Recently by Addison Wiggin: Could a Tea Party Occupy Wall Street?
Its hard to crawl the Internet today without running across something like this
Wikipedia and several other sites are blacked out to protest the Stop Online Piracy Act, or SOPA an odious piece of legislation that would allow domain names to be erased from the web without due process of law.
Possible Website Block by US Authorities
Not that this is deterring members of Congress determined to get the bill passed.
Due to the Republican and Democratic retreats taking place over the next two weeks, says its sponsor, Rep. Lamar Smith (R-Tex.), markup of the Stop Online Piracy Act is expected to resume in February.
Its D.C. versus Silicon Valley in the SOPA fight, observes colleague Greg Grillot. You have Google, Mozila, Wikipedia, Reddit, Firefox and Boing Boing against it. And how many D.C. shills for it?
Its a true war: the last bastion of creative/productive ingenuity in America versus the swamp of D.C.s parasitic, industry-conflicted bureaucracy.
Is D.C. winning?
Last year, Census data revealed Washington moved past San Jose as the wealthiest U.S. metropolitan area.
Meanwhile, we see the House will likely vote today against raising the debt ceiling, which Uncle Sam is once again hitting.
Its purely symbolic: Under the debt-ceiling deal reached last August, the president need merely notify Congress that hes going to raise it; its up to both houses to vote against it. With the Senate under the control of the Democrats, that wont happen.
The $1.2 trillion increase coming soon should be enough to tide over Uncle Sam until oh, right around Election Day. And that increase would have to be passed the old-fashioned way.
Next crisis, please
While Washington has spent the last year (and much of the last quarter-century) fighting about the national debt, most of our leaders have blithely ignored Americas staggering level of household debt, writes American University history professor Andrew Yarrow.
Time was Americans observed National Thrift Week along with Ben Franklins birthday, which was yesterday. Now Americans are once again raiding their savings to get by.
In an ominous sign for Americas economic growth prospects, Reuters reported yesterday, with no reference to Ben Franklin, workers are paring back contributions to college funds and growing numbers are borrowing from their retirement accounts.
Indeed, the savings rate has fallen back to December 2007 levels right when the official recession began.
Reprinted with permission from The Daily Reckoning.
Addison Wiggin [send him mail] is the editorial director and publisher of The Daily Reckoning. He is the author, with Bill Bonner, of Financial Reckoning Day: Surviving The Soft Depression of The 21st Century and the upcoming Empire of Debt. His latest book is The Demise of the Dollar…and Why It’s Great for Your Investments.