Sunday, November 19, 2017

Tyler Durden On ZeroHedge: Understanding Capital

Your MesaZona is on a roll with reporter Tyler Durden who's been publishing some very good informative articles frequently using original sources via an intermediary link. This one yesterday is by Ronald-Peter Stöferle via The Mises Institute that uses the principles of The Austrian Institute of Economics. What's interesting to note is that the original created only 16 comments while Tyler's report has been viewed almost 48,000 times receiving 80 comments We're Living in the Age of Capital Consumption
By  18 Nov 2017
"When capital is mentioned in the present-day political debate, the term is usually subject to a rather one-dimensional interpretation: Whether capital saved by citizens, the question of capital reserves held by pension funds, the start-up capital of young entrepreneurs or capital gains taxes on investments are discussed – in all these cases capital is equivalent to “money.” Yet capital is distinct from money, it is a largely irreversible, definite structure, composed of heterogeneous elements which can be (loosely) described as goods, knowledge, context, human beings, talents and experience. Money is “only” the simplifying aid that enables us to record the incredibly complex heterogeneous capital structure in a uniform manner. It serves as a basis for assessing the value of these diverse forms of capital.
Modern economics textbooks usually refer to capital with the letter “C”. This conceptual approach blurs the important fact that capital is not merely a single magnitude, an economic variable representing a magically self-replicating homogenous blob but a heterogeneous structure. Among the various economic schools of thought it is first and foremost the Austrian School of Economics, which stresses the heterogeneity of capital. Furthermore, Austrians have correctly recognized, that capital does not automatically grow or perpetuate itself. Capital must be actively created and maintained, through production, saving, and sensible investment.
Moreover, Austrians emphasize that one has to differentiate between two types of goods in the production process: consumer goods and capital goods . . .
Through capital formation, one creates the potential means to boost productivity. The logical precondition for this is that the production of consumer goods must be temporarily decreased or even stopped, as scarce resources are redeployed toward the production of capital goods. If current production processes generate only fewer or no consumer goods, it follows that consumption will have to be reduced by the quantity of consumer goods no longer produced. Every deepening of the production structure therefore involves taking detours.
Capital formation is therefore always an attempt to generate larger returns in the long term by adopting more roundabout methods of production. Such higher returns are by no means guaranteed though, as the roundabout methods chosen may turn out to be misguided. In the best case only those roundabout methods will ultimately be continued, which do result in greater productivity. It is therefore fair to assume that a more capital-intensive production structure will generate more output than a less capital-intensive one. The more prosperous an economic region, the more capital-intensive its production structure is. The fact that the generations currently living in our society are able to enjoy such a high standard of living is the result of decades or even centuries of both cultural and economic capital accumulation by our forebears.
Once a stock of capital has been accumulated, it is not destined to be eternal. Capital is thoroughly transitory, it wears out, it is used up in the production process, or becomes entirely obsolete. Existing capital requires regularly recurring reinvestment, which can usually be funded directly out of the return capital generates. If reinvestment is neglected because the entire output or more is consumed, the result is capital consumption.
It is not only the dwindling understanding of the nature of capital that leads us to consume it without being aware of it. It is also the framework of the real economy which unwittingly drives us to do so . . .
At the same time, the all-encompassing redistributive welfare state, which either directly through taxes or indirectly through the monetary system continually shifts and reallocates large amounts of capital, manages to paper over the effects of capital consumption to some extent. It remains to be seen how much longer this can continue. Once the stock of capital is depleted, the awakening will be rude. We are certain, that gold is an essential part of any portfolio in this stage of the economic cycle.

Ronald-Peter Stöferle is managing partner and fund manager at Incrementum AG, Liechtenstein. He invests using the principles of the Austrian school of economics.



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Critical Earthquake Warning | S0 News Nov.19.2017


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Saturday, November 18, 2017

The Wonders of Space: Amazing Images From Hubble , Spitzer, Chandra Tel...


Published on Nov 18, 2017
Views: 1,794
Stunning images of our Galaxy and beyond taken by Hubble Space Telescope as well as other telescopes such as Spitzer and Chandra.
Also included are images of Earth taken by astronauts aboard the ISS as well as images of the planets taken by the many spacecraft that have visited them.

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The Administrative State and Religious Freedom


Published on Nov 18, 2017
Views: 14
At both the federal and state levels, bureaucrats wield power to make decisions that substantially impact the exercise of religion. From interpreting and enforcing public accommodations laws to administering vast regulatory regimes and deciding how all of these laws interact with RFRAs, agencies headed by political appointees are often charged with determining --- at least in the first instance --- the extent to which generally applicable law will impinge on religious freedom. Who will be required to provide contraceptive coverage; how will religious accommodations be extended, and to whom? Must bakers and photographers with religious objections service gay weddings? Must doctors perform surgeries on patients that violate their faith and medical judgment? Even without a change in legislation, the answers to such questions often flip after new administrations appoint new agency heads. This panel will discuss whether the administrative state places religious freedom in too precarious a position, and if so, what can and should be done about it.

--Prof. William P. Marshall, William Rand Kenan, Jr. Distinguished Professor of Law, University of North Carolina School of Law

--Mr. Mark L. Rienzi, Senior Counsel, The Becket Fund for Religious Liberty and Professor of Law, Columbus School of Law, The Catholic University of America

--Ms. Melissa Rogers, Nonresident Senior Fellow in Governance Studies, The Brookings Institute

--Mr. Roger Severino, Director, Office for Civil Rights, United States Department of Health and Human Services

--Moderator: Hon. Diarmuid O'Scannlain, United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Cir
cuit

THIS RUSSIAN HELICOPTER IS COMING TO THE MIDDLE EAST || WARTHOG 2017


Published on Nov 17, 2017
Views: 9,320
Russia’s lethal-looking Ka-52 attack helicopters have reappeared in video footage blasting targets in Syria—catching some journalists in Europe by surprise. Even if Russia withdraws the agile attack helicopters, the type will remain active in the Middle East in Egyptian service.
This story was originally published by The National Interest

Sébastien Roblin holds a Master’s Degree in Conflict Resolution from Georgetown University and served as a university instructor for the Peace Corps in China. He has also worked in education, editing, and refugee resettlement in France and the United States. He currently writes on security and military history for War Is Boring.

Mesa Mayor John Giles Caught Prodding Jeff Flake On-Stage with Hot Open Mic

 Here's our self-described "non-partisan" Mayor getting caught on an open mike pinned to Flake's lapel pin encouraging him to run for President . . . Couple of nice LDS dudes, huh??
Published on Nov 17, 2017
Views: about 740
ABC15's microphone picked up a conversation between Senator Flake and Mesa's major Giles joking about President Trump.

In other coverage

 
 
 

E Pluribus Unum? Getting The Nation Sorted-Out

Here's revisiting reporter Tyler Durden again writing on ZeroHedge yesterday, using as an original resource an intermediary blog Via Jim Quinn's Burning Platform blog,
In his fourth book, “American Nations: A History of the Eleven Rival Regional Cultures in North America,” award-winning author Colin Woodard identifies 11 distinct cultures that have historically divided the US. . . Please read that again: 11 distinct cultures

The11 Nations Of The United States
by Tyler Durden    Nov 17, 2017 11:45 PM 
Blogger Note: Tyler Darden's report has attracted about 170,000 views and 240+ comments already since getting published just before midnight yesterday 
That may be the case for the purposes to explain three centuries of immigration patterns across the entire continent from European countries, some with religious origins, but he also takes the time and effort to feature another infographic at the end of his online report.
That is what you first in the opening of this post - it's that "Red-and-Blue" thing in liberal-conservative voting patterns from the last election. It's way more of a mosaic with red predominant. That works across what Woodard theorizes about eleven "nations". It's not exactly polarized since it's all spread out across the cultural settlement lines in the next image taken from Darden's report.
"Woodard also believes the nation is likely to become more polarized, even though America is becoming a more diverse place every day.
He says this is because people are “self-sorting.”
“People choose to move to places where they identify with  the values,”  Woodard says. “Red minorities go south and blue minorities go north to be in the majority. This is why blue states are getting bluer and red states are getting redder and the middle is getting smaller.”
___________________________________________________________________________

Please connect to the reporter's link at the beginning of this post that explains this map






American Nations: A History of the Eleven Rival Regional Cultures of North America Paperback September 25, 2012

Link to Sales site for the book ( includes an audio promotion )https://www.amazon.com/American-Nations-History-Regional-Cultures/dp/0143122029?tag=bisafetynet2-20 

DHS denied claims that it would destroy evidence following the fatal shooting of Alex Jeffrey Pretti | Daily Beast

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