Thursday, July 31, 2025

Is This The End Of The California Bullet Train? - and the US?

   America was built on its rather successful private and often public investment, Radio and TV networks, electrification, freeway system, huge rail system, and many others. 50 years ago, it was by far the most modern country in the world. The BART (Bay Area Rapid Transit) metro in San Francisco was futuristic. The Space Needle and monorail of Seattle likewise, the Arch in Saint Louis was majestic. Not all was pristine under the sun but overall the country was rising. 

  Now? Almost all the largest cities are a dump which you'd better avoid as a tourist. (The locals know where not to go!) New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago and Philadelphia are worst. Although let's not talk about fallen metropolis such as Detroit or Cleveland. There are of course nicer places but mostly, you can't afford it thanks to extreme polarization of wealth.

  So what better symbol of such a downturn than the new California rapid train system under construction? If you have ever been to the place, you know that the coast, think Santa Barbara or Newport Beach are for the rich and the Central Valley is where Mexicans grow food for the rest of the country and more importantly, that the two are separated by the impassable Sierra Nevada. What the pioneers found most difficult to cross during the gold rush was not Death Valley which they were avoiding North and South but the Sierras with their foreboding passes which were impossible to circumvent. 

  So from the beginning, with a project supposed to go from Merced to bakerfield, it was obvious that there was a problem. What about the huge tunnels needed across high mountains and the San Andreas Fault to reach the high density centers? Mistake of planning? Inability to consider the technical challenges?        

  To make a long story short, if the line was in China, the trains would already be running. In the US, 90% of the line is not built and it is of course the most complex part, by far. So in the end, what would have ended up as a useless train line anyway will never be complete, and that in a nutshell is the state of America today. 

Authored by William Anderson via The Mises Institute,

It has been The Project That Will Not Die.

What began as a California statewide voter referendum in 2008 to approve initial funding for a high-speed rail system between San Francisco and Los Angeles has become a financial black hole with no railroad to show for it.

Despite statements from Gov. Gavin Newsom that the system is fine, the Trump administration has announced it was pulling $4 billion from the project. In typical Donald Trump fashion, the president, on Truth Social, called it a “train to nowhere,” adding: “The Railroad we were promised still does not exist, and never will. This project was Severely Overpriced, Overregulated, and NEVER DELIVERED.”

Not to be outdone, California Gov. Gavin Newsom ordered the state to sue for the money, claiming that the Trump administration was breaking a legal contract. No doubt, a friendly federal judge will order the money reinstated, but one doubts that after appeals, the California High Speed Rail Authority will win.

Despite rhetoric to the contrary, The Donald is right on this one. From the project’s 2008 start to the present time, the idea of the state building a train that could go from San Francisco to LA in 2 hours and 40 minutes has never been a possibility, thanks to California’s unforgiving geography. Furthermore, even if California authorities were able to find even $100 billion more for this project, it could not be built as planned, and certainly not as promised.

The Promise

In the annals of boondoggery, it is doubtful that any politician—even those that are especially venal and corrupt—ever sets out to create a boondoggle. While “boondoggle” is a word that probably is used too often (or maybe not often enough, if one really takes a hard look at government projects), it would seem that the word should have been created for the California bullet train project. The potential for financial losses is staggering, even by the high standards of financial chicanery that governments at all levels have been executing in the 21st century.

Joel Kotkin and Wendell Cox of The Spectator have written what should be the definitive article on this monstrosity, and their analysis is devastating. (You know, they state the facts of the case and the facts don’t need to be embellished in this situation.) In the beginning was the referendum:

When voters approved $9 billion for the plan in 2008, the California High-Speed Rail Authority estimated that it would cost $33 billion and start running by 2020 – and that was just for the San Joaquin Valley portion. The cost has since ballooned to $130 billion, and no stretch is operational.

That should sink in. Seventeen years ago, voters approved a plan to build something that would supposedly be done 12 years later. Today, the earliest projection of finishing a truncated line in the Central Valley—a 171 mile stretch between Bakersfield and Merced—is 2030 to 2033, and this project has not met a single deadline.

The Reality

As I noted in a previous article last spring, construction of the line has been occurring on that Central Valley stretch, but even if this part of the project is ever finished, there are still another 300-plus miles to go, and much of that will have to go through a number of California’s many mountain ranges. In the northern portion, a 1.6-mile and another 13-mile tunnel through Pacheco Pass would be required, and neither tunnel is in even preliminary planning stages.

In the southern portion, once the train goes south of Bakersfield, it hits the Tehachapi Mountains, where the current freight line goes over a pass at 4,000 feet after passing through the famous Tehachapi Loop. While a slow-moving diesel-electric train can make the climb, going over this uplift is not conducive to electrified high-speed passenger rail, which would require extensive tunneling through this mountain range that has peaks almost 8,000 feet high. Like the planned Pacheco Pass tunnels, the proposed dig through the Tehachapi exists only in the abstract.

The last leg goes through the San Gabriel Mountains, which will require extensive tunneling and grading before finally coming into Los Angeles proper. At this point, one understands the enormous task that would be ahead should the Central Valley portion ever be finished, as this portion is the easiest part of the entire project. Write Kotkin and Cox:

Worse yet, the biggest financial obstacles loom ahead. Much of what has been built has been easier-to-build flat valley land. Far more expensive tasks lie ahead, such as building 30 miles of tunnels through the San Gabriel Mountains and nearly 15 miles of rails traversing Pacheco Pass. One stretch must climb from approximately 400 feet above sea level in Bakersfield to about 4,100 feet. If the costs of the Los Angeles and San Francisco extensions replicate the experience of the much-easier Bakersfield-to-Merced segment, our analysis suggests a final cost that could be nearly double present projection: about $250 billion.

Most likely, even $250 billion might be an underestimation, and there is no way that the state can fund such a gargantuan project by itself, given that this coming year’s California state budget itself is $321 billion. Kotkin and Cox, again:

With no prospect of private investment, it’s hard to see where the money will come from. This puts Governor (and aspiring presidential candidate) Newsom in a tight spot, forcing him to choose between funding the money-mad train and balancing his budget, or addressing critical progressive priorities such as public-employee pensions and free healthcare for the state’s estimated 2.5 million undocumented immigrants.

Future Prospects for the Bullet Train

Despite the “finish it at all costs” rhetoric coming from Sacramento and the Democrats in California’s Congressional delegation, the bullet train project will never be finished in its entirety, but California’s Democrats will do everything they can to finish the present 171-mile project. If not, every Republican running for office in the state will show photos of unfinished bridges and viaducts and point out that California taxpayers will be paying for money borrowed through the bond issues into perpetuity.

If this stretch of the railroad is finished, it will probably be the least ridden high-speed line in the world and will be the subject of jokes. However, one can imagine that whoever is in the governor’s seat will declare victory, not just because the line is finished, but also because they will have spent billions of dollars in the process, enriching contractors, unions, and anyone else standing under the money spigot.

At the end of the classic 1935 movie “Little Caesar,” Rico the gangster (played by the incomparable Edward G. Robinson) is gunned down by Police Sergeant Flaherty, his last words being, “Mother O’ Mercy, is this the end of Rico?” One can only hope that Trump has played the role of Flaherty in putting the California Bullet Train out of its misery.

California politicians have shown themselves capable of mind-bending foolishness, but nothing in the history of foolishness in this state comes close to this railroad. If nothing else, however, perhaps the steel and concrete that makes up the “bullet train” can stand as a warning to future governors and presidents that economic laws exist for a reason, and that those that bend or break them will have to deal with the consequences.

U.S. Troops to Ukraine? No One Is Telling the Truth… by COL. Douglas Macgregor (Video - 25mn)

   Another no-nonsense video from COL. Douglas Macgregor. The good thing nowadays is that these videos are not cancelled by YouTube anymore. Some progress then? 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8qsdEL1kmXc

 

Is Trump doing his very best to boost BRICS?

  You would be forgiven to believe that by shooting at everything that moves left and right, Trump is actually boosting BRICS towards a post dollar monetary system. 

  The 3 articles below concern, Brazil, Iran and India. But Trump is also busy punishing Russia and China of course. Without mentioning the "Huuge" deals which have recently been signed with Europe, Japan and Korea which sooner or later these countries will find the term indigestible. 

  From a purely financial aspect, I perfectly understand the stance of the USA: The current desequilibriums are unsustainable. In fact, everybody understands, which is why most countries are open to discuss the issue. But taking this opportunity to enforce a neo-colonial policy is simply no way to look for a solution.  

  So in the end, what will happen? Well, the writing is on the wall. Diversify as fast and as soon as possible. This in silence is what is taking place right now. Countries will of course be "punished" down the road for doing just that. But by then, there will be very little left for Trump to leverage short of actual military confrontation. 

  And confronting the world will quickly sound very familiar to those who have read Gibbon's "Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire". Just too many "barbarians" everywhere!

Western Pressure On India Over Russia Already Backfired Even If It Partially Complies

 It’s reshaping Indian policymakers’ views of the West and breeding resentment of their governments among its society...

Iran Plans To Abandon GPS & Replace With China's BeiDou System

 "The era of blind, naive dependence on US-controlled infrastructure is rapidly coming to an end."

Trump Punishes Brazil With Sweeping Tariffs, Sanctions - Which Bolsonaro Hails As 'Not Revenge, But Justice'

 Goes after Bolsonaro nemesis, Supreme Federal Court justice Alexandre de Moraes...

 


Wednesday, July 30, 2025

Scotland and the West are being DESTROYED by Neil Oliver (Redacted Video - 1h18mn)

   A powerful voice for freedom in a continent where there is so little left. 

   Neil Oliver is probably one of the best speakers denouncing the censorship and restrictions on free speech we now see in Western Europe. 

   The worst is that this is what we said would happen a few years ago and now we are there, seeing it happening in real time. Almost no difference for most people but a world of difference for an almost, but not completely fallen, society. 

   A later day William Wallace screaming "freedom" at the foot of the Stirling Castle in Edinburgh. Well worth listening to:

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xp4L6Nt7APQWatch Now on Redacted

 

Tuesday, July 29, 2025

Cynical, Aloof And Insatiable: The Rise Of The Postmodern State Aristocracy

  The reason why the system cannot change and will repeat former waves of aristocratic blindness and keep sliding towards a period of upheaval. This has happened many times in the past and the outcome of turmoil and revolution cannot be avoided at this late stage of the cycle. 

  This again is the example of Germany as the country is most certainly a prototype of what has gone wrong with the system, but with some adjustments, the example could easily be applied to almost any other developed countries.  

Cynical, Aloof And Insatiable: The Rise Of The Postmodern State Aristocracy

While the political class freely taps into outsized debt programs, it urges citizens to embrace austerity. The increasingly brazen plundering of taxpayers' dwindling resources signals the emergence of a detached state aristocracy in Berlin.

Two legendary quips—likely apocryphal—best capture the decadent twilight of the French monarchy. One is Madame de Pompadour’s fatalistic remark after the crushing French defeat at Roßbach in 1757: “Après moi, le déluge”—“After me, the flood.” Let others deal with the aftermath.

The second is Marie Antoinette’s infamous line, allegedly uttered when informed the starving masses lacked bread: “Let them eat brioche.” Though doubtful in historicity, both lines remain enduring symbols of elite arrogance and detachment.

Postmodern Neo-Feudalism

One needn’t search the archives of Versailles to observe such disdain today. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz has repeatedly scolded citizens for complacency. At a CDU economic summit in May, he warned that “a four-day workweek and work-life balance alone won’t preserve prosperity” and called for labor reforms and stronger German leadership in the EU.

Perhaps he’s right. But in Germany’s welfare paradise, such pronouncements—especially from those who have benefited most—feel gallingly tone-deaf. Merz critiques the very citizens who, through their toil, sustain the fantasy of a universal welfare state.

This from the man responsible for the most lavish debt spree in modern German history—a figure emblematic of a political elite either unwilling or incapable of addressing Germany’s structural failings. While everyday Germans endure inflation, mass migration, and overregulation, their rulers refuse even minimal reform despite access to princely tax revenues.

Joining Merz in the choir of moralizers is President Frank-Walter Steinmeier, who has called for a “more modest” lifestyle.

Yet this same Steinmeier billed taxpayers €205 million for a temporary office during renovations to Bellevue Palace—without so much as considering renting existing office space. Such extravagance seems to elevate him to a special tier within Berlin’s elite.

A Pay Bump for the Nobility

Money appears to be of little concern in these circles. While citizens juggle inflation and taxes, lawmakers wonder aloud: “What exactly is the people’s problem?” Perhaps they should start with their own salaries. Since 2013, Bundestag salaries have climbed 43%—automatically, annually on July 1st. Today, a German MP earns over €11,800 per month—more than double the national average gross salary. After 20 years, they enjoy pensions exceeding 70% of salary—on top of their state pension, if applicable.

Ordinary citizens, by contrast, have seen real wage growth of under 10% since 2013.

In the private sector, income and pensions are hard-won through skill and sustained effort—an ethic worthy of respect.

In politics and public administration, however, taxpayer-funded budgets support careerists who have escaped the market’s performance principle. This, more than anything, defines today’s state aristocracy: an elite living in a risk-free economic parallel universe, cushioned by government agencies and NGOs that transform employment into a full-coverage entitlement.

Media Hegemony and Thought Control

Controlling the budget is only part of this power. The state aristocracy also commands the media ecosystem. Beyond the publicly funded broadcasters lies a phalanx of affirmatively aligned media, many propped up with public subsidies, ensuring state narratives dominate the discourse.

This trend reaches its most aggressive form in Brussels, where free speech on decentralized platforms like X or Telegram is targeted through the Digital Services Act (DSA). The zeal with which the EU seeks to crush dissenting media reveals that the battle for civil liberties may ultimately be fought in the realm of speech.

The Bureaucracy Beneath the Crown

This elite also has its administrative backbone. Roughly 5.4 million work in Germany’s public sector—two million of them as lifetime civil servants. Just ten years ago, the number was 4.7 million, marking a 15% increase. Despite technological efficiencies, bureaucracy has swelled beyond control, driven by political will rather than administrative need.

This metastasizing bureaucracy is more than a power base; it is the engine of a new socialism—one that asserts a level of authority not seen since reunification. The government’s budget reflects this shift, as credit-funded stimulus is deployed to mask a deep structural crisis. These debt-financed outlays supercharge state interventionism and will likely lead to fiscal catastrophe.

Such funding is a boon to regulators and agencies who use it to justify their growing influence—public-sector entities increasingly behave like self-perpetuating corporations, competing for budget increases and morphing into states within the state.

Former SPD leader and labor minister Andrea Nahles, now head of the bloated Federal Employment Agency—with its 100,000 staff—epitomizes the cushy second careers awaiting loyal party functionaries.

The Climate Economy and War Profiteering

This is just one example from Germany’s hypertrophied bureaucracy. An even more grotesque iteration exists in the “climate economy.” In a desperate bid to keep this artificial sector afloat, thousands of EU officials oversee its massive subsidy machine. Alongside the arms industry, it forms a second economic pillar for the state aristocracy.

Bigger green budgets mean more corporate leaders become addicted to subsidies. The result? A tacit pact: the state buys business silence in exchange for handouts. Criticism of the failed green transition is taboo. With no real oversight and media immunity, the state aristocracy slips further into feudalism.

The European Commission’s next seven-year budget (2028–2034) plans for €750 billion in transfers—fuel for expanding bureaucracy, new appointments, and ample corruption opportunities.

The Silence of the Subsidy Barons

This is the structural flaw of populist democracies: political elites are selected exclusively through internal party channels and rarely earn credentials in the private sector. Term limits, pension caps, and salary ties to previous private income might check this perverse dynamic—but such reforms are fantasy.

This state aristocracy operates with near-total immunity. And so, as Germany’s crisis deepens, we’ll continue receiving sermons from the likes of Merz and Steinmeier—elites who know full well that their fragile authority ultimately rests on the very economic class they so brazenly disparage.

US Goods Trade Deficit Shrinks More Than All Expectations In June

  "ONLY 85 billion dollars of deficit in goods in a the US in June!" 

  "A win for Trump!"

  This is what is called "economic news" these days. Amazing indeed! 

  So we are supposed to believe that after front running tariffs with 150 billion + for 3 months, back to "normal" deficit is great news? Only at the top of a market bubble will whatever is not abyssal be considered "good news". Oh and whatever conversely is abyssal is also good news because it will oblige the FED to react and lower interest rates.   

  As we have explained many times, as "responsible" for the world currency, the US cannot not have a huge deficit if only because it needs to provide liquidity for the rest of the world. It is both a blessing (free money) and a curse (deindustrialization) which is why no one in his right mind will want to replace the dollar short of a cataclysm, especially China which would very quickly see a huge spike in the value of the Yuan and of unemployment as jobs and investments move to Vietnam and other countries. 

  Imagine we get a deficit of "only" 75 billion dollars next month. This would be announced as another "great" news. "The Trump strategy is working!" Except that the world would now be starved of dollars and short of a recession (likely) the price of the currency would rise which would allow the FED to lower interest rates at last but would also make US goods less attractive around the world.  

 So expect every micro move to be welcomed as great news from now on although fundamentally, nothing much will change because nothing much can change... and the deficits will keep rising inexorably, ever closer to monetary abyss.   

US Goods Trade Deficit Shrinks More Than All Expectations In June

The US merchandise-trade deficit shrank in June by more than expected, reflecting a broad decline in imports as the pre-tariff rush to secure goods unwinds.

The shortfall in goods trade narrowed 10.8% from the prior month to $86 billion...

Source: Bloomberg

This deficit was smaller than all economists' forecasts...

Source: Bloomberg

Imports fell 4.2% to $264.2 billion, including the smallest value of inbound shipments of consumer goods since September 2020.

Imports of industrial supplies and motor vehicles also fell. US exports of merchandise decreased 0.6%.

Source: Bloomberg

In addition to the merchandise-trade data, the latest advance economic indicators report showed retail inventories rose 0.3% last month, the most since September and reflecting a surge at car dealers. Stockpiles at wholesalers climbed 0.2%.

More complete June trade figures that include the balance on the services account are due Aug. 5, but for now, this seems like a win for President Trump.

Preprint: Synthetic mRNA Vaccines and Transcriptomic Dysregulation: Evidence from New-Onset Adverse Events and Cancers Post-Vaccination

  Although we had some serious hints from the beginning, we are starting to see, scientifically, how extremely toxic the mRNA vaccines truly are!

Via: Preprints:

Synthetic mRNA vaccines have raised concerns regarding prolonged spike protein expression, immune activation, and potential off-target effects. This study investigates
transcriptomic alterations in individuals with new-onset adverse events or cancer following mRNA COVID-19 vaccination.

Methods: Bulk RNA sequencing was performed on peripheral blood from two patient groups: individuals with new-onset nonmalignant adverse events and individuals newly diagnosed with cancer post-vaccination. A control group of healthy individuals was used for comparison. Differential gene expression was analyzed using DESeq2, and Gene Set Enrichment Analysis (GSEA) was conducted using the MSigDB database and custom gene sets. Results: Both vaccine patient groups displayed widespread transcriptional dysregulation. In the nonmalignant adverse event group, hallmark enrichments included mitochondrial dysfunction, proteasome-mediated stress, transcriptomic instability, and systemic inflammation. The cancer group exhibited additional hallmarks of genomic instability, and epigenetic reprogramming. Nonsense-mediated decay (NMD), ribosomal stress, and MYC activation were prominent in both groups, while immune signaling via TLRs and type I interferons was particularly elevated in cancer patients.

Conclusions: The observed transcriptomic profiles indicate persistent cellular stress responses, mitochondrial dysfunction, and immune dysregulation following exposure to mRNA vaccines, potentially in susceptible individuals. Shared and distinct molecular signatures in both cohorts demonstrate underlying mechanisms contributing to post-vaccine symptomatology and complications including oncogenesis and or progression of malignant disease. These findings underscore the need for a deeper investigation into the long-term safety of mRNA vaccines and host response variability.

Monday, July 28, 2025

The Rape Of Europa by Portfolio Armor

   What is going on in Europe is a disgrace but a well deserved disgrace. 

   Second rate politicians jetting around the world to be humiliated day after day and in the end bankrupting their countries. What could be more fitting to the decline of Europe? 

   Unlike Austin Powers, it must not be very good to be them! After being treated like second rate ambassadors coming to Kowtow in China and being kicked out early after only a day of discussions for being disrespectful. It was the turn of Trump to enjoy his role of Uber predator:

 "If you do what I say, you'll get 15%"

 "Can we get any better?"

 "No, 15%!"

 "15%.... "  

  No strength, no intelligence, total dejection. Almost painful to watch.

  I would call this a turning point for Europe but I am afraid, worse, much worse is yet to come!  

   Don Quixote would both recognize the decaying Spanish empire and the windmills! 

The Rape Of Europa by Portfolio Armor

A riff on Titian's "The Rape of Europa", with Ursula von der Leyen as Europa and Trump as Zeus disguised as a bull.
A riff on Titian's "The Rape of Europa", with Ursula von der Leyen as Europa and Trump as Zeus disguised as a bull.

The Double Humiliation Of Europe

That's a pretty clever image, isn't it? Starting with Titian's "The Rape Of Europa" and putting European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen's face on Europa and President Trump's face on Zeus disguised as the bull. If I were a certain one of my fellow contributing editors, that image would be the whole post, but instead, I'm going to give you some of the best reactions to Ursula's brace of humiliations at the hands of Xi and Trump. 

Humiliated In China 

For some perspective, here's how China treats a visiting foreign leader it respects, in this case, Russian President Vladimir Putin last year. 

Compare to the welcome Ursula von der Leyen and her entourage got in China last week. Imagine President Trump being herded onto an airport bus like a budget airline passenger. That’s how China just welcomed the EU. Like she was about to pick up her rental from Hertz.

Humiliated In Scotland 

The worst was yet to come in Scotland, however, as she met President Trump at his golf club there over the weekend. The words cut off after "Trump's" below are "humiliation rituals". European reactions ranged from anger to embarrassment. 

What You Share With ChatGPT Can Be Used Against You

   Forget the risk of AI going rogue, here's the real risk of AI: The privacy of what you share with it.

  The AI are supposed to work for you, but what about the confidentiality of the information that a AI will learn from you? How can you be certain that it will not be leaked to a competitor? That AI will not somehow remember for other purposes or worse that it won't be used against yourself? 

  In reality, you have no guaranty whatsoever about anything. As a company, you would have to be suicidal to share trade secrets or any type of confidential information with a AI. Same for a lawyer, a doctor, a politician... In fact, this is true for almost anybody: Sharing information with a AI may eventually be dangerous. 

  That and that alone may very quickly balloon as a major problem and impediment to further AI adoption in many sensitive cases.  Wait for a few high profile cases...

Authored by Martin Young via CoinTelegraph.com,

OpenAI could be legally required to produce sensitive information and documents shared with its artificial intelligence chatbot ChatGPT, warns OpenAI CEO Sam Altman.

Altman highlighted the privacy gap as a “huge issue” during an interview with podcaster Theo Von last week, revealing that, unlike conversations with therapists, lawyers, or doctors with legal privilege protections, conversations with ChatGPT currently have no such protections.

“And right now, if you talk to a therapist or a lawyer or a doctor about those problems, there’s like legal privilege for it... And we haven’t figured that out yet for when you talk to ChatGPT.”

He added that if you talk to ChatGPT about “your most sensitive stuff” and then there is a lawsuit, “we could be required to produce that.”

Altman’s comments come amid a backdrop of an increased use of AI for psychological support, medical and financial advice.

“I think that’s very screwed up,” Altman said, adding that “we should have like the same concept of privacy for your conversations with AI that we do with a therapist or whatever.”

Sam Altman on This Past Weekend podcast. Source: YouTube

Lack of a legal framework for AI

Altman also expressed the need for a legal policy framework for AI, saying that this is a “huge issue.” 

“That’s one of the reasons I get scared sometimes to use certain AI stuff because I don’t know how much personal information I want to put in, because I don’t know who’s going to have it.”

He believes there should be the same concept of privacy for AI conversations as exists with therapists or doctors, and policymakers he has spoken with agree this needs to be resolved and requires quick action. 

Broader surveillance concerns 

Altman also expressed concerns about more surveillance coming from the accelerated adoption of AI globally.

“I am worried that the more AI in the world we have, the more surveillance the world is going to want,” he said, as governments will want to make sure people are not using the technology for terrorism or nefarious purposes. 

He said that for this reason, privacy did not have to be absolute, and he was “totally willing to compromise some privacy for collective safety,” but there was a caveat. 

“History is that the government takes that way too far, and I’m really nervous about that.”

The European Disease: Germany Enters The Debt Spiral

   This is not about Germany. The country is simply following the same scrip that ALL countries have followed in the past and present when confronted with a slowing economy and dwindling fiscal revenues. Germany is just the latest domino to fall. Short term expediency has always been preferred to long term prudence which promises little but harsh times ahead. Here we'll get a much worse outcome but later which is perfect for all politicians at any time in history. The old time French nobility was talking in jest of burning the furniture and the timber frame of the castle to keep warm a few more days! Germany will now follow the lead of France, Italy and Belgium in Europe. Japan in Asia although the debt structure of Japan is different since it is mostly owned by Japanese and can therefore be repressed with low returns to a much greater extend. And of course the US which having access to the main world currency also benefit, for now, of less strict conditions. (Until investors start fleeing the dollar. We are getting close but we are not there yet.)

  So what comes next, then? History is telling us that first we'll get punishing interest rates, then restrictions on foreign exchange and investment. Once these measures are in place, interest rates will become controlled, voluntarily or not. War bonds for example. At each stage, history will accelerate. When the Europeans are telling us that they expect to be at war with Russia by 2027, they are indirectly telling us that they expect to be bankrupt by that time and that consequently war will be used to have restrictions accepted by the population. I believe that they would be very lucky if all this profligacy can last another two years. But who knows, maybe two years. Just remember that this is an upper limit. Any black swan before that and the budgets are toast! 

The European Disease: Germany Enters The Debt Spiral

by Thomas Kolbe

Germany is on a path to losing its reputation as a fiscally responsible state. Through unchecked spending, the federal government is steering the country into stormy waters. 

On Thursday, Handelsblatt reported a new budget gap. By 2029, previously unfunded additional debts are expected to grow from €144 billion to €150 billion, according to several government sources. These are not part of the planned federal debt but come on top of it. Most recently, the coalition agreed to bring forward a planned pension supplement for mothers to 2027, adding another €4.5 billion in spending.

It must be said clearly: Under Chancellor Friedrich Merz, Germany has abandoned its last efforts at fiscal seriousness and conservative budgeting. The costs of a shaky coalition’s political consensus, designed to avoid conflict, are being offloaded onto taxpayers.

A Predictable Crash

These numbers are already alarming—but we are still in the calm before the storm. In 2025, the net new debt ratio is expected to reach 3.2% of GDP. This includes roughly €82 billion in new federal debt, €15 billion in additional borrowing from states and municipalities, and about €37 billion in federal “special funds”—off-budget shadow debt.

This forecast will collapse the moment the German economy sinks deeper into recession. Rising unemployment and falling tax revenues will put further strain on the federal budget and social welfare funds. While politicians still feel safe with public debt at 63% of GDP, once we include the €1 trillion debt program of the Merz government, debt levels could surpass 90% of GDP by the end of the decade.

Germany is now practicing a kind of fiscal policy most citizens are unfamiliar with. Mediterranean habits have arrived—but not in the form of sunny weather, rather in the mismanagement of public finances.

Tax Revenues Can No Longer Fill the Gaps

In a display of unprecedented hubris, German politics has kept its welfare state wide open for migration-driven poverty over the past decade—causing not only fiscal but also cultural and economic disarray. Added to this is the aging population and a self-inflicted economic crisis. All signs in the welfare system now point toward disaster.

By 2025, a combined deficit of over €55 billion is expected — foremost in statutory health insurance, which will run a record shortfall of nearly €47 billion. Long-term care insurance adds a further €1.6 billion in losses, and the pension fund faces a shortfall of roughly €7 billion.

Once touted as a system “fit for future generations,” Germany’s welfare model has become a bottomless pit. Federal bailouts, emergency loans, and ever-higher contributions now characterize a social state entering the early phase of collapse.

Vae victis — woe to the vanquished — and blessed are those who foresaw this descent and had the means to escape the welfare-state trap. The bill is now being paid by the quietly suffering workforce — the heroes who absorb the fallout from the reckless debt policies through their labor and lost time.

Social policy today is primarily a repair shop for damage caused by political interventionism. In trying to fuse artificial social glue into society, the state’s share of GDP has risen to 50%. Despite massive tax hikes—think CO2 levies, road tolls, property taxes, and cold progression—the gap between government spending and actual tax revenue keeps widening.

Since pre-lockdown times, public spending has jumped by around one-third, while real tax revenues have only increased by 14%. Even an economic illiterate could deduce that this mismatch requires structural correction—urgently.

The Crossroads Ahead

But there’s no sign of retreat in Berlin. The political competition among statist parties—including the CDU—produces only one outcome: larger social budgets, endless benefit promises, and deeper interference in the economy.

With dogmatic loyalty to climate policy and open-border ideology, the German state stumbles blindly toward a crossroads. Budgetary crises can’t be timed—they arrive when governments lose the ability to borrow on the capital markets. As Hemingway once said about bankruptcy: “First slowly, then suddenly.”

Once that moment comes—when bond markets say no—a society faces two paths: total statism or radical economic liberalism. In the former, both energy and capital markets fall under state control, as economic management turns authoritarian. This is the road Germany is currently on.

The alternative is the one Argentina has chosen under President Javier Milei—symbolized by his now-famous chainsaw. That route returns to a civilization based on limited government, confined to protecting internal and external security.

Europe as a Laboratory

Whether we like it or not, we are all part of a vast social experiment. The question is: Can Europe shed its degenerative socialism—the ideology that has inflicted so much harm on the continent and the world—or will we fall back into infantile patterns, refusing reform out of fear and sentimentality?

France’s budget debate and political paralysis offer a preview of our own future. The French state quota has climbed to 57%. Its open-border policies have failed. Its bloated welfare state has made the country ungovernable.

All this culminates in a permanent state of government crisis—translating into a collapse in public trust. Economic volatility, long suppressed by the welfare state, is now erupting as social unrest in the streets.

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