Mark Twain noted that history doesn't necessarily repeat, but it rhymes. This is exactly what is happing with Donald Trump's proposal to seize Greenland. Before Hitler took the Sudetenland in Czechoslovakia in 1938 he threatened to invade. Similarly, Putin made noises about taking Crimea in 2014 before invading that part of Ukraine. It seems that Trump is giving new life to my "Reliving the 1930's series. (See: https://shulmaven.blogspot.com/2023/11/reliving-1930s-part-5.html ) The difference here is that instead of acting like a leader, Trump is acting like a three year-old toddler. He neeeeds Greenland. Unfortunately, his tantrum is breaking up NATO and like the previous episodes I noted, it will make the world a far more dangerous place.
Monday, January 19, 2026
Thursday, January 15, 2026
My Review of Amit Segal's "A Call at 4 AM"
A Primer on Israeli Politics
Leading Israeli
reporter Amit Segal has written a primer on Israeli politics going back to the
State’s founding. I would characterize his views as center-right. However, a
long time Israeli friend and former reporter would argue that Segal is firmly
on the Right. In the beginning Israel created a parliamentary system consisting
of 120 delegates to the Knesset who would be elected via a party slate by
proportional representation, not by constituency. In 1948 with the new state’s
boundaries up for grabs, it wasn’t really possible to create individual
districts. You would think that accountability would flow through the political
parties, but, in fact, the party leaders became personality cults starting with
David Ben Gurion. It seems that once in power prime ministers never know when
to quit. Ego mania is alive and well in Israeli politics.
With 120 seats in the
Knesset, a majority of just 61 seats runs the country. For the first 29 years
the Mapai Party (Labor) had a monopoly on power. However, since 1977 when a
rightwing bloc formed around the Likud Party under the leadership of Menachem
Begin took power, it has for the most part represented the dominant coalition
in the Knesset. Israeli governments are coalition governments, because even during
the heyday of the Labor Party, no party ever achieved a majority.
The trick is to put
together a coalition of 61 members and for the past 50 years by the dint of
demographics and divisions in the Left, rightwing governments tended to run the
country. It has to be kept in mind that the distinctions between right and left
are not of the American variety. According to Segal, what separates the right from
the left is the distance from Yasser Arafat and his successors. Historically
the left has been open to a two-state solution while the right has not.
Segal points out the
reasons for the ascendancy of the right. The 1973 Suez War destroyed the
credibility of the left on the security issue. The failure of the 2000 peace
talks with Arafat led to the second intifada thereby causing the left to lose
the peace issue. In the 2026 election the critical question will be the right’s
failure to defend the country on October 7th, 2023, be enough to
topple its long-term hegemony or alternatively will its subsequent success be
enough for it to hold power.
On the importance of
personality over party, Segal highlights the case of General Ariel Sharon who
became a Labor Party member to be promoted in the early 1970’s, he then broke
with them to help found the Likud Party and later he founded his own party.
During his life he built settlements that he would later destroy.
Today political
divisions in Israel evolve around Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and the
question of Jewish versus Israeli identity. Israelis are either for him or
against him, so much so that most center and left parties won’t be in a coalition
government with him especially when Netanyahu’s guiding philosophy is “no enemies
on the Right,” and no one trusts him. That abstention gives power to the Haredi
religious parties whose votes in the Knesset are traded for draft exemptions
and huge public subsidies that are bleeding the country white.
Those citizens who
view themselves as primarily Israeli are largely secular and their views about
trading West Bank land for peace with the Palestinians are based on a cold-eyed
analysis of Israel’s security. On the other hand, those Israeli’s who view themselves
as primarily Jewish view Judea and Samaria as sacred ground of the Bible where their
forefathers walked and where David and Solomon were kings and where the
prophets spoke truth to power. Thus, control of that land is non-negotiable.
After reading Segal’s book I have come to the conclusion that the only way to pull Israeli society together after the brutal Gaza War is for Netanyahu and the center left to form a coalition government that would remove the far-right Ben Gvir and Smotrich factions from the government as well as the religious parties. ( See: https://shulmaven.blogspot.com/2025/10/my-review-of-yaakov-katz-and-amir.html ) That would lower the temperature in Judea and Samaria and pave the way to radically reduce the power of the Haredi parties. It is not perfect, but as they say, politics is the art of the possible and both the right and the left are going to have to swallow their pride.
Monday, January 12, 2026
Donald Trump (National Socialist) - Part 2
Donald Trump took two more steps down the road to national socialism today. (See: https://shulmaven.blogspot.com/2025/09/donald-trump-national-socialist.html ) First, his Justice Department announced a criminal investigation of Fed Chair Jay Powell to further his attempt to control the central bank. In March 1933 Hitler appointed Hjalmar Schacht to lead the Reichsbank to reinforce his control over the economy and to secretly fund the military as part of his first 100 days.
Second, his Department
of Labor put out a slogan on social media calling for “One Homeland, One
People, One Heritage.” This slogan
brings to mind the Nazi slogan “Ein Volk, Ein Reich, Ein Fuhrer,” which means “one
people, one nation, one leader.” Whether
the Department of Labor knew its historical antecedents or not, it is a
troubling sign. All the while the Department of Homeland Security is
over-reaching, to put it mildly, in rounding up illegal immigrants. To anyone
with a historical memory, it is not a pretty sight.
Monday, January 5, 2026
Venezuela: Too Early to Tell
Much has been written about the rendition of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro to the United States to stand trial on drug trafficking and arms smuggling charges. We have had predictable reactions from the Right hailing it as successful operation to remove an anti-American dictator and from the Left attacking it as a throwback to the Yanqui Imperialism of the early 20th Century that will lead to a quagmire.
To me, it is far
early to tell how it will turn out. What we do know is that Maduro was an evil
dictator who tortured and murdered his people with abandon and the country has
a heavy presence of Russian, Chinese, Iranian, and Cuban forces. Thus, Venezuela
represented a threat to U.S. security. Whether the threat is imminent or not is
an open question. We also know that Venezuela possesses the largest oil
reserves in the world, but much of it consists of tar sands which is costly to
produce and that the oil fields are operating in a dilapidated condition causing
oil production to drop from three million barrels a day to just under a million
barrels a day over the past 20 years.
We are far from being
reassured by Trump talking about oil and not talking about a return to
democracy. Indeed, the entire security apparatus of the Maduro state remains
intact. We do not know to what degree Vice President and now President Delcy
Rodriguez will cooperate with Trump. She has given off very mixed signals, and
we don’t know where the army will end up. We can surmise that given the intelligence
that was available to the U.S military, it is likely that someone on the inside
is working for us. Who that person or persons are, and their future role will
be critical in the days ahead.
Trump is opting for
stability over democracy. That may work in the short run, but if there aren’t
any plans for elections after six months this whole adventure could go south
very quickly. It is obvious that the Democratic Opposition would win an
election; they did so under Maduro’s control. The question is whether or not
the Maduro security apparatus will allow an election to take place and if it
does take place will they allow the winner to be seated. Before rushing to judgement
let’s give it some time for events to play out.
Outside of Venezuela
both China and Russia are looking on. They too can make similar moves in the
Taiwan straits or the Baltic States, respectively.
Thursday, January 1, 2026
My Review of David McWilliams' "The History of Money"
Money Makes the World go Round
Irish economist David
McWilliams has written a very informative and entertaining book on the history
of money with loads of anecdotes. McWilliams views money as one of the great
innovations of human beings just behind fire and the wheel. Why? Money
facilitates intra-community and inter-community transactions to the benefit of
society as a whole. As the great economist Paul Samuelson noted that money is a
social contrivance. McWilliams argues that puts human interactions into overdrive as the lust for
it propels economic progress.
He takes us back in
time to the Sumerian Civilization of 2000 BCE where a handful of grain equaled
a shekel and where there were lending transactions calling for the payment of
interest all the way up today’s quantitative easing of central banks. The first
real breakthrough occurred around 1500 BCE where in Lydia the first gold coins
were produced. Later Greek and Roman coinage unify the Mediterranean region as
one giant free trade zone.
McWilliams history is
not dry. He introduces us to Johannes Guttenberg of printing press fame who was
quite the scoundrel. One of the original users of his new technology was the
Catholic Church where the printing press automated the production of
indulgences which brought in great wealth. Calligraphy was out and printing was
in. He also tells us that much of the church land in Europe came from the
foreclosing of mortgages of the nobility. We also witness John Law’s
Mississippi Bubble in France which cratered the economy and made banking a
scandalous profession where the name bank was not used for years.
There is also an
interesting vignette on James Joyce, who while living in Trieste owned a movie
theater and later owned one in Dublin. The great writer was from immune from
the temptations of money.
Gold plays a key role
in the history of money. It was widely used for centuries as the coin of the
realm. For example, the Florin gold piece of the Florence Republic was widely
circulated for three hundred years. However, over time gold backed paper notes
were used in place of physical gold thereby creating the gold standard.
McWilliams is a
critic of the gold standard because it places the economy in a straitjacket by
limiting the supply of money which, in his opinion, slows economic progress.
When money is easy, but not too easy to cause inflation, the way is open for
all kinds of invention and innovation. He believes that the gold standard
stifled innovation and thus progress making him a strong proponent of the
central bank managed (fiat) currencies we have today. Of course, fiat currencies
require a high degree of trust in the issuing authority. Without that its value
craters.
Here, I think, he
goes too far. Economist Robert Gordon makes a convincing case that the bulk of
economic progress that we have today arose from 1870-1940 where for almost all
of that period the gold standard reigned supreme. (See: Shulmaven:
My Amazon Review of Robert J. Gordon's "The Rise and Fall of American
Growth" )
Think automobiles, electricity, telephones, indoor plumbing, aircraft and
radio, for example. I would note that in 1879 the year the U.S. returned to the
gold standard both the incandescent light bulb and the telephone were invented
and over in Germany the internal combustion engine was invented and in the
1880’s the U.S experienced a record railroad building boom. It is hard to make
the case that the gold standard stifled progress. What did in the gold standard
were the huge distortions caused by the financing of World War I and the
subsequent battles over reparations and inter-war debts.
McWilliams argues
that money subjugated the people under colonial rule from 1600- 1960. That was
certainly true of Belgium’s barbarism in the Congo caused by the need for
rubber to make bicycle tires at the turn of the 20th Century. Those
tires were invented by the Irishman John Dunlop. However, Latin America was
liberated in the early 1800’s and long-term economic growth in that entire
region was hardly stellar.
McWilliams has the
U.S. leaving the gold standard in 1936; it was, in fact, 1933. He has the
United States returning to the gold standard in 1873; it was 1879. In 1873 the
U.S. started the process of returning to the gold standard but wasn’t fully
realized until the fulfillment of the Resumption of Specie Act in 1879. My
quibbles aside, McWilliams has written a very lively book on what makes the
world go round.
Thursday, December 25, 2025
My Review of A. Wess Mitchell's "Great Power Diplomacy"
The Art of the Deal
Diplomat/historian A. Wess Mitchell has offered us a
long history of diplomacy starting with Sparta’s conflict with Athens in 400
BCE up to the Nixon/Kissinger opening of China in the 1970’s. Instead of the
direct application of force Mitchell views active diplomacy as a way of getting
the best out of a weak hand and as a way to strengthen a strong hand in the
game of nations.
His case studies also include Byzantium’s struggle
against the Huns and Persia, Venice making peace with Milan to engage the
Ottoman’s, Austria’s many struggles in Central Europe, France’s grand strategy
in the 1600’s, Bismarck’s in the 1800’s and Britain’s at the turn of the 20th
Century. Above all to Mitchell, interests triumph over ideology requiring a
nation to play the hand with the cards it is dealt.
Especially interesting to me was Austria’s Prince
Kaunitz, Metternich’s predecessor, using Louis XIV’s mistress Madame Pompadour
as a go between to establish an alliance with France against Frederick the
Great’s Prussia. A few years later we see Austria, guided by Metternich making
an alliance with Prussia to stave off France. Indeed, interests are far more
permanent than alliances. Also fascinating are the machinations of France’s
Cardinal Richelieu making an alliance with Protestant Sweden against Catholic
Austria. Mind you this is against the backdrop of huge religious strife in
Europe.
Mitchell discusses at length Britain’s realization
that by 1900 it was overstretched and had to reduce its global commitments. Mitchell
follows Lord Landsdowne as he makes deals with Japan limiting its involvement
in the Western Pacific, with Russia in Central Asia and with the Untied States
in the America’s. All of this was necessary to gird the nation for the war that
would come with Germany. If there is one message in the book is that core
interests take precedence over peripheral interests. This blog previously
reviewed Kori Schaki’s work on the same topic. (See: Shulmaven:
My Amazon Review of Kori Schake's "Safe Passage: The Transition from
British to American Hegemony" )
Another lesson of the
book is the importance of mobilizing effective coalitions and isolating the
enemy. The worst thing that can happen is to be isolated against a strong
enemy. Opponents have to be constrained and if they can’t be constrained by the
threat of force, bribery sometimes works as in the case of Byzantium buying off
the Huns. But bribery should not be confused with appeasement of a direct
rival. In the case mentioned Persia was the direct rival and the bribes enabled
Byzantium to hold its own.
In reading Mitchell’s
book, one has to shudder just to think about Trump’s foreign policy. Instead of
making alliances, he is destroying them and making America more isolated while
Russia and China are moving in the fill in the vacuum, not a pleasant sight. (
See: Shulmaven:
Some Thoughts on Trump's National Security Strategy ) One would hope that
at least a few Trump staffers would sneak away to read this valuable volume on
foreign policy.
Sunday, December 21, 2025
2026: A Year of Turbulence
“ When the music stops, in terms of liquidity, things will be complicated. But as long as the music is playing, you’ve got to get up and dance. We’re still dancing.”
Chuck Prince, Citigroup CEO, July 2007
Before discussing the
outlook for 2026, I would like to review what we got wrong and what we got
right about 2025. (See: https://shulmaven.blogspot.com/2024/12/2025-revenge-of-bond-vigilantes.html )
· Yet again we were
wrong about the stock market. Instead of the S&P 500 trading in a 6400-5500
range stocks traded between 6900- 4900 and closing at the top of the range. We
thought stocks would end the year lower.
· We were right about
inflation running at 3% annual rate. The year-over-year change in the CPI of
2.7% reported for November will be revised higher to correct data errors.
· We were right about
tariffs and the mass deportations of illegal/undocumented immigrants.
· We were wrong about
the 10-Year U.S. Treasury yield exceeding 5%. The yield peaked early at 4.79%
and trended lower towards 4%.
· We were mostly
correct about the passage of the Trump tax cuts thinking that the 2017 cuts
would be extended and the SALT deduction would increase to $20,000, it turned
out to be $40,000 with an income cap. We were wrong about other aspects of the
Trump tax package that passed. (i.e., no tax on tips and overtime)
· We were wrong about
Congress taking down two Trump cabinet appointees.
· We were right about
Israel attacking Iran’s nuclear infrastructure.
· We were right about
France being on the road to becoming the new Greece.
Because I am a
glutton for punishment here are my thoughts about 2026.
· Inflation will run
hotter than what the market expects. It will end the year at a 4% run rate. The
combination of fiscal stimulus, monetary ease and AI capital spending will propel
inflation higher. 3% will be the new 2%.
· The yield on the
30-year U.S. Treasury bond will approach 5.5% causing both the Treasury and the
new Trump Fed to institute a policy of yield curve control. It has already
started with the Fed buying $40 billion of T-Bills a month through April and
the Treasury swapping long term bonds for T-Bills.
· Gold will surge past
$5,000/ounce.
· Stocks will trade in
a broad 7500-5500 trading range and close down by more than 10%. The $310 of
S&P 500 estimated earnings will not be enough to levitate stock prices. Put
simply, the time to dance will soon be over.
· NVDIA margins will
take a big hit late in the year as competition forces price cutting. (See: https://shulmaven.blogspot.com/2025/12/the-economic-obsolescence-to-nvidia-gpus.html )
· The Democrats will
seize control of the House gaining anywhere between 15-40 seats and could very
well take the Senate. Just to note the last time one party controlled all three
branches of government was 2003-2006 inclusive and before that it was 1977-1980
inclusive. Americans like divided government. I would also point out that in
wave elections partisan redistricting actually hurts rather than helps. ( See: https://shulmaven.blogspot.com/2018/07/gerrymandering-wont-save-republicans-in.html )
· The Minnesota
Medicaid scandal will reach into the offices of Governor Tim Walz and
Congresswoman Ilhan Omar.
· Israel will again
attack Iran’s nuke and missile infrastructure.
· Khamenei will meet
his virgins in the sky and Maduro will be out.
As usual I end with I
am often wrong, but never in doubt.