a billion dollars a month ago and ended up in failure, broke and in debt. We are talking, of course, about the relentless debt-funded spree that somehow became synonymous with economic success in the US.

According to the latest Treasury data released today, in October – the first month of fiscal 2025 – the US spent a massive $584.2 billion, a 24.3% increase from the prior year, and a record government outlay for the month of October. On a trailing 6 month moving average basis, to smooth out outliers months, the spending hit $586 billion, effectively at an all time high with just the record spending spree during covid pushing government spending higher.

Key drivers of the deficit widening included outlays in the Departments of Health and Human Services and of Defense, up 12% and 13% respectively, adjusted for calendar differences. Health spending alone jumped by $62 billion compared with the same month last year.

At the same time, the US government collected just $326.8 billion in taxes, down a massive 19% from the $403.434 billion last October, and down even more from the $527 billion in tax receipts in September ’24. As shown in the next chart, while spending continued to grow exponentially, tax receipts have flatlined, and the 6 month average in October was just $380 billion, the same as three years ago!

It’s actually worse than it looks: according to the Treausry, last year’s October tax receipts were unusually higher due to deferred tax receipts that were received that month from companies and individuals affected by disasters including wildfires in California. Taking that into account, the budget deficit this October would have been 22% higher, a Treasury official said.

In any case, netting the two means that the US deficit exploded in October to a staggering $257.5 billion, and even though this included several calendar adjustments – which explains the freak September surplus which as we said was due to calendar effects – the number was not only $25 billion more than consensus estimates of a $232.5 billion deficit, it was a staggering 4x bigger than the $66.6 billion deficit in October of 2023. Worse, it was the second highest October deficit on record, and only the budget busting October when the US was spending to prevent an all-out economic implosion, was bigger.

And putting the deficit in context, October – the first month of the fiscal year – was just shy of the biggest deficit start to a year for the US Treasury on record, with just fiscal 2021 (i.e. October 2020) bigger.

In contrast with what has been a terrifying trend for some time now, the Treasury’s debt-servicing costs only rose slightly in October. Gross interest costs totaled $82 billion in October, unexpectedly down $7 billion from $89 billion in the same month a year before.

The drop meant that LTM interest spending posted the first (very modest) sequential drop – from $1.133 trillion to $1.126 trillion –  since August 2023.

That’s because the weighted average interest rate for total outstanding debt by the end of September was 3.30%, at roughly 15-year highs, but down slightly from the month before, the second monthly decline.

However, don’t expect this decline in interest spending to persist because even though the Fed has cut rates twice since September, this has been more than offset by the surge in debt which at last check was just shy of $36 trillion, and unless Elon’s Department for Government Efficiency (DOGE) manages to somehow slash trillions in both spending, this is what US debt will look like for the next few years, guaranteeing that interest on said debt will very soon become the single largest spending category for the US government.

The mindblowing figures illustrate the monumental challenge for Trump and all those promising to rein in US debt, which has exploded to 120% of GDP after four years of Biden’s “drunken-sailor” spending ways. Last night Trump tapped Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy to look at ways to cut spending. Thursday’s figures showed the bulk of the outlays are in areas that are bound to be politically challenging to address, in other words, any cuts even remotely close to the $2 trillion suggested by Vivek would lead to a revolt.

Tyler Durden
Wed, 11/13/2024 – 18:00

JACK POSOBIEC: ‘The regime still exists’

“The military-industrial complex does not want to nominate someone who is best known for being a veterans advocate.”

Now it can be told: the truth about the Covid jabs is slowly coming out

by Alex Berenson, Unreported Truths: Matt Taibbi: “I agree with Alex Berenson” that the mRNAs failed. Very significant, because even the big independent voices – like Taibbi and the Free Press – have been reluctant to join me on this. Our responses in Berenson v Biden are due Friday, so I don’t have a lot […]

No plan to regularize undocumented migrants before election: Canada

Canada on Wednesday closed the door on a promised major regularization of undocumented migrants, dampening residency hopes for thousands of people following a period of policy uncertainty. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau had pledged an ambitious program aimed at regularization. But polls have shown a discernible shift in public opinion after years of broad support for Canada’s […]

The post No plan to regularize undocumented migrants before election: Canada appeared first on Insider Paper.

Republicans complete power takeover with House majority

The Republicans were declared the majority party in the US House of Representatives Wednesday, completing a clean sweep of Congress and the White House in last week’s elections and handing incoming president Donald Trump vast legislative power. After more than a week of vote counting, CNN and NBC projected that Trump’s party had reached the […]

The post Republicans complete power takeover with House majority appeared first on Insider Paper.

Excess deaths published

Excess mortality across countries in the Western World since the COVID-19 pandemic: ‘Our World in Data’ estimates of January 2020 to December 2022

https://bmjpublichealth.bmj.com/content/2/1/e000282

Our world in data

https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/excess-mortality-p-scores-average-baseline

Human Mortality Database (2024); World Mortality Dataset (2024); Karlinsky and Kobak (2021); Human Mortality Database (2024); World Mortality Database (2024) – processed by Our World in Data

https://ourworldindata.org/excess-mortality-covid

Introduction

Excess mortality during the COVID-19 pandemic has been substantial,

includes not only deaths from SARS-CoV-2 infection but also deaths related to the indirect effects of the health strategies

Insight into excess death rates in years following WHO’s pandemic declaration is crucial for government leaders and policymakers to evaluate their health crisis policies.

This study explores excess mortality in the Western World from 2020 until 2022.

Although COVID-19 vaccines were provided to guard civilians from suffering morbidity and mortality by the COVID-19 virus, suspected adverse events have been documented as well

Methods

All-cause mortality reports were abstracted for countries using the ‘Our World in Data’ database.

Excess mortality, deviation between the reported number of deaths in a country during a certain week or month, and the expected number of deaths in a country for that period under normal conditions.

Karlinsky and Kobak (2021)

This model uses historical death data in a country from 2015 until 2019 and accounts for seasonal variation and year-to-year trends in mortality.

Results

1 January 2020 until 31 December 2022

The total number of excess deaths in 47 countries of the Western World was 3, 098, 456

Excess mortality was documented in:

41 countries (87%) in 2020

42 countries (89%) in 2021

43 countries (91%) in 2022.

In 2020

(the year of the COVID-19 pandemic onset and implementation of containment measures)

1, 033, 122 excess deaths
(P-score 11.4%)

In 2021

(the year in which both containment measures and COVID-19 vaccines were used to address virus spread and infection)

the highest number of excess deaths was reported:

1, 256, 942 excess deaths
(P-score 13.8%)

In 2022

(when most containment measures were lifted and COVID-19 vaccines were continued)

808, 392 excess deaths (P-score 8.8%).

Conclusions

Excess mortality has remained high in the Western World for three consecutive years,

despite the implementation of containment measures and COVID-19 vaccines.

This raises serious concerns.

Government leaders and policymakers need to thoroughly investigate underlying causes of persistent excess mortality.

More details

Previous research confirmed profound under-reporting of adverse events, including deaths, after immunisation

Consensus is also lacking in the medical community regarding concerns that mRNA vaccines might cause more harm than initially forecasted.

French studies suggest that COVID-19 mRNA vaccines are gene therapy products requiring long-term stringent adverse events monitoring

Although the desired immunisation through vaccination occurs in immune cells, some studies report a broad biodistribution and persistence of mRNA in many organs for weeks.

Batch-dependent heterogeneity in the toxicity of mRNA vaccines was found in Denmark.

Simultaneous onset of excess mortality and COVID-19 vaccination in Germany provides a safety signal warranting further investigation.

Despite these concerns, clinical trial data required to further investigate these associations are not shared with the public.

Autopsies to confirm actual death causes are seldom done.

Governments may be unable to release their death data with detailed stratification by cause,

although this information could help indicate whether COVID-19 infection, indirect effects of containment measures, COVID-19 vaccines or other overlooked factors play an underpinning role.

Expression of concern

https://bmjpublichealth.bmj.com/content/2/1/e000282eoc

Other work by Saskia Mostert

https://www.researchgate.net/scientific-contributions/Saskia-Mostert-39309794

Other work by Gertjan Kaspers

https://researchinformation.amsterdamumc.org/en/persons/gerardus-j-l-kaspers

UN leaders brace for change in US climate policy under Trump admin

“The American people re-elected President Trump by a resounding margin giving him a mandate to implement the promises he made on the campaign trail.”

Trump Announces Matt Gaetz as Pick for Attorney General

Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) will be Donald Trump’s nominee for Attorney General, the top law enforcement officer in the land.

The post Trump Announces Matt Gaetz as Pick for Attorney General appeared first on Breitbart.