Podcast
In this week’s Off The Cuff I sit down with David Collum to discuss:
- The looming fiscal & social crises caused by underfunded pensions
- Is everything in America is now “Too Big To Fail”?
- Investing for a future of secular inflation
- The dangers of cancel culture & the “woke” movement
Never short on strong opinions, Cornell chemist and pontificator extraordinaire Dave Collum joins us this week to opine on a wide spectrum of topics.
Dave is very concerned about the trajectory America and much of the world is headed, careening down a slope that history shows ends in economic malaise, social discord and currency collapse. As a society, we seem to have lost our backbone; every politician is willing to sacrifice tomorrow’s prosperity for today’s quick fix, and the populace only rewards that can-kicking behavior.
When everyone is so unwilling to face consequences they are making a devil’s bargain: receiving a carefree today in exchange for a tomorrow filled with much larger problems that refuse to be postpones any longer. Are we ready for that reckoning?
Click here to listen to a sample of this Off The Cuff Podcast
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Off The Cuff: Has Society Lost Its Backbone?
PREVIEW by Adam TaggartIn this week’s Off The Cuff I sit down with David Collum to discuss:
- The looming fiscal & social crises caused by underfunded pensions
- Is everything in America is now “Too Big To Fail”?
- Investing for a future of secular inflation
- The dangers of cancel culture & the “woke” movement
Never short on strong opinions, Cornell chemist and pontificator extraordinaire Dave Collum joins us this week to opine on a wide spectrum of topics.
Dave is very concerned about the trajectory America and much of the world is headed, careening down a slope that history shows ends in economic malaise, social discord and currency collapse. As a society, we seem to have lost our backbone; every politician is willing to sacrifice tomorrow’s prosperity for today’s quick fix, and the populace only rewards that can-kicking behavior.
When everyone is so unwilling to face consequences they are making a devil’s bargain: receiving a carefree today in exchange for a tomorrow filled with much larger problems that refuse to be postpones any longer. Are we ready for that reckoning?
Click here to listen to a sample of this Off The Cuff Podcast
Or Enroll today to access the full audio as well as all of PeakProsperity.com’s other premium content.
In this week’s Off The Cuff I sit down with Axel Merk to discuss:
- The implications of yesterday’s announcements by the Federal Reserve
- How much does the Fed truly care about inflation?
- Is the Fed willing to sacrifice the purchasing power of the USD in pursuit of its dual mandate?
- Why resilience remains the right strategy, in both your finances and overall lifestyle
Expert Federal Reserve-watcher Axel Merk joins the program this week to react in real-time to yesterday’s latest announcements by the FOMC and Fed Chair Jerome Powell.
He and I discuss the Fed’s apparent lack of concern about both raising bond yields and building inflation concerns.
As far as Fed Chair Jerome Powell claims, the current easing mode of easy monetary policy is going to continue for a lot longer.
And for those concerned that the repercussions of those policies are having increasingly disastrous effect on the vast majority of the American public, Axel warns that it’s folly to believe the Fed is working in their interests…
Click here to listen to a sample of this Off The Cuff Podcast
Or Enroll today to access the full audio as well as all of PeakProsperity.com’s other premium content.
Off The Cuff: ‘Don’t Believe For A Second That The Government Has Your Back’
PREVIEW by Adam TaggartIn this week’s Off The Cuff I sit down with Axel Merk to discuss:
- The implications of yesterday’s announcements by the Federal Reserve
- How much does the Fed truly care about inflation?
- Is the Fed willing to sacrifice the purchasing power of the USD in pursuit of its dual mandate?
- Why resilience remains the right strategy, in both your finances and overall lifestyle
Expert Federal Reserve-watcher Axel Merk joins the program this week to react in real-time to yesterday’s latest announcements by the FOMC and Fed Chair Jerome Powell.
He and I discuss the Fed’s apparent lack of concern about both raising bond yields and building inflation concerns.
As far as Fed Chair Jerome Powell claims, the current easing mode of easy monetary policy is going to continue for a lot longer.
And for those concerned that the repercussions of those policies are having increasingly disastrous effect on the vast majority of the American public, Axel warns that it’s folly to believe the Fed is working in their interests…
Click here to listen to a sample of this Off The Cuff Podcast
Or Enroll today to access the full audio as well as all of PeakProsperity.com’s other premium content.
It’s difficult to deny that competition makes markets economically efficient.
But it’s less clear that this works out well for the public when it comes to the dependability and resilience of essential services like electric power, as the Texas freeze recently proved.
Almost 8 million Texans lost power and 13 million had no water from February 15 through February 19 because of extreme cold weather.
The storm was no surprise yet by early morning on February 15, net generation dropped 15 GW (gigawatt hours) from 68 to 53 GW . By early evening, it had fallen another 9 GW to 44 GW (Figure 1).
Meanwhile, demand stood at more than 75 GW so supply was only about 65% of estimated demand. The result was loss of electric power to millions of homes. Much of the state’s water relies on electric pumps to move it through pipelines. When electric power was lost, pumps stopped working and there were shortages of water. Insurance losses of are estimated at $18 billion mostly from water damage because of broken pipes.
According to critics, a chief cause of Texas’ grid failure was…
‘Efficient’ Does Not Equal ‘Resilient’
PREVIEW by Art BermanIt’s difficult to deny that competition makes markets economically efficient.
But it’s less clear that this works out well for the public when it comes to the dependability and resilience of essential services like electric power, as the Texas freeze recently proved.
Almost 8 million Texans lost power and 13 million had no water from February 15 through February 19 because of extreme cold weather.
The storm was no surprise yet by early morning on February 15, net generation dropped 15 GW (gigawatt hours) from 68 to 53 GW . By early evening, it had fallen another 9 GW to 44 GW (Figure 1).
Meanwhile, demand stood at more than 75 GW so supply was only about 65% of estimated demand. The result was loss of electric power to millions of homes. Much of the state’s water relies on electric pumps to move it through pipelines. When electric power was lost, pumps stopped working and there were shortages of water. Insurance losses of are estimated at $18 billion mostly from water damage because of broken pipes.
According to critics, a chief cause of Texas’ grid failure was…
In this week’s Off The Cuff I sit down with William Rees to discuss:
- Bill’s coining of the ‘ecological footprint’ concept
- Why he thinks humans have reach a ‘plague stage’ on the planet
- Why our leaders are unwilling to admit to the two problems that matter most
- Bill’s outlook for humanity’s future
We dive deep into the Environment/Ecology “E” of the Three E’s in this week’s Off The Cuff.
Highly-esteemed bio-ecologist and ecological economist William Rees returns to the program to reinforce his warning that the human population is badly in ecological overshoot. If we do not find a way to reduce our taxation of the planet’s resources, the consequences will be devastating.
And sadly, he notes that those “leaders” making policy decisions avoid addressing the issues that pose the greatest threat, because they are politically “sensitive”. Because of this, Bill considers most of the current multi-national agreements focused on dealing with issues of pollution, climate change, species loss, etc are misdirected attempts that aren’t addressing the core problems in the manner or scope needed.
Click here to listen to a sample of this Off The Cuff Podcast
Or Enroll today to access the full audio as well as all of PeakProsperity.com’s other premium content.
Off The Cuff: Our Ecological Footprint Is Badly In ‘Overshoot’
PREVIEW by Adam TaggartIn this week’s Off The Cuff I sit down with William Rees to discuss:
- Bill’s coining of the ‘ecological footprint’ concept
- Why he thinks humans have reach a ‘plague stage’ on the planet
- Why our leaders are unwilling to admit to the two problems that matter most
- Bill’s outlook for humanity’s future
We dive deep into the Environment/Ecology “E” of the Three E’s in this week’s Off The Cuff.
Highly-esteemed bio-ecologist and ecological economist William Rees returns to the program to reinforce his warning that the human population is badly in ecological overshoot. If we do not find a way to reduce our taxation of the planet’s resources, the consequences will be devastating.
And sadly, he notes that those “leaders” making policy decisions avoid addressing the issues that pose the greatest threat, because they are politically “sensitive”. Because of this, Bill considers most of the current multi-national agreements focused on dealing with issues of pollution, climate change, species loss, etc are misdirected attempts that aren’t addressing the core problems in the manner or scope needed.
Click here to listen to a sample of this Off The Cuff Podcast
Or Enroll today to access the full audio as well as all of PeakProsperity.com’s other premium content.