SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Maurice Winn who wrote (163466)10/8/2020 9:36:33 AM
From: marcher  Respond to of 217615
 
--Somebody should ring a bell at the peak so we know when to sell. Or maybe an alarm at the top and
ring a bell at the bottom.--

i second that!



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (163466)10/8/2020 9:37:07 AM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
marcher

  Respond to of 217615
 
Re <<hoping for salvation via Federal Reserve last gasp defense of USD by increasing interest rates>>

... unusual hope at this juncture when the officialdom intention is to both trash the currency as well as to tee-up inflation, run up debt, and then default by any and all means necessary, whatever it shall take.

In the meantime report in indicating it-isn’t-over-until-is-over w/r to long-CoVid

bloomberg.com

Why Covid-19’s Impact on Health Is a Long-Term Worry

Jason Gale
October 8, 2020, 11:03 AM GMT+8
Sign up here for our daily coronavirus newsletter on what you need to know, and subscribe to our Covid-19 podcast for the latest news and analysis.

The new coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 is as fast-spreading as it is enigmatic -- with those afflicted experiencing everything from no symptoms to a scratchy throat to life-threatening pneumonia. While it seems that most infections lead to only mild cases of Covid-19, a significant portion of the tens of millions of people who have “recovered” suffer from lingering and sometimes debilitating heart, lung and nervous-system impairments. As researchers try to measure the durability and depth of what’s being called “long Covid,” patient anecdotes and a burgeoning number of post–Covid clinics indicate recovery can be slow and painful, likely meaning the pandemic will sap health resources long after it ends.

1. What are the persistent ailments?
Surveys and preliminary research indicate the most commonly reportedinclude fatigue, breathlessness, headache, insomnia, chest pain, joint pain, coughing, loss of taste and smell, intermittent fevers and skin rashes. Less frequently, hearing problems, “ brain fog,” mental-health problems and hair loss have been reported, though these have yet to be confirmed by studies. Besides these general symptoms, specific organ dysfunction has been reported, involving primarily the heart, lungs, and brain -- even among those whose acute infection led to no discernible symptoms. But the science is still evolving and there’s no consensus yet on a clinical definition for long, or post-acute, Covid.

2. What’s the risk?
It probably increases with the severity of the initial bout of Covid-19. For instance, two-thirds of patients who had mild-to-moderate Covid-19 reported at least one persistent symptom 60 days after falling ill, according to a French study that followed 150 non-critical patients from March to June. A similarly sized study of older, more seriously ill hospital patients in Italy found 87% had at least one symptom, particularly fatigue and shortness of breath, an average of two months later. A survey in the U.S. found 35% of patients who weren’t hospitalized had not returned to normal health as long as three weeks after testing positive. Among 18-to-34-year-olds with no chronic medical conditions, the figure was 19%.

3. How big a problem is this?
We don’t know yet because Covid-19 is a new disease. Researchers haven’t studied enough patients over a long enough period of time to know what the full range of long-term effects, or sequelae, might be. Nor do they know what proportion of patients will suffer from them or for how long. The uncertainties have sometimes led to what so-called long haulers describe as medical gaslighting by health professionals who don’t take their complaints seriously, especially if the patient is a woman. Early findings and the demand for specialized post-Covid clinics to help survivors deal with scarred lungs, chronic heart damage, post-viral fatigue and other debilitating conditions indicate a significant prevalence. The social and economic impact would be magnified if people end up enduring years or decades of coronavirus-related disability. Some researchers say the pandemic may spur chronic fatigue syndrome, also called myalgic encephalomyelitis or ME, and neurodegenerative diseases like Parkinson’s.

4. Do other viruses cause prolonged illness?
Yes. Post-viral syndromes occur after many viral infections, including the common cold, influenza, HIV, infectious mononucleosis, measles and hepatitis B. Diabetes and other long-term consequences were observed in survivors of severe acute respiratory syndrome, which is caused by a related coronavirus. A Canadian study found 21 health-care workers from Toronto had post-viral symptoms for as long as three years after catching SARS in 2003, and were unable to return to their usual work. Some people who were hospitalized with SARS in Hong Kong still had impaired lung function two years later, a study of 55 patients published in 2010 found. Still, it’s not known yet whether the lessons of SARS are applicable to Covid-19. What’s novel about SARS-CoV-2 is the broad spectrum of symptoms that are being reported and the duration of months not weeks.

The Reference Shelf
Related QuickTakes on what you need to know about the virus, how it spreads, the impact on kids, the risk of second waves, the quest for vaccines and treatments, and how safe is flying.Peter Wark, a conjoint professor in the school of medicine and public health at the University of Newcastle, reviews what we know so farabout the long-term symptoms, as does a report from the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change.The World Health Organization answers commonly asked questions about Covid-19.An app that records daily symptoms developed at King’s College London tracks more than 4 million Covid-19 patients in the U.K., Sweden and the U.S.Support groups on Slack and Facebook share experiences of thousands of long haulers, and the Journal of the American Medical Association looked at their stories too.

Before it's here, it's on the Bloomberg Terminal.
LEARN MORE

Sent from my iPad



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (163466)10/9/2020 12:02:25 AM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217615
 
Re <<I covered AAPL right at the bottom of the covid crash. But got skooshed by TSLA at $1011 short and about even on bigger $2116 or thereabouts short. Divide by 5 for current share price comparisons>>

So, in hindsight was AAPL save a lucky CoVid break of brilliance?

Re TSLA, was short, am short, and intending to remain short, for am treating TSLA as a funding currency for all manner of mischief in gold and PGM by physical, DRD, and SBSW.

Re <<Now breaking my decades-long rule by holding big heaps of USD cash hoping for salvation via Federal Reserve last gasp defense of USD by increasing interest rates though not expecting Volker tough love and discipline.>>

As % NAV, am about ...

~19% physical metals; w/ enough of the increase due to pricing action, and a bit of topping up. Storage, as hinted at by Warren Buffett, is becoming a problem

~61% real estate, about 50/50 of the inexpensive redevelopment sort

~4% in equities, mostly in DRD shares, a bit in SBSW, and rest in this and that

~16% in cash and net equity derivatives, here there everywhere, calculated by inference
---------------------
Summing to 100%

But the cash and equities together supporting and is supported by wagers against TSLA and for DRD (and a bit for SBSW and other stuff) by derivatives.

Notional gross-short against TSLA is 2.22X NAV

Notional gross-long for TSLA is 1.8% of NAV (yes, I have faith on the dark side and the 'for' is just for fun)

Most of the TSLA stuff blows up 20th November but am marching forward further into the dark side to collect lucre due and well deserved.

Notional gross-long for DRD is 9% of NAV (the notional would be real should I be put and called between now and May 2021, but mostly to 20th November)

So, the book of deployment is grotesquely dominated by Elon's TSLA and he has been very generous along w/ GS and Softbank and RobinHooders. I wish all of them well and continued good enthusiasm.

Am trying to figure out how much of the gain to mineralise into sleeping capital / permanent savings between 20th November and end-2020. The capital is needed per call of duty but habits are habits, must mineralise some savings.

Re <<Qualcomm>>, never saw much point in it, and still do not. Seems a lot of risk and busy bodying for rather skimpy returns, almost as bad a Warren Buffett's operation, and do not see the scenery change much going forward

finance.yahoo.com




To: Maurice Winn who wrote (163466)10/9/2020 3:52:55 AM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217615
 
Either the Republicans are safe because the Economist has given odds, or
It is time for the Republicans to run for their lives as the blades glint under the sun
The crowds are gathering on the public square, waiting for the spectacle to start

projects.economist.com








To: Maurice Winn who wrote (163466)10/10/2020 7:31:39 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217615
 
October Surprise #2 (premised on the Trump catch the China-China-China bug qualifies as Surprise #1)

Observations, that the guns are long and the rocket is huge

Rotating the tires on the truck is a day job

I wonder about the industrial capability & capacity of the N. Koreans

Between N. Korea and Persia, and Turkey and Armenia and wherever I cannot correctly spell, either Trump or Biden shall have hands quite full. No wonder the Trump wants out from Afghanistan before Christmas, again.

How did Team USA finally decamp Vietnam? What was the exit strategy back then? Before the tanks rolled into Saigon, and helicopters got ditched in the pond of peace.

Then there be the details of China-China-China War, and Wave 2 of Wuhan Flu.

Busy 2021 coming right around the holidays corner.

bloomberg.com

Kim Jong Un Shows Off New ICBM Built During Talks With Trump

Jeong-Ho Lee



A news broadcast of file footage of a military parade showing North Korean soldiers, on Oct. 10.

Photographer: Jun Yeon-Je/AFP via Getty Images

LISTEN TO ARTICLE
Kim Jong Un rolled out a new ballistic missile designed to carry nuclear warheads to the U.S., in a massive military parade that appeared calibrated to show strength at home and abroad without provoking President Donald Trump.

The new intercontinental ballistic missile, which weapons experts said appeared to be the largest road-mobile rocket of its type, provided the grand finale to an extended procession of goose-stepping troops and military hardware. Footage of the rare midnight parade to mark the 75th anniversary of the ruling Workers’ Party was aired hours after the event Saturday, confirming weeks of speculation that Kim would use the show to send a campaign-season message to the U.S.



Kim Jong Un at the parade on Oct. 10.

“The new ICBM is almost certainly Kim Jong Un’s ‘new strategic weapon’ promised to the world back in December 2019,” said Ankit Panda, author of “Kim Jong Un and the Bomb: Survival and Deterrence in North Korea” and a Stanton senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. “North Korea worked on this system while diplomacy with the United States was ongoing.”

The spectacular affair -- complete with fighter jet fly-overs and fireworks -- included both flourishes of authoritarian control and emotion from Kim, who wore a gray business suit and glasses as he read a written speech from a high balcony overlooking Kim Il Sung Square. Kim appeared to cry while expressing regret for the country’s struggles under sanctions and natural disasters.

In his remarks, Kim vowed only to unleash his arsenal if threatened. He avoided naming the U.S. and signaled a willingness to resume exchanges with rival South Korea after the pandemic subsided.



Battalions march in Kim Il Sung Square.

“We will continue to strengthen our war deterrence capability, so as to deter all kinds of risky attempts and threats -- including nuclear threats that are being constantly aggravated by hostile forces,” Kim said. “But if any forces try to use their military power against us, I will preemptively mobilize our most powerful offensive force and punish them.”

The event was the first time since Kim opened unprecedented talks with Trump in 2018 that he had paraded new nuclear hardware through Pyongyang. Kim has expressed increasing frustration with the U.S. since Trump walked out of their second formal summit in February 2019 without a deal to reduce North Korea’s nuclear arsenal or relieve the sanctions squeezing the country’s economy.

For more on North Korea:
Kim Jong Un Set to Show Nuclear Advances in Message to Trump Kim Jong Un’s Regime Baffles World With Contradictory Signals How Kim Jong Un Keeps Advancing His Nuclear Program: QuickTake Kim Jong Un Calls ‘80-Day Battle’ to Boost North Korea Economy

While initial state media reports on the parade noted how North Korea’s missiles have struck “terror and horror” in the country’s enemies, they made no mention of the new ICBM. Dispatches in the Korean Central News Agency noted how onlookers received the strategic weapons with “excitement and enthusiasm.”

“Kim’s speech was tame and seemed to almost deliberately avoid provoking Trump before the election, while achieving domestic aims to strengthen unity,” said Duyeon Kim, an adjunct senior fellow with the Center for a New American Security in Seoul. “He also said ‘war deterrent’ and not ‘nuclear deterrent,’ while almost going through lengths to frame his nuclear weapons as self-defense tools.”

Still, the parade showed how far Kim’s weapons program has advanced over the past two years, despite Trump’s claim that North Korea was “no longer a nuclear threat.” The spectacle underscored how the country will remain one of the U.S.’s biggest strategic challenges regardless of whether Trump or his Democratic opponent Joe Biden win on Nov. 3.



An intercontinental ballistic missile which appears to be one of the longest road-mobile nuclear weapons ever built.

The ICBM, which appeared to be an extended version of the Hwasong-15 missile that North Korea tested in November 2017, looked designed to carry a heavy payload, such as multiple warheads that could evade defensive systems. Weapons experts also spotted a missile that they called a Pukguksong-4A, a submarine weapon believed to be the most advanced solid-fuel missile Kim’s regime has developed.

The event showed off Kim’s growing arsenal of short-range ballistic missiles and the mobile transport launchers that can be rolled out for quick strikes. The regime has test-launched more than 30 of them since 2019. These include the nuclear-capable, hypersonic KN-23 that can strike all of South Korea -- including U.S. forces stationed south of Seoul -- within two minutes.

Return of Rocket Man
Missile tests under Kim Jong Un
Sources: South Korea Ministry of Defense and Center for Nonproliferation Studies

The footage aired on state media did point to some possible limits facing Kim’s weapons-building efforts. He didn’t prove that he could significantly increase his inventory of the specialized trucks needed to transport and hide his largest missiles. And he didn’t produce a solid-fuel ICBM that many non-proliferation experts had predicted.

North Korea is heading toward its biggest economic contraction since 1997, according to Fitch Solutions, as the coronavirus led to border closures and flooding destroyed large swathes of crops. Kim issued a rare warning for North Korea’s economy in August, telling party leaders that his country “faced unexpected and inevitable challenges in various aspects,” adding his development goals had been “seriously delayed.”

Kim appeared to get emotional while discussing the country’s struggles of the past year, citing typhoons, flooding and the U.S.-led international sanctions regime constraining the economy.

“How many people have endured and struggled with the difficult environment this year?” Kim said, appearing to cry. “The patriotic devotion of our People’s Army soldiers on the quarantine front and in natural disaster recovery front cannot be treated without tears of gratitude. I’m so sorry and it hurts to not be with them on this night of glory.”

— With assistance by Peter Pae, and Shamim Adam

Before it's here, it's on the Bloomberg Terminal.
LEARN MORE



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (163466)10/10/2020 7:33:53 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217615
 
Ideas for the next Team USA administration

bloomberg.com

Dog Days of Coronavirus May Bring Germany a Canine Cash Windfall

Catherine Bosley
10 October 2020, 14:00 GMT+8



A dog walker passes a coronavirus information sign during lockdown in Munich, Germany, on April 16.
Photographer: Michaela Handrek-Rehle/Bloomberg
LISTEN TO ARTICLE
:48

Sign up here for our daily coronavirus newsletter on what you need to know, and subscribe to our Covid-19 podcast for the latest news and analysis.

German local officials facing depleted coffers as a result of Covid-19 can take comfort from the prospect of more taxpayers seeking canine companionship to get them through the crisis.

Unlike in Britain or the U.S., dog owners in Germany face an annual levy on their pets. In Berlin, the bill amounts to 120 euros ($141) a year, while Munich offers more of a bargain at 100 euros.

Canine Windfall
Germany is collecting more in dog taxes
Source: Destatis

The tax netted municipalities 370 million euros in income last year. That total has been steadily rising over the past decade, according a release from the Federal Statistical Office on Friday.

With the popularity of dogs increasing during the pandemic, according to the German Kennel Club VDH, the amount is likely to climb again this year.

Before it's here, it's on the Bloomberg Terminal.

LEARN MORE



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (163466)10/10/2020 7:38:18 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217615
 
Another good idea should it be sustainably affordable, or not

I have often thought that cretins do not deserve what they ask for

morons deserve what's coming to them

bloomberg.com

Denmark Agrees to Let Banks Fund Early Retirement for Workers

Jesper Starn
10 October 2020, 18:14 GMT+8

The Danish government’s plan to fund early retirement for some workers by introducing an extra tax on the financial industry has gained enough support among opposition parties to be turned into law next year.

After negotiations into the early hours of Saturday, the Danish Social Democrat-led government announced this morning that it had reached an agreement with opposition parties to support the proposal. This means there is now a majority in the parliament to add 2 billion kroner ($318 million) worth of additional annual taxes on the financial sector to strengthen pension rights.

“The sector made billions during the last couple of years, and an extra contribution is therefore entirely in its place” Morten Bodskov, minister of taxation, said in a statement. “Those who have toiled and toiled in a long working life are now entitled to a dignified retirement.”

Read: Denmark to Make Banks, the Rich Fund Its Early Retirement Plan

As many as 41,000 Danes will be eligible for one to three years of early retirement from 2022, as long as the proposal is backed by a vote in parliament next month. About 24,000 of them are expected to accept the offer.

Denmark’s financial industry has strongly opposed the plan saying it will only lead to increased fees for its customers. It welcomed that a tax on stock gains was no longer part of it, according to a statement.

Before it's here, it's on the Bloomberg Terminal.
LEARN MORE



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (163466)10/10/2020 9:37:50 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217615
 
Re Surprise #2, would appear that the regime is about to collapse under weight of sanctions, troubles of no-dialogue, and internal dissension, and that the WMD is a a Potemkin village exercise used to disguise a starving population

just one more round of sanctions ought to do it




To: Maurice Winn who wrote (163466)10/16/2020 11:06:14 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217615
 
Events are moving into high gear, as the financial gearing goes high, across all lands, but at different spots on the grand super hyper overarching cycle

usdebtclock.org


OTOH, Team USA the leader of the world is doing best to save the planet zerohedge.com "US Budget Deficit Triples To Record $3.1 Trillion In 2020 As US Spends 90% More Than It Collects" given that wars cost money, and big wars cost mega bucks, even if one can print bucks



and the electorates want more., much more, without pause at end-December



OTOH, the enemy's numbers cannot be trusted, according to suspect MSM Economist, a rag believed in by enough cretins, imbeciles, morons, knaves, and simpletons. I suggest watch & brief, wait & see, who can know, but time shall tell

The proxies, alas, offer slightly different narratives about China’s economy this year. Capital believes that the slowdown in the first quarter was much sharper than reported, whereas the Fed’s calculations suggest that it was milder. Both, however, agree on the most salient point: the rebound since then has been big. The crowded streets and buzzing shops do not lie.


economist.com

The real deal Can China’s reported growth be trusted?Economists have constructed alternative gauges, some less flattering than others
Oct 15th 2020
NO SOPHISTICATED ANALYSIS is needed to show that China is in better economic shape than most other countries these days. Just look at its bustling shopping malls, its jammed roads in rush hour and its mobbed tourist sites during holidays. But if the crowd scenes suffice to affirm that China is doing well, a little more work is needed to address the question: exactly how well? As is often the case with Chinese data, the answer is controversial.

The national statistics bureau will report third-quarter GDP on October 19th. Analysts expect growth of about 5% compared with a year earlier, a strong recovery from the depths of the coronavirus slowdown, and all the more stunning when much of the world is mired in recession. Yet some believe the official growth data have been too rosy this year, not least because China’s pandemic lockdown in the first quarter was among the world’s most restrictive.

Thankfully, the mysteries are not unfathomable. Research published in recent weeks sheds some light on what is really going on. Doubts about China’s data are not new: it is probably fair to say that few serious economists trust its exact growth figures. Instead, there are two broad camps. One thinks that official data are overly smooth, but that the general picture is not all that misleading, because the government sometimes exaggerates GDP and at other times lowballs it. The second camp sees one-sided manipulation, with China’s boffins consistently inflating the size of the economy. The new research comes from both camps.

Start with the more sceptical of the two, best demonstrated in a note in September by Capital Economics, a consultancy. Julian Evans-Pritchard and Mark Williams, its analysts, argued that Chinese data have looked particularly fishy since 2012. Before that, growth regularly exceeded targets by a wide margin. Since then, reported GDP has been smack in line with targets set early in the year. And statisticians have stopped making big revisions to their initial estimates. It all seems a little too perfect.

Other data look more credible. Whereas real growth (ie, adjusted for inflation) has been improbably smooth, nominal growth has been volatile. Moreover, certain elements of the real-growth calculations appear to have been lifted upwards. For years the construction component of GDP moved in tandem with cement production. But from 2014 until 2018 a big gap opened up as construction raced ahead. In the first quarter of this year, when China was in partial lockdown, the transportation component of GDP was resilient—despite a collapse in freight and passenger traffic.

So Capital Economics has developed a “China activity proxy” to gauge growth. There is a long tradition of analysts using alternative sources to measure the Chinese economy. No less an authority than Li Keqiang, now prime minister, famously did so when he ran a north-eastern province. In their latest proxy Messrs Evans-Pritchard and Williams include eight indicators, from property sales to seaport cargo. The results are stark. Whereas official GDP grew by 48% in cumulative terms from 2014 to 2019, they put the true expansion at 33%.

China’s boffins can to turn to an unlikely corner for a partial defence: America’s Federal Reserve. John Fernald, Eric Hsu and Mark Spiegel, economists at the Fed’s San Francisco arm, have also constructed a proxy for Chinese growth, laid out in a forthcoming paper, using indicators such as consumer expectations and fixed-asset investment. They, too, conclude that official growth has been implausibly smooth since 2013. But they find that true growth was faster about half the time and slower the other half (see chart).



The crucial test for these proxies is whether they offer insights about China’s trajectory that are missing in the official GDP data. Both pass the test. The ups and downs of their measures better explain China’s periodic shifts in fiscal and monetary policies than the uncannily steady path of official real GDPdoes. The Fed economists subject their proxy to another test, constructing it to be in line with Chinese imports, as measured by the reported exports of trading partners—in other words, a data source entirely free from potential Chinese fiddling. In countries with reliable statistics, import growth typically moves closely with that of GDP. That is the case for their proxy—but not for official GDP.

Does this mean that Chinese data are, put bluntly, garbage? No. The Fed economists find that Chinese statistics, with the notable exception of real GDP, have become more reliable over time. The analysts with Capital Economics conclude that the main problem occurs in the transformation of nominal figures into real ones; statisticians appear to use excessively low inflation rates when calculating real growth so that the government can hit its targets. Nominal measurements are more trustworthy, and that matters when trying to assess, say, China’s debt burden or the size of its economy relative to America’s.

The proxies, alas, offer slightly different narratives about China’s economy this year. Capital believes that the slowdown in the first quarter was much sharper than reported, whereas the Fed’s calculations suggest that it was milder. Both, however, agree on the most salient point: the rebound since then has been big. The crowded streets and buzzing shops do not lie. ¦

This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline "The real deal"



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (163466)10/22/2020 3:06:22 AM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217615
 
Coincidentally, and truly, I signed up for Amazon Prime this past week in preparation for CoVid Part II, as already have the other streamers, and

am relishing watching Borat, a character that I had long ago decided to never ever watch.

However, for Rudy and Pence, gotta, must, imperative, for the giggles

I want to see whether Rudy's explanation of 'adjusting microphone' is credible, for I want to give folks the benefit of the doubt if doubt at all not-ridiculous

It is just tooooo puuuurfect

The movie is apparently rated for anyone older than 3

I doubt anyone gives a hoot about Hunter and his sister-in-law and possibly too-young companions and and and matter before the election. After the election would be another story.

2021 we would be entertained by Hunter and Bannon, and possibly Rudy, and either Biden and / or Trump. all can be funded by TSLA and if more interesting, also funded by AAPL

ft.com

Borat returns with Giuliani, Pence and a female accomplice

In ‘Borat Subsequent Moviefilm’ Sacha Baron Cohen tramples over sensitivities with customary glee
15 hours ago


Sacha Baron Cohen as Borat, disguised as Donald Trump, attending a Mike Pence speaking engagement with his daughterIn 2003, provocateur Sacha Baron Cohen — then in the guise of rapper Ali G — interviewed Donald Trump. The celebrity real estate developer quickly walked out. You couldn’t — to put it politely — kid a kidder. Seventeen years later, Trump is out of reach even for a berserker like Baron Cohen. Nonetheless, in the madcap travelogue sequel Borat Subsequent Moviefilm, he returns to circle his old prey. The US president does not appear, but is everywhere in spirit. Starring in the flesh — and then some — is his lawyer Rudy Giuliani. Hold that thought.

If fans were worried about burgeoning good taste in the Borat of the original 2006 misadventure, they shouldn’t be. In the guise of his naive Kazakh reporter, Baron Cohen still tramples over sensitivities with the glee of a toddler loosed on the flowerbeds. But there is a problem. If the first film was built on unwitting play-alongs, now whenever Borat appears in public, Baron Cohen is met by real-life demands for autographs. The solution comes with the same premise that returns him to America. Delighted by the political mood in the US, the Kazakh president would like to formalise a union. Borat must make an appropriate gift: offering Mike Pence his 15-year-old daughter, Tutar.

As I said, Baron Cohen is still willing to Go There. Tutar is played by the previously unknown Bulgarian actress Maria Bakalova. A star is assuredly born. An accomplice for Baron Cohen too. How much of the gonzo feminism of the film was always the plan and how much born from the need for another — less famous — face to prank America is moot. With Baron Cohen, you often need to hold two competing thoughts in your head at once.



Maria Bakalova plays Tutar, Borat’s teenage daughter, in the comedy sequel

Either way, Bakalova means business. Sometimes, the pair work as a double act, as when visiting a cosmetic surgeon who assures the young woman he is angling to give breast implants that he would gladly “sex attack” her if her father were not present. But soon Tutar is on her own, speaking to a Republican women’s group on what might be called matters of physical self-discovery. Whatever your politics, the effect is thrilling, Bakalova as nerveless as her co-star in drawing out condescension, then turning it to horrified, disbelieving silence. Encore!

Where does this leave the actual Borat? Sometimes Baron Cohen seems to be working up a thesis, gesturing to threads between fictional, omni-bigoted Kazakh superstitions and America’s genuine anti-science, QAnon baloney. But the rigour is mostly saved for real-world interventions such as the comedian’s celebrated 2019 speech on Facebook and Holocaust denial. With Borat, he is always keen to get to the next slapstick confrontation. Some are as hilarious as ever, others less so.

Still, we are all judged by our endings and the film has a doozy — a gleaming glacé cherry of humiliation in clown-nose red, starring Giuliani. By now Tutar has transitioned into an anti-lockdown pseudo-journalist, interviewing the onetime New York mayor as he holds forth on Chinese villainy and Trumpian heroics. To describe what follows in the hotel suite would be a spoiler. Suffice to say, it feels at once inevitable and still remarkable to see on screen. Bakalova, like Baron Cohen, is expert at Going There. Giuliani, having gone along, should probably now stay put.

On Amazon Prime Video from October 23



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (163466)10/23/2020 10:43:48 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217615
 
It is Saturday 24th October

Have you bought either gold or bitcoin yet?

zerohedge.com

Raoul Pal: The Biggest Trade in the World



by Tyler Durden
Fri, 10/23/2020 - 18:10



Real Vision CEO, Raoul Pal, arrives to the Daily Briefing frothing at the mouth with Bitcoin bullishness. Senior editor, Ash Bennington, tries in vain to contain Raoul’s enthusiasm, but with Bitcoin up over 20% this month, Raoul’s zeal simply cannot be restrained, and he proceeds to go at length about how this asset will become a global reserve asset as the world moves along an adoption curve of trust. Raoul and Ash proceed to discuss the ongoing progress to make crypto-assets easier to own for RIAs and institutional investors, and Raoul reflects on the relative risk/reward profile of bitcoin at a time with record low bond yields and a stock market at all-time highs. In the intro, editor Jack Farley breaks down the new Frankenstein of the fixed income world: the CLO ETF.



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (163466)10/24/2020 7:49:17 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217615
 
something about a trade

the mrs sports one of these BN(O)s and so far it is as useful as toilet paper at low season

scmp.com

The UK is peddling a citizenship pipe dream to naive Hongkongers


Yonden Lhatoo explains why the British government’s offer to take in those from the city with BN(O) status is a political sham that will only bring grief to unwitting victims who fall for it



Yonden Lhatoo

Published: 9:44pm, 24 Oct, 2020

Just like the young Dick Whittington of English folklore who found out the hard way centuries ago that the streets of London were not in fact paved with gold, many Hongkongers getting excited over Britain’s great offer of a “pathway to citizenship” are in for bitter disappointment.

Purportedly out of overwhelming concern for the safety of their loyal former colonial subjects, the people in charge of good ol’ Blighty announced this week that they were creating a special class of visa for Hongkongers with British National (Overseas) status to help them escape the city’s terrifying new national security law.

According to official estimates from the British side, more than a million eligible Hongkongers could land on English shores in the next five years under this generous new visa scheme, half of them in the first six months after applications open at the end of January, 2021.



But how many will actually end up settling in Britain? And if they do, are they fully aware of what they’re signing up for? Because as magnanimous and warm as the offer sounds, the cold, hard reality behind it is that life in Britain looks harsh enough to make “suffering” in Hong Kong feel like a picnic.

Unemployment in Britain surged to its highest rate in more than three years at 4.5 per cent in the three months to August, with nearly 3 million people claiming out-of-work benefits in September. It’s going to be even worse, with the unemployment rate expected to hit up to 10 per cent by the end of the year as the government scales back its job protection scheme and enforces a new system of lockdowns to tackle a raging pandemic.

Imagine more than a million “refugees” from Hong Kong descending upon that job market and how all those Brits struggling to find work and make a living would react to the competition.

The new immigrants from Hong Kong will not be eligible for welfare payments, and must be able to support themselves financially for at least six months. And they will have to be self-sufficient for up to seven years before they can become citizens.

Immigration consultants expect mostly unskilled youngsters to take up the citizenship offer, rather than professionals who would much rather move to other Western countries with better job prospects, such as the US and Canada.



Unemployment in Britain surged to its highest level in more than three years in the three months to August, reaching 4.5 per cent. Photo: Xinhua
“My advice to people who wish to migrate to the UK, especially young people, is to be mentally prepared for the worst-case scenario, in which they do not have a job for a long period of time, and may need to survive on their savings without income,” one consultant told this paper.

It’s not just the money. Hongkongers will be moving from one of the safest cities in the world in terms of Covid-19 containment to a country that has only its own, shambolic response to blame for more than 830,000 infections and well over 44,000 deaths.

Not to mention the racist attacks against Asians, especially Chinese-looking people being blamed for the plague. The best of British luck explaining to some lout on the street spitting at you or punching you in the face that you’re actually from Hong Kong and share his anti-China sentiment.

Oh, and you can also say goodbye to all the perks of living in Hong Kong that we all take for granted – the low tax regime, quality and efficiency of most services, convenient public transport system, and better-funded and more accessible health care.

The British government is peddling a pipe dream to Hongkongers, pretending it cares for their well-being and effectively encouraging them to abandon their own homeland. Let’s hope most of them are pragmatic enough to realise they’re better off staying put here. And as for those who leave only to end up deeply disappointed and desperate to return home, let’s hope Beijing is benevolent enough to let them back in without retaliation.