Author: Steve Boren

  • Mayor Will Dissolve DONE on Monday

    ELECTIONS ARE MARCH 2 DETAILS BELOW

    The Chatsworth Roundup

    Breaking News from your Chatsworth Neighborhood Council

    Special Edition | ChatsworthCouncil.org | Sunday, Feb. 21, 2010


    Mayor Will Dissolve DONE on Monday
    Scandal-Scarred Agency to Be Merged Into Community Development

    DONE is finished.

    Greig Smith grilled Kim, according to the
    CityWatch newsletter,
    asking if he could get the funding audit done on schedule. Kim responded "I’ll do my best," drawing the ire of Smith, who went on the attack, suggesting that if that was the best answer available, Kim should resign
    or the mayor should fire him.

    Also Thursday, the City Council, dealing with a $212-million budget deficit, ordered agency heads to cut 3,000 additional city jobs "by any means necessary, including layoffs" by July 1. This is in addition to the 1,000 cuts ordered earlier by the mayor. The budget shortfall is expected to increase to $485 million in 2010-2011.

    Urging quick action, Councilman Smith said, "You cannot walk away from this thinking that it’s going to take care of itself."


    On Friday, Mayor Villaraigosa called for all city employees to take pay cuts, including police officers and firefighters, saying it would be the only way to avoid job cuts.
    A request for comment from the mayor went unanswered over the weekend.

    The first Neighborhood Council was chartered in December of 2001 under rules established by the City Charter. Their primary job is to provide communities with a grassroots voice at City Hall.



    Expect the announcement from Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa’s office Monday that the Department of Neighborhood Empowerment (DONE), which oversees the city’s 90 Neighborhood Councils, will be disbanded and only nine of its remaining employees will shift to the Community Development Department (CDD).
    The mayor already ordered the elimination of the departments of Environmental Services and Human Services in an attempt to ease the city’s budget crisis.
    The bomb dropped at 6:30 p.m. Friday leaving DONE employees wondering about their futures over the weekend, a staffer said.

    The mayor’s announcement comes on the heels of a scathing audit which, among other criticisms, said that DONE couldn’t account for at least $5.6 million on its books. The department had forgotten a bank account containing $160,000. At at least six Neighborhood Council officers are under investigation for the alleged embezzlement of a total of $276,000 in taxpayer money. The criminal allegations were first revealed in the Chatsworth Roundup.
    This is "a systematic failure of accounting and fiscal oversight," according to the audit released Jan 12. Please click here to view audit.
    The shuttering of DONE leaves in question the immediate status of unpaid Neighborhood Council bills. It may also complicate upcoming Neighborhood Council elections.


    DONE will transition with 14 employees until June 30, with nine moving to CDD on July 1. Then, two will be tasked with maintaining accurate financial operations, according to Al Abrams, vice president of the Board of Neighborhood Commissioners.

    BongHwan Kim, general manager of DONE, and a mayoral appointee, reportedly will depart by mid-March. A request for comment went unanswered over the weekend. Kim has been overseeing a months-long reconciliation of DONE’s books in an attempt to find out how much city money remains in each Neighborhood Council’s account.
    This fiscal year each Neighborhood Council was


    [Daily News]


    Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa at budget hearing


    He has already eliminated the departments of Environmental Services and Human Services.



    allocated $45,000 to fund operations and community activities, down from $50,000 in previous years. However, rollover savings from previous years has been in doubt because DONE has not been able to reconcile its accounts.

    At Thursday’s City Council session, Councilman
  • “Ain’t No Spring Chickens…and a coupla hot chicks”

    Hi "Chickens" Family and Friends,

    Attached is the flyer for "Ain’t No Spring Chickens…and a coupla hot chicks", back by popular demand" with some new songs, some new faces!

    Opens March 6th. Thanks for any help in getting the word out. We hope you will join us or return for this ROCK AND ROLL BLAST FROM THE PAST featuring guest artists "Sentimental Journey" Jimmy Angel (sings hit "Teen Angel" and more), with the "Hen House Honeys" and
    Cock a Doodle Do Wops"

    Show Dates: Saturday March 6, 20, April 3, 17, May 8, 22 at 7: 00 PM
    Sundays March 21, April 18, May 23 at 4:00 PM.

    Tickets $18 and Seniors $15.
    Reservations: (818) 998 0185 or [email protected].

    Best regards!
    Bonnie
    for Avenue Act 1

  • Pork your way to better sex

    Pork your way to better sex

    Vegans don’t just eat boring foods… they also have boring sex.

    There’s a reason they’re so weak between the sheets. They’re missing out on two key ingredients in an unforgettable sex life: protein and zinc.

    I’ve told you this before, but the connection between good meat and great sex has gotten some unexpected attention since Argentina’s president, Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, said that pork helped boost her sex life.

    "I’ve just been told something I didn’t know; that eating pork improves your sex life," she was quoted as saying. "I’d say it’s a lot nicer to eat a bit of grilled pork than take Viagra."

    She said when she ate some pork, "things went very well that weekend."

    Forget ObamaCare — sign me up for CristinaCare, because she’s a smart cookie… not to mention easy on the eyes. If more world leaders looked like her, they could probably show international summits on pay-per-view instead of CNN.

    But forget her looks — because she’s right (even if she was just trying to get easy applause from an audience of pork industry bigwigs). Pork will boost your sex life. So will beef, poultry, dairy and shellfish — all foods rich in protein and zinc, which are essential to testosterone production.

    Men with low testosterone levels have weak sex drives — any vegan will tell you that, if he’s honest (but trust me… he’s probably not). Here’s a piece of trivia you can use to annoy these high-and-mighty animal-rights loons: British schoolmasters used to put boys on vegetarian diets to slow the libido and prevent masturbation.

    The logic was sound, but I doubt it worked very well — boys are boys, after all, and they have higher testosterone levels to begin with.

    But as we age, our bodies need more — but make less. To make up for that cruel irony, you need to eat plenty of meat.

    The best source of zinc — by far — is oysters. There’s a reason they’ve been used as aphrodisiacs for centuries: They work. Just don’t ask any vegans about that. They’ll have no idea what you’re talking about.

    Always ready for bedtime,

    William Campbell Douglass II, M.D.

  • The silent plague of sports injuries

    The silent plague of sports injuries

    I’ve gotta be honest with you. I got a good chuckle when I read this article on MSNBC.com.

    Headline: "Gym-goers trip, flip, and fall in pursuit of fitness."

    It recounted stories of rather klutzy gym rats who fell of treadmills, rolled off exercise balls, tripped over jump ropes, or dropped weights on their toes.

    I don’t mean to laugh at anyone’s misfortune, but you have to admit that the picture of someone breaking his toe because he kicked a treadmill is rather amusing.

    But that’s where the humor ends.

    The grim reality is that this nonsensical "exercise-is-good-for-you" craze is landing more than 50,000 people in the emergency room every year because of mishaps on gym equipment, according to numbers from the Consumer Products Safety Commission. But that’s just the tip of the exercise iceberg.

    At least 17 million Americans are treated for sports-related injuries each year overall, including 3.5 million children under the age of 14. And who knows how many millions more silently limp along with untreated aches and injuries caused by something that was "supposed" to make them healthier.

    The experts chalk the injuries up to user error and suggest that people be more careful. It’s user error alright — the error occurred when they thought they needed to exercise to begin with.

    This has nothing to do with how careful you are — and everything to do with the high price of self-destructive behavior. Punish your body and you WILL pay the toll.

    Can you name one athlete you know — or one exercise nut — who isn’t nursing some sort of injury? If you do, just give it time. They’ll be bandaged up and making weekly visits to the physical therapist soon enough.

    Sports can destroy your knees and cause early-onset arthritis, as I told you not long ago. But that’s getting off easy. Recent studies on former football players show their brains are turning into oozing puddles of useless mush from all the hits they take.

    That’s not just an occupational hazard for rich, spoiled athletes — but a real risk for any of the millions of kids who play competitive sports in high school or college. Many of these supposedly fit people eventually hobble around on perpetually bandaged limbs like they limped off a Civil War battlefield instead of sports field.

    And yet the nutty experts just want to blab on and on about how safe exercise is.

    Wake up and smell the Ben-Gay! The safest thing you can do is to stay out of the gym.

    William Campbell Douglass II, M.D.

  • Bill Gates’ biggest glitch

    Bill Gates’ biggest glitch

    Here’s a lesson for you computer geeks out there: Stick with your transistors, and stay the heck out of medicine.

    Bill Gates — world’s richest man, even if he’s shed a few billion over the past year — has hatched a bizarre plot to vaccinate millions of Third World children. He’s either got a lot of Big Pharma stock he needs to pump up, or he’s the world’s most gullible computer genius.

    Gates is donating $10 billion –- on top of $4.5 billion he’s already committed — to pay for things like malaria vaccines.

    You want to save these kids? Keep them far from vaccines. I’ve spent a lot of time caring for children in clinics in Africa and Central America, and the last thing I want to see is some wealthy know-it-all poking these poor kids like they’re voodoo dolls.

    Since Gates is the inventor of the Microsoft operating system, he should know a thing or two about bugs. And in this case, the real problem isn’t malaria…it’s the mosquitoes that carry and transmit it.

    We solved the mosquito problem decades ago. Then we unsolved it when we let the treehuggers ban DDT, the safest and most effective pesticide the world has ever known.

    Don’t listen to the enviro-wackos — there’s no real proof DDT causes birth defects or cancer, and no evidence that it’s harmful to eagles or any other bird.

    But it’s hell on mosquitoes.

    Drain the swamps these bloodsuckers call home and then pump them full of DDT — you’ll have malaria-free zones and much more pleasant places to live. A $10 billion gift could go a long way toward making that happen.

    I may not have a billion dollars, but I do have some advice for you, Bill: Go back to making software for geeks, and let those of us who REALLY know what we’re doing deal with the bugs.

    Crashing the system,

    William Campbell Douglass II, M.D.

  • Pandemic panic hits World Health Organization

    Pandemic panic hits World Health Organization

    I’m sure by now you’ve noticed that swine flu is nothing more than a sniffle…and if you fell for the phony panic and got yourself vaccinated, well — maybe next time you’ll listen to me.

    But don’t just blame yourself — blame the disease-mongers who’ve been trading in swine flu fears and vaccines futures. The pandemic may have been fake, but the multibillion-dollar bill was real…and the trail of dirty dollars leads right to the World Health Organization.

    European officials have been asking the kinds of questions our own lawmakers have been avoiding, almost certainly because they’re knee-deep in this conspiracy, too. And the WHO is putting the "D" in denial.

    "The world is going through a real pandemic," the organization said in a statement. "The description of it as a fake is wrong and irresponsible."

    Naturally, they’re also denying that they changed the definition of pandemic to fit swine flu. And there’s a reason they rushed to change that definition. You see, after the bird flu panic hit a few years ago, health officials around the world made a deal with the devil. According to Time magazine, they told Big Pharma that if a real pandemic hit, they’d buy up vaccine just as fast as it could be made, according to the magazine.

    Is it clear yet?

    As I’ve already told you, some of the WHO’s leading flu experts have ties to the vaccine makers. Even the Council of Europe is looking into Big Pharma’s influence on the WHO’s swine flu decisions.

    Here’s what I think they’ll find: Big Pharma leaned hard on the WHO and its so-called experts, knowing that once the "P" word was uttered they would be swimming in pandemic dollars.

    WHO made the call…and we got the bill.

    They figured everyone would get vaccinated in the resulting panic. Then, when the mass casualties failed to materialize, they could claim it was because the program worked — they got everyone vaccinated in time.

    Nice one, guys. Too bad not all of us fell for it.

    Tens of millions of people got suckered into those vaccines…more than 60 million in the United States alone. But even more people told their docs and health officials where to stick those needles.

    If the WHO was right, we should have seen body bags lining the streets, hospitals overflowing with patients, and a depleted workforce as millions of people fell victim to the virus.

    You can’t stop the truth now — it’s all coming out, and this is just the beginning. Pull up a chair, this is going to get interesting.

    William Campbell Douglass II, M.D.

  • PTC-Keep an Eye on Your Child’s iPhone

    Keep an Eye on Your Child’s iPhone

    Because of its many entertaining "applications" which feature movie clips, games, and more, Apple’s iPhone has become enormously popular with teenagers. But some "apps" contain material clearly not appropriate for kids — and YOU can help put a stop to it! ► more Stop Apple Providing Porn to Kids

    ► To phone Apple: call (408) 974-2042 (press "0" and ask for "customer relations").
    ► To e-mail Apple: click here Apple – iPhone – Feedback and fill out the form. (Under "Feedback Type," click on "Enhancement Request").

  • Solving the Neighborhood Council Funding Fiasco By Greg Nelson

    Solving the Neighborhood Council Funding Fiasco
    EMPOWERMENT REPORT-REPLAY
    By Greg Nelson

    (The City is once again considering the restructuring of the Department of Neighborhood Empowerment. Neighborhood Council leaders are prepared to recommend, at a meeting with the Mayor’s office, that the City explore outsourcing the Department’s funding responsibilities. Greg Nelson provided his advice on that … and other related subjects … a month ago. Here’s what he said.)

    Read more…
    CityWatch – An insider look at City Hall

  • NC Funding: It’s the Law By Barbara Monahan Burke

    NC Funding: It’s the Law
    VOICES
    By Barbara Monahan Burke

    The City Charter mandates both the establishment of a citywide system of Neighborhood Councils and also the funding of neighborhood councils to ensure that they can carry out their mandated functions.

    Read more…
    CityWatch – An insider look at City Hall

  • Prop 16: Worst Measure on June Ballot By Paul Hogarth

    Prop 16: Worst Measure on June Ballot
    GUEST WORDS
    By Paul Hogarth (Posted first at beyondchron.com)

    Every election cycle has an awful state ballot proposition, with plenty of corporate funding to fool voters. For the June primary, it’s Prop 16 – a thinly veiled power grab by PG&E to shut down competition to keeps its monopoly.

    Read more… Click below

    CityWatch – An insider look at City Hall

  • LA’s Budget Crisis: No Time for Flip-Flop Leadership By Stephen Box

    LA’s Budget Crisis: No Time for Flip-Flop Leadership
    BOX SOAP
    By Stephen Box

    BongHwan Kim, the General Manager of the Department of Neighborhood Empowerment, is experiencing a "moment of reckoning" brought to him courtesy of the city’s budget crisis and the resulting debate over NC funding, DONE operations, core priorities and the delivery of services.

    Read more… click below

    CityWatch – An insider look at City Hall

  • Chump Change Says LA’s WATCHDOG Jack Humphreville

    Chump Change
    LA WATCHDOG
    By Jack Humphreville

    “Chump Change.” That is how one knowledgeable City Hall insider described the $240,000 cost of the Mayor’s 2008 politically motivated trip to Israel.

    Over the past five years, our Mayor and his entourage have traveled the world: Asia, South Africa, Mexico, Berlin, London, Iceland, and Copenhagen. He has also spent considerable time running around the country campaigning for Hillary Clinton and attending too many to count photo opportunities and fundraising events.
    Read more… click below

    CityWatch – An insider look at City Hall

  • NCs: Is the Experiment Over Now? By Ken Draper

    NCs: Is the Experiment Over Now?
    CITYWATCH
    By Ken Draper

    The first neighborhood council was certified in December of 2001. For what seemed like an eternity following that act, neighborhood councils were referred to by a number of City Hall folks as an experiment.

    Neighborhood councils were Charter-created to provide grassroots LA with a voice at City Hall.

    On a Sunday in early January, neighborhood council leaders gathered at an emergency session to discuss the City’ financial crisis and ensure that NCs had a seat at the solutions table.

    Read more… click link below
    CityWatch – An insider look at City Hall

  • The Pain in Spain

    02.19.10 09:30 PM

    Germany, Greece, and Spain
    Two Views on the Euro
    The Pain in Spain
    How Much Is Too Much?
    Tampa, Austin, and California

    Last week we talked about Greece. But the problems are more than just Greece. We look at two very different views of the euro, and then opposing thoughts on Spain. Is Spain a problem or not? And how can the US keep on spending? Is there a limit? There is a lot to cover in what has been an interesting, if confusing, week.

    Before we get into the meat of the letter, I want to give you a chance to register for my 7th (where do the years go?!) annual Strategic Investment Conference, cosponsored with my friends at Altegris Investments. The conference will be held April 22-24 and, as always, in La Jolla, California. The speaker lineup is powerful. Already committed are Dr. Gary Shilling, David Rosenberg, Dr. Lacy Hunt, Dr. Niall Ferguson, and George Friedman, as well as your humble analyst. We are talking with several other equally exciting speakers and expect those to firm up shortly.

    Look at that lineup. These are the guys who got the calls right over the past few years. They called the housing crisis, the credit bubble, and the recession. And, in my opinion, these are some of the best in the world at giving us ideas about where we are headed.

    Comments from those who attend the annual affair generally run along the lines of, “This is the best conference we have ever been to.” And each year it seems to get better. This year we are going to focus on “The End Game,” that is, on the paths the various nations are likely to take as they try to solve their various deficit problems, and how that will affect the world and local economies and our investments. We make sure you have access to our speakers and get your questions answered, and you'll come away with excellent, practical investment ideas.

    This conference sells out every year, and it looks like it will do so this year. You do not want to miss it. There is a physical limit to the space. Every year I have to tell people, including good friends, that there is no more room. Don't wait to sign up. There is still an early-registration discount. And while it pains me to say it, you must be an accredited investor to attend the conference, as there are regulations we must follow in order to offer specific advice and ideas. Click on the link and sign up now. https://hedge-fund-conference.com/20…px?ref=mauldin

    Germany, Greece, and Spain

    Let's start with a little theater of the absurd. Quoting from a Reuters story (you can't make this up!):

    “Greek opposition lawmakers said on Thursday that Germans should pay reparations for their World War Two occupation of Greece before criticizing the country over its yawning fiscal deficits.

    “How does Germany have the cheek to denounce us over our finances when it has still not paid compensation for Greece's war victims?” Margaritis Tzimas, of the main opposition New Democracy party, told parliament.”

    This was during a debate in the Greek parliament on how to handle the Greek debt. And it was echoed by both the left and right political parties. Somehow they forgot about the German government paying 115 million deutschmarks in 1960, not a small sum back then. It seems that many Greek politicians are still in the denial stage of dealing with this crisis.

    In Germany, it is becoming increasingly clear that there is little political will to bail out the Greeks without severe austerity measures that will further increase an already deep recession. But I wrote about that last week. Nothing has really changed, except that it has become even less clear how all this will unfold. But whatever happens, there is no positive outcome for the Greeks. Only less bad outcomes.

    Well, a few things did happen. The rest of the EU took away the vote on some issues from Greece, and there are noises that if the Greeks do not take severe enough measures, they (the EU) will step in and take over. Now THAT would be an interesting spectacle. Just what the market likes: lots of confusion. Try selling a Greek bond in the midst of a modern Greek tragedy.

    There are those, both in Europe and without, who think a default by Greece will mean the end of, or at least do serious damage to, the euro. Count me among the skeptics on that, as a default by California would not do much damage to the dollar. Greece is only about 2.5% of the Eurozone GDP. It would be a problem, and maybe even a crisis, as European banks have large Greek debt exposure; but Germany in fact could bail out its banks a lot more cheaply than bailing out Greece. And Portugal is even smaller.

    I wrote in 2003 that I thought the euro (then at $.88) would go to $1.50 (it got to $1.60) and all the way back to parity ($1) over the course of many years. I still think so. It has and will be a long and rocky road. It is still not clear how all of the problems in the eurozone countries will be resolved, and by that I mean the serious entitlement liabilities they will face in the middle of the decade.

    Oh, and as a reminder, I wrote last year and at the beginning of this year that the dollar was going to get stronger. I got more than a few people telling me I was, well, wrong, with varying degrees of politeness. (You need a thick skin to write this letter!)

    Two Views on the Euro

    My good friends David Kotok and Dennis Gartman illustrate the two sides of the euro debate. Dennis has long been a euro skeptic, and of late has been especially forceful as he writes about the problems of the euro. David runs around with serious international thought shapers in Europe. David wrote a letter to Dennis this week, and Dennis responded. I am taking the liberty of reprinting part of that conversation, as it sets up the discussion we will have nicely.

    Dennis,

    Most of the time you and I are simpatico in view. But this time we are on totally opposite sides. You predict the EUR is toast. I think it emerges from this stronger than ever and that the weaker system is now the deficit-ridden US. I have organized and chaired conferences and seminars in Europe for the last decade as program chair of the GIC, www.interdependence.org. The next one is in June in Paris and Prague, to which I am inviting you with this email.

    In the course of this decade those meetings have ranged in location from south (Italy) to Baltic (Estonia) to west (Ireland). All of these meetings were multinational. None of them had language or cultural barriers. All of these various hosts were gracious and hospitable and welcoming. All of them had goodwill among nationals of the various European countries. None of them had internal antagonism.

    Come with me in June and see this with your own eyes. Europe wants a hard currency and better economics and knows how to get it. The Greeks will end up better off and the politics will force it.

    I am a euro bull. All the best. By the way, I still want you to come fishing with me.

    David [Kotok]

    Dennis answered.

    David,

    I'm writing from Calgary this morning. Nice town, and not all that cold. Nice people out here in Canada's west. I always feel better about the world when I get to the Canadian west.

    We do indeed disagree on the EUR, David, and I hope you are right, but I fear you are wrong. These cultural differences are simply too great to be overcome. I have always been a EUR skeptic, and have been surprised that the whole experiment has lasted this long, but the Germans are not going to allow any of their money to be shipped to Athens to defend Greeks who have no pride in their own country [and are] tax-paying scofflaws. The German's felt put-upon by the rest of Europe when they paid for the cost of reunification entirely, and they have no intention of now paying for Greeks who thumb their noses at law and fiscal responsibility.

    Right now, the market's sayin' I'm right, and for now I'm going to press the issue until the market tells me I'm wrong, David. It's all I know to do. Expecting Papandreaou to change his fiscal spots is simply not wise. He has been a profligate all his life; so too his father. It is genetic and it aint' gona' change.

    Be well, my friend. We can disagree and still be impressed by one another's work. I know I am.

    Dennis Gartman

    Who's right? In an odd way, both of them.

    Let's look at what I think is the difference between my two friends. If you read European papers and briefings by serious economists and euro politicians, the idea of the eurozone breaking up is simply unthinkable to them. So much time and effort was put into creating the euro to begin with that there is a lot of vested interest in keeping it. (And by the way, let me be clear that the world is better off with a viable euro.) When David goes to Europe, as he often does, he meets with the top tier of business, investment banking, and central banking circles. And they assure him they will figure this out. These are the thought leaders who brought the euro together in the first place.

    Dennis listens to the trading floors and people in the streets. He was a man born in the trading pits. He rightly looks at the politics of Greece and Germany and says that is a “dog that won't hunt.”

    In the short term, a Greek default will put significant pressure on the European banking system and through that the euro. But it is not the end of the world for the euro. Ultimately, in the grand scheme of things, the value of the euro, within limits, is not significant. If it falls to dollar parity there are winners and losers, of course. European exporters will be delighted. So will be their farmers. If you are a consumer buying goods outside the eurozone, you will not be as happy.

    But the valuation of the euro is not in and of itself a reason for the euro to disappear. At one time it was $.82. Then over $1.60. All currencies fluctuate, some more than others. What destroys them is political malfeasance.

    What would put the euro at risk of a bad political decision? A Greek bailout without serious conditions would be the one thing that could be a very bad start to a downward spiral. If Greece is bailed out, then why not Portugal or Spain or Ireland? What about the emergency room crisis that is Austrian banks?

    The line has to be drawn, and it has to be a hard line. And basically, what David is saying is that the serious leaders with whom he is in contact get it. But it is not certain how things will play out. Will Greek politicians and unions blink when faced with reality? Polls show that a majority of Greeks now favor making serious budget cuts. And the reality is that they will lose access to the credit markets if they do not make major spending cuts and get some kind of pan-European guarantee for their new debt. Losing access to the credit markets will mean even more (and immediate!) drastic cuts.

    The real choice for the Greeks is whether to stay in the monetary union. Of course, leaving and defaulting on their debt also cuts them off from the credit markets. It is a sad reality they face.

    The Pain in Spain

    That of course brings us to the elephant in the room – Spain. While the eurozone can survive a Greek default or a serious Greek depression, Spain is another story. Spain is a very large country whose deficits, if not brought under control, could in fact tank the euro.

    Spanish leaders have been all over Europe, loudly proclaiming that they are not Greece. However, their current fiscal deficit is in the same league (9%), and they have other problems. And just as Dennis and David disagree, this week I had two reports on Spain hit my inbox the same day, from two of the groups I respect the most. And they do not agree abut the future of Spanish debt.

    The first was from the European team of the Bank Credit Analyst. I have been reading BCA for decades, and they have a real knack for being right. I pay attention when they write something. They are a serious research firm, and consult with the biggest firms in the world. It is not an exaggeration to say the central bankers pay attention to them.

    And they think Spain is going to work out. Let's look at a few paragraphs from their latest report:

    “Listen to the current market commentary and you might be forgiven for thinking that history is repeating itself. We don't want to minimize the country's woes. Unemployment has after all just breached the psychologically brutal level of 4 million.

    “But much of the analysis is backward looking. What the markets fear has already happened. A rerun of the Greek debt crisis is not inevitable, Spanish bonds are cheap relative to Bunds and many of the cyclical imbalances are on the mend. Spain has already undergone 18 months of painful economic adjustment. The current account deficit in relation to GDP has more than halved to 4.6% from its peak in 2008, when in absolute terms it was the second highest in the world after the US.

    “The budget shortfall is beginning to roll over, a reduction plan is in place and the public debt-to-GDP ratio is 60%, barely more than half the Greek ratio. Most importantly, the inflation rate has converged with the euro zone average, one of many indicators confirming the decade-long adjustment to membership of the currency club is complete.

    “Spain does not fit well into the caricature of a two speed Europe, with the south on a slow, unsustainable growth path. Its demographic profile is far more propitious to economic growth than Germany or France, never mind Greece and Portugal, and its policy makers are in many instances more vehement about the need for financial discipline. After all, it was Spain which recently attempted to get the EC to agree to penalties for countries that did not hit their economic targets, only to be blocked by Germany. If there is to be a euro crisis, it is not going to be Spain that causes it.

    “… The shakeout in the labor market will bring a sharp short term jump in productivity, with policy changes providing additional help thereafter. Immigration creates the potential for Spain to grow its way back.”

    It was just a few months ago that I published a report from Variant Perception on the serious problems of Spanish banks. Spain has almost 20% unemployment and the government deficit is almost 9%. They have a trade deficit of 4%. Real GDP is down by 5%. Getting back to growth and a less severe government deficit is going to take some serious willpower from a socialist government. So I was glad to read that someone I respect as much as BCA thinks things will work out.

    Then I read a short report by Ray Dalio and the team at Bridgewater. It is hard to get their work, but every now and then someone gets me a copy. I don't know Ray, but I have serious respect for his work. I am a huge fan. He is one of those men about whom the word brilliant can be used without risk of exaggeration. Bridgewater manages $80 billion or so for some of the largest institutions in the world. (www.bwater.com)

    So what do they write about Spain? They are not as optimistic.

    “[because of the recession] … the Spanish government decided to run big budget deficits that have been funded with big borrowings, but the more the debt increases, the closer this approach is to coming to an end. As of now, conditions are tenuous but acceptable because most investors a) are used to thinking of Spain as being safe and not having wide credit spreads and b) have been inclined to pick up yield by holding debt that was generally considered safe, so they funded these deficits with narrow credit spreads.

    “We do a lot of work estimating what a country's credit spreads should be in light of its cash flows and asset values and have made more than a few bucks doing this. Based on these criteria, we judge Spain's actual credit spread to be just about the narrowest relative to what it should be on the basis of its fundamentals — i.e., the spread is 1.4%, and we would assess the fundamentals to warrant it to be 6.5%, on the basis of fundamentals alone.

    “We judge Spanish sovereign credit to be much riskier than is discounted because it seems to us that there is a high risk that Spain won't be able to sell the debt that it needs to fund its deficits, and there is virtually no chance that the government can cut spending (nor does it want to). That is because a lot of debt is coming due; the Zapatero government is weak, very socialist and supported by a collection of factions (e.g., those in states seeking independence); and the Spanish people are now politically fragmented and only care about what money the government is going to give them. Also, the private sector debt problems have largely been kept under the rug rather than dealt with via restructurings.

    “In other words, 1) Spain has big debt/deficit problems; 2) it is not dealing with these problems by doing the tough, forthright things to alleviate them; 3) it doesn't have the printing press to avoid the risk of default (unless the ECB helps them); and 4) it has a narrow credit spread. Situations like this, in the past, have been associated with both debt rollover and capital flight problems.

    “… Spain's external debts, have exploded without a significant offset of external assets. On net, Spain owes the world about 80% of GDP more than it has external assets. As a frame of reference, the degree of net external debt Spain has piled up in a currency it cannot print has few historical precedents among significant countries and is akin to the level of reparations imposed on Germany after World War I. We don't know of precedents for these types of external imbalances being paid back in real terms.

    “On top of the debt that needs to be rolled, Spain's cash flows (current account and budget deficit) are extremely bad. Spain's current living standards are reliant not just on the roll of old debt, but also on significant further external lending.

    “For these reasons, we don't want to hold Spanish debt at these spreads.”

    And this, gentle reader, brings us to the heart of the problem. These are two very smart research houses with opposite conclusions. Having disagreements is not all that unusual. Disagreements are what makes for horse races and markets.

    But the difference is in essence the same disagreement that David and Dennis have. It is one of political nuance. BCA thinks Spain will get its act together, and Bridgewater does not, or at least not until its hand is forced by the markets (my assumption, not theirs).

    The amount of pain that Spain must endure to get it fiscal house in order should not be underestimated. Wages are going to have to fall relative to northern Europe for them to be competitive. The dependence on government is going to have to be reduced. This is not going to be easy for a socialist government with a very thin coalition.

    And that brings us back to Greece. While Greece can be readily bailed out (assuming they accept large budget cuts) because it is small, Spain is too big to save. The European Union cannot set the precedent that countries that do not set their fiscal houses in order will be bailed out by countries that do.

    This is the nature of the End Game I have been writing about. The decisions are now political. How do we unwind the debts and the leverage? How much pain do we postpone and how much do we take on today? It is the same question for much of Europe, Great Britain (serious problems there), Japan (which is a bug in search of a windshield), and the US. We now have a limited number of path-dependent options. By that I mean the political paths chosen by the various governments will dictate the economic path we go down.

    How Much Is Too Much?

    And to close, I want to show a chart from today's Wall Street Journal, from a column by Daniel Henninger.

    This is the definition of an unsustainable path. Spending has grown 7 times as much in real (inflation-adjusted) terms as median household income over the last 40 years. Like Greece and Spain and much of the rest of the developed world, we will be forced to make hard choices. We cannot afford to do everything that even conservatives would like, let alone liberals. We cannot fight two wars, increase spending on health care, stimulate a faltering economy, and fun a 20% explosion in federal employees in just one year, etc., etc.

    Pay attention to Greece and Spain and especially Japan over the next few years. Unless the US gets its fiscal house in order, we will be next. It will not be any easier for us in five years than it is for Greece today.

    Tampa, Austin, and California

    I leave way too early tomorrow morning to fly to Tampa to be with Jeff Saut, the chief investment officer for Raymond James. Sunday we will spend time on his boat in the bay, and then devote a few hours to work on Monday. Back Monday afternoon and then a quick one-day trip to Austin to be with George and Meredith Friedman of Stratfor, which is always fun.

    Then Friday I leave for California to participate in the Singularity U executive conference for nine days, listening to lectures and such for about 12 hours a day on how the world is changing in a dozen different fields from biotech to medicine to nanotech to robotics, informatics, and more. It will be a jam-packed information event. I will be sitting with my computer, making notes on what strikes me as most interesting; and that will be the next Friday's letter, as I leave that day for San Antonio and a speech at the Cambridge conference and have to get my letter done early.

    This week we found out that it is once again time for an audit from FINRA. While we have done these before, they do consume a lot of preparatory time. We had one about 20 months ago, and thought we were not due for a while, but evidently we are on the list again. I am all for audits of brokers, as they are needed, but it is not something I personally like going through.

    Poor Tiffani, though, has to do most of the work for that. As she pointed out to them when they made the call, the last time they came it was a week before her wedding; and now it is just after she gets back from maternity leave and is behind in all her projects.

    As she was walking out after the call that informed us of the audit (in two weeks), she gave a big sigh. “Audits before my wedding and after the baby. I wonder what the next big thing in my life is, because it looks like that will be when they do the next one.” I could not help but laugh. Oh well, I guess you had to be there.

    Have a great week. Get out and enjoy being with a few good friends, and find some good wine to share. I am bringing some of my marvelous birthday wine to Tampa. Wine is best when it is shared with friends.

    Your thinking about how the End Game will look analyst,

    John Mauldin


    http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Thoug…-in-spain.aspx

  • SFV Neighborhood Council Elections

    Neighborhood Council Elections…

    LA City Councilmember Greig Smith’s Field Deputy Semee Park works closely with Neighborhood Councils in our District. She brings this reminder that most Neighborhood Councils in our District have their elections on Tuesday, March 2. (Encino and Lake Balboa Neighborhood Councils have their elections on May 27.)

    Check your Neighborhood Council’s website for each Council’s individual polling place.

    For more information call City Clerk’s Neighborhood Council Election Unit at (213) 978-0444 or email [email protected].

    Canoga Park http://www.canogaparknc.org/
    Chatsworth http://www.chatsworthcouncil.org/
    Granada Hills North http://www.ghnnc.org/
    Granada Hills South http://www.ghsnc.org/
    Northridge East http://www.northridgeeast.com/
    Northridge West http://www.northridgewest.org/home/
    North Hills West http://www.nhwnc.org/
    Porter Ranch http://www.prnc.org/
    Reseda http://www.resedacouncil.org/
    Winnetka http://www.winnetkanc.com/
    West Hills http://www.westhillsnc.org/
    Encino http://www.encinocouncil.org/
    Lake Balboa http://www.lakebalboanc.org/

  • West Hills Neithborhood Council Sponsoring Free Emergency Preparedness Classes

    West Hills Neithborhood Council Sponsoring Free Emergency Preparedness Classes…

    Our Chief of Staff Mitch Englander is a strong advocate of Community Emergency Response Team, or CERT, the L.A. Fire Department’s nationally recognized free emergency preparedness courses for community members.

    He encourages residents in the West Hills to sign up for a CERT training course being sponsored by West Hills Neighborhood Council and West Hills Neighborhood Watch starting Tuesday, March 9.

    Tuesday, March 9
    6:30 pm
    LAPD Valley Communications Center
    23001 Roscoe Blvd.
    (On Corporate Pointe campus)
    To register for the class visit
    www.westhillsnc.org and click on the CERT training link.

    The course is seven weeks long. Each free class is approximately 2.5 hours long and is taught by L.A. Fire Department Firefighters and Paramedics. Get CERT trained and you’ll be better prepared to help your family, your neighbors and emergency responders during disasters such as earthquakes, wildfires and floods.

    We applaud West Hills Neighborhood Council for helping to offer this valuable program to more people.

    For more information about CERT, visit www.CERT-LA.com.
    Thanks for the Info. Mitchell Englander from Greig Smith’s Office and good luck on your bid for the upcomming City Councilmember’s election.

  • Join the Chatsworth Relay for Life and Help Support the Fight Against Cancer

    Join the Chatsworth Relay for Life and Help Support the Fight Against Cancer…

    Relay For Life of Chatsworth is a 24-hour event meant to increase cancer awareness and raise much-needed funds for the American Cancer Society’s patient service programs, cancer research, advocacy and community education.

    Local businesses, community groups and community members form teams and raise funds, and then take turns walking around the track for 24 hours on Saturday, April 24 and Sunday, April 25. Throughout the Relay, there is entertainment, food, music and lots of fun activities.

    Relay For Life of Chatsworth
    April 24-25
    9:00 am to 9:00 am
    Lawrence Middle School
    10100 Variel Ave., Chatsworth

    For more information please contact Event Chair Ileana Plourde at (818) 618-0559 or [email protected], or Staff Partner Sonia Lopez at (818) 447-7778 or [email protected].

    NewsLetter from Greig Smith’s office Councilmember
    12 District

  • LAPD’s Cancer Fundraiser Bike Ride,Lets Ride.

    Join LAPD’s Cancer Fundraiser Bike Ride…

    Join the LAPD’s Ride to Arrest Cancer on Saturday, March 13. All proceeds from this fun and exciting event benefit the Los Angeles Police Cancer Support Group. It’s a great opportunity for community members to meet many local police officers and work together toward a great cause.

    There are 15, 25 and 50 mile rides for riders of all levels. The ride starts at Valley Traffic Division, and stops at several Valley Police Stations.

    Saturday, March 13
    Registration – 7:00 am
    Ride Starts – 8:00 am
    Valley Traffic Division
    7870 Nolan Place, Panorama City
    $25 Registration fee in advance. $30 Same-day registration.

    There will be a BBQ, a health awareness fair, demonstrations by LAPD units and the ride will have LAPD motorcycle safety escorts.

    For more information, visit www.RidetoArrestCancer.com.

    Info. From Councilman Greig Smith’s Office

  • Upcoming Household Hazardous Waste & Electronic Waste Collection Events

    Upcoming Household Hazardous Waste & Electronic Waste Collection Events…

    Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne
    The City is holding a free household hazardous waste and electronic waste collection event on Saturday, Feb. 27 and Sunday, Feb. 28 at Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne in Canoga Park.

    Bring old electronic devices, fluorescent lightbulbs, paint, motor oil, pool and garden chemicals and other household hazardous waste to be disposed of safely and properly. It is now illegal to throw such items in the regular trash. They can leach hazardous substances into the air, water and soil.

    Saturday, Feb. 27
    Sunday, Feb. 28
    9:00 am to 3:00 pm
    Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne
    De Soto Ave & Gresham St.
    Canoga Park

    For more information, call (800) 988-6942 or visit www.LACitysan.org.
    From Councilman Greig Smith’s NewsLetter

  • An Evening of Asian Music, Dance and Art at the Rancho

    An Evening of Asian Music, Dance and Art at the Rancho…
    Celebrate the Chinese New Year with an evening of Asian music, dance and art Sunday, Feb. 21 at El Rancho Cordillera Del Norte in Northridge.

    Elisabeth Waldo presents this cultural event with a concert of Pan-Asian music, Chinese and Vietnamese artwork, Asian fashions and more.

    Sunday, Feb. 21
    4:00 pm
    El Rancho Cordillera Del Norte
    New Mission Theatre
    18916 Nordhoff St. (corner of Wilbur Ave.)
    Northridge
    Reservations are required. $30 donation.

    To reserve tickets call (818) 993-1669 or email [email protected].
    NewsLetter Greig Smith’s Office