The Tapering

Queen Anne's Lace

Queen Anne’s Lace

The Tapering, it sounds like the title of some new Stephen King horror novel, but it is not as scary as it sounds. Tapering is a tried and true training technique employed by athletes. Athletes will taper off their training exertions in the days preceding a big event, like an important race. Easing up a bit, allows athletes to rest up a bit and husband their strength and stamina for the coming main event. Some athletes have reported undesirable side effects from tapering. Tapering sometimes leaves the athlete feeling down or depressed. The athlete’s friends and family members might also notice increased irritability or grumpiness. These are classic withdrawal symptoms, in this case a withdrawal from exercise.

The Tapering is the name that Wall Street has given to the Federal Reserve’s anticipated curtailment of Quantitative Easing. For many months now, Ben Bernanke and the Fed have been pumping boatloads of money into the US banking system and markets, most recently to the tune of $85B per month. Helicopter Ben and his gang of Federales has been the only arm of government that has been making any effort of late to stimulate the economy and get this country out of the deepest recession since the Great Depression. Republicans are doing worse than nothing and have deadlocked the rest of government. Only the Fed has been free to act, but its only tool is to throw more money at the problem. I guess that if you have an infinite supply of money, then just throwing it eventually becomes an effective weapon, because last week Ben let it be known in the most gentle terms that the party might someday come to an end.

This little hint that someday, in the indeterminate future, Quantitative Easing would be gradually eased out has spawn the term The Tapering and caused the stock markets fits. On the one hand this is a good thing; experts at the Fed are glimpsing the light at the end of this long dark recession. Economic indicators are looking more positive. More people are finding jobs than losing them, albeit not at a quick enough pace. Even the housing market is beginning to show the first few tremors of life. On the other hand, the stock market’s free money fed frenzy may have to come to terms with reality. The economy is slowly, but steadily improving since the dark days of deep recession, but has it really improved as much as the record levels of the DOW and S&P seem to indicate? Bernanke and company will now have to demonstrate a finesse to rival their already demonstrated courage and successfully wean those cranky Wall Street Olympians off the Feds teat. It would be better for all to avoid those pesky tapering side effects, like depression.

Fremont Lenin

Fremont Lenin

Fremont Lenin

One of the many one-of-a-kind bargains that can be found at the Fremont Sunday Flea Market is this sixteen foot, seven ton statue of Vladimir Lenin, the first leader of communist Russia. Finding this statue on a street corner in the Fremont neighborhood of Seattle, would be enough to fulfill all of the suspicions of any naysayer of the liberal left coast. In this case though, it is not the artwork itself that is important, but the story behind it.

It was created by Emil Venkov, a Slavic artist who has worked in bronze for over thirty years and who is now widely exhibited in Europe and the United States. It was installed in what is now modern Slovakia in 1988. It is a unique representation of Lenin, portraying him surrounded by guns and flames, instead of the usual portraits that show him holding a book or waving his hat. The sculptor wanted to convey a subtle form of protest, by expressing his vision of Lenin as a violent revolutionary and not just as an intellectual and theoretician.

In 1989, after the Velvet Revolution, the American teacher, Lewis Carpenter, found this statue lying facedown in the mud, ready to be sold for scrap. He purchased it and then working with the original artist had it eventually transported to Seattle in 1994. Carpenter financed all of this with a mortgage on his house. In the midst of the uproar in Seattle that was set off by his import of a statue of a communist leader, Lewis Carpenter was killed in a car accident. The Carpenter family continues to try to sell the statue. Their asking price has risen over the years from $150,000 to $250,000.

Fremont is a quirky artistic community, so the statue has found a home of sorts. During Christmastime the statue is topped with a red star. It was once made to look like John Lennon. During Gay Pride Week it is dressed in drag.

Bye Bye Blackbird

Neoporteria - Stick It

Neoporteria – Stick It

So long, Michele Bachmann, don’t let the door hit you on the way out. Yesterday, this soon to be former US Representative from Minnesota announced her planned retirement from Congress, at the end of her current term, in 2014. She made this announcement via a nine-minute web video, in which claimed that her decision to retire from Congress was not influenced by any of her looming legal difficulties or that she was afraid that she might not win reelection in 2014. In full disclosure, I did not listen to her video; life is too short for nine-minutes of that sort of drivel. I’m sure that she claimed that she wanted to spend more time with her family, or some such rot.

Less than twenty-four hours after her announcement though, her first trial date was set for next May. By then she ought to be well on the way to transitioning from her current occupation, Congresswoman to her next job as a defendant. This court date is for a civil suit that is being pressed because during her failed 2012 Presidential bid, the Bachmann campaign allegedly stole and then illegally used an email list belonging to an Iowa homeschooling organization. This legal action is just part of the rumbling after effects of a campaign that began so promisingly. Bachmann won the Republican Iowa Straw Poll, the first, albeit unofficial vote of the Presidential election. From there it was all down hill.

Looming on the horizon for Bachmann are a Congressional ethics investigation that is expected to make its report next month and an accompanying FBI investigation. Both probes center on alleged illegal uses of her PAC campaign funds, also in Iowa. Bachmann was probably hoping to transition to a cushy and lucrative Fox News consultancy, but instead she might find herself doing her own pro bono defense work. On your way out of government service Michele, don’t let the door hit you where the good Lord split you.