Saturday, July 11, 2026

My Review of Maggie Haberman's and Jonathan Swan's "Regime Change"

 A Man in Full*


Much has already been written about “Regime Change.” New York Times reporters Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan have chronicled the first year of the second Trump administration which they rightly characterized as the start of an imperial presidency. Thus, I don't have much to add. It is an administration loaded with sycophants who are willing to enforce Trump’s retribution agenda. Indeed, Trump is presiding over an historic expansion of executive power that has no parallel in peacetime and has engaged in a pattern of self-enrichment that is without precedent.

 

There are more than a few nuggets in the book such as the use of the situation room, hitherto focused on national security events, to discuss the Epstein affair which for a while, paralyzed the administration. We also learn that Trump aide, Natlie Harper is with him constantly as she runs his Truth Social account and caters to his every whim.

 

Nevertheless, I expected much more from the book, especially from Maggie Haberman who has followed Trump since her days at the New York Post in the early 2000’s. ( See: Shulmaven: My Amazon Review of Maggie Haberman's "Confidence Man: The Making of Donald Trump and the Breaking of America")  In many respects the book reads like a long New York Times article, except most of the sources are on deep background. The authors put you in the room where it happened with direct quotes of the participants without attribution.  Unlike Trump’s first administration, the current one does not leak out of a real fear of retribution.

 

So, we are left with question, who talked to the authors?  Who benefits from the book? I can only guess, but those officials most interested in running for office in 2028 and in protecting their future reputation from the investigations that are sure to come can give us a clue as to who spoke to the authors.

 

My candidates are Vice President J.D. Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Chief of Staff Susie Wiles, Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent, CIA Director John Ratcliffe, and son-in-law Jared Kushner. These folks talked to Haberman and Swan on a situation-by-situation basis. They only spoke when it served their individual interests, par for the course.

 

What Haberman and Swan have done is to give us a good summary of Trump’s first year and it demonstrates his primary motivation is to avenge those who he perceived wronged him in his first term and the investigations that followed. Policy is secondary to vengeance, the accretion of power and self-enrichment.

 

*-With apologies to Tom Wolfe.

Tuesday, July 7, 2026

My Review of Randall Sullivan's "The First All-Star Game"

 All-Stars


On July 14th baseball will celebrate the 93rd anniversary of the first All-Star Game to be held in Philadelphia. Here Randall Sullivan recounts the history of how the first All-Star game came to be along with digressions about the history of baseball, the Great Depression, The Negro Leagues, Franklin Roosevelt, Chicago politics, and the gangsters of the 1930’s. As a kid growing up in the 1950’s, I ate, drank, and slept baseball. I read all kinds of sanitized books about the early years of baseball and the great players of that era.

 

As Sullivan notes, the origin of the first All-Star game in 1933 had its roots in the Chicago Tribune and its sports editor, Arch Ward. With the country in depression there was a special need to hype up the 1933 Chicago World’s Fair. The idea came to Ward to have the “game of the century” that would feature the best players in the National and American leagues playing against each other with the players to be selected by a vote of the fans. To pull this event off it required the support of both league presidents, the Kenesaw Mountain Landis, the Commissioner of Baseball, Chicago Mayor Edward Kelly, and the support of President Roosevelt.

 

It worked and it all came together with Connie Mack, the manager of the then Philadelphia Athletics, and John McGraw, the manager of the then New York Giants piloting each team of all-stars. Of course, the great Babe Ruth played for the American League and let his team to a 4-2 victory with a home run.

 

I learned much about the players of that era. They weren’t quite the all-American choir boys, except for the great Lou Gehrig, they were portrayed in the books that I read those many years ago. For example, instead of coming out of an orphanage to play baseball, Babe Ruth was in reform school. He also had a gluttonous taste for food, booze, and women. He was a customer of brothels in every American League city. Nevertheless, after a night of carousing, he was still among the greatest of all time on the field and at bat.

 

My quarrel with the book is that Sullivan goes off on to many tangents that can lose the reader’s interest. Nevertheless, he tells a story of how baseball captured America’s imagination in the 1920’s with Babe Ruth along with Charles Lindberg being the two great celebrities of the Roaring 20’s.

 

Friday, July 3, 2026

Ukraine Goes on the Offensive

 Shulmaven has been commenting on Russo-Ukraine War since 2014 when the Russian “green men” seized Crimea. (See: https://shulmaven.blogspot.com/2014/03/the-ukraine-what-is-to-be-done.html ) The all-out Russian invasion began in February 2022 and if we date the war’s start to then, the Russo-Ukraine War is now longer than the fighting in World War I. Similar to World War I, the battlefield has been stalemated since the end of 2022 with a “no-man’s land” in the east separating the forces and on ongoing Russian drone/missile blitz on Ukrainian cities in the West.

 

However, of late, Ukraine has gone on the offensive with drone and missile attacks reaching into the heart of Russia. Both Moscow and St. Petersburg have witnessed the war coming home. More important, Ukraine has taken out more than 25% of Russia’s oil refining capacity triggering gasoline rationing that Putin was forced to admit last week.

 

Under severe wartime conditions Ukraine has built up the capacity to mass produce long range drones and missiles. What we are witnessing in Ukraine is a revolution in military affairs where ground forces have become immobilized by the fear of drone attacks and that swarms of low-cost drones can overcome Russia’s sophisticated air defenses. No region in European Russia is safe and perhaps we will soon see Ukraine set ablaze the west Siberian oilfields, a course I have long advocated.

 

Russia is now in a box. Instead of their once thought of inevitable victory, it is now slowly losing the war. Putin will have to accept this reality or attempt to widen the War into Poland or the Baltic states. His goal would be to force NATO into pressuring Ukraine to accept its demands. Of course, this high risk strategy could very well bring NATO directly into the war with unknowable consequences.

 

NATO is meeting in Ankara, Turkey next week. I am sure Ukraine will be a major topic of conversation. Given Ukraine’s battle-tested army and its advanced weapons production capabilities, it would seem to me that NATO needs Ukraine more than Ukraine needing NATO. It wouldn’t surprise me that while the meeting is in progress, Ukraine will launch its largest air assault on Russia to date.

Saturday, June 27, 2026

Havana on the Hudson - Part 3*

With the results of last Tuesday’s primary victories for the TikTok Jacobins and the enactment of a rent freeze on one million rent stabilized apartments, New York City drove a few more nails into its coffin. The congressional primary victories of DSA members Claire Valdez and Derializa Avila Chevalier along with the anti-Zionist Jew, Brad Lander, defeating Congressman Dan Goldman demonstrated the power of Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s machine. To be sure he was pushing against a hollowed out Democratic Party. Put bluntly the socialist left in the Democratic Party is copying the Tea Party/Trumpian takeover of the Republican Party a decade ago.

 

Of particular note is that Chevalier is a stone-cold communist of the third world variety.  My guess is that she would take what I just wrote as a compliment. She doesn't beleive in prison terms for murderers. Her political support comes not from the Black and Latino populations of her district, but rather from the white intellectual leftists that seem to have found a home in New York City.

 

As expected, the Rent Guidelines Board froze rents on one million apartments under its authority. Because most of the rent stabilized housing stock is old, the likely outcome of a rent freeze would be speed up the deterioration of the buildings. Indeed, the not so hidden agenda of the Mamdani is to bankrupt the existing owners to enable the city to buy up the buildings.  Recall that the city is already the biggest slumlord through its housing authority.

 

While New York City seems to be prospering on the surface and benefitting from the Wall Street bull market, beneath the surface the socialist termites are eating away its foundation. So, just as the speed of the socialist takeover seemed to surprise, so too will the speed of the city’s demise. Havana here we come.

 

*-   See: https://shulmaven.blogspot.com/2025/11/havana-on-hudson-part-2.html

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

The Fed Turns a Page: Warsh and Greenspan

Kevin Warsh’s first meeting as Fed Chair last week and the death of longtime Fed Chair Alan Greenspan yesterday signaled that the Federal Reserve is embarking on a new chapter in its history. The Fed is now turning a page as it leaves its policies for the first quarter of the 21st Century behind. Under Warsh the Fed is abandoning its policy of forward guidance and with that the so-called “dot plots” that were introduced in 2012 which presented the forecasts of individual members of the Open Market Committee will soon go by the wayside. As a result, the Fed Put that worked as a floor underneath the stock market since 1987 has been removed. Look for more volatility in stock prices. As if on cue, the stock market is responding today. Over the longer term the four task forces authorized by Warsh, which will include outside members, may end up having a far more lasting effect on the Fed.

 

Ten years ago, I reviewed Sebastian Mallaby’s biography of Alan Greenspan so there is no need to recount his remarkable career here. (See: https://shulmaven.blogspot.com/2016/10/my-amazon-review-of-sebastian-mallabys.html ) In a nutshell a kid from the Washington Heights neighborhood of Manhattan rose to become the conductor of the global economic orchestra as I wrote then. Both Henry Kissinger and Henry Kaufman, my old boss at Salomon Brothers came from the same neighborhood. Something must have been in the water.

 

I met Alan Greenspan twice as an outside consultant to the Federal Reserve Board. The first time was in December 1991, when the Fed invited a group of real estate experts to discuss the then ongoing meltdown in commercial real estate. Greenspan listened and maintained a sphinxlike expression. Two days later he announced an inter-meeting 100 basis point cut in the discount rate and a 50-basis point cut in the federal funds rate. He obviously took seriously my comments and those of others on the gravity of the situation.

 

The second time was in December 1996 when the Fed called in several Wall Street equity strategists and few academics including Robert Shiller. The topic was whether or not the roaring bull market in stocks was getting out of control. A few days later Greenspan gave his famous “Irrational Exuberance” speech. When the formal meeting was over, I sat with him and a few others at a small table over lunch. There he gave me a marked-up copy with his autograph on “Comments on Credit,” Salomon Brothers weekly publication on the credit markets and the economy. He noted a small error. When I got back to the office I gave the copy to Robert DiClemente, the author of the report. Bob was flabbergasted that Greenspan read his work in such detail and he immediately had it framed. One of the secrets to Greenspan’s success was that he was very meticulous. He knew every data point in most economic series, both current and historical.

 

Under Greenspan’s leadership the Fed helped lead the U.S. economy into an extended period of moderate growth, with low unemployment and low inflation. Along the way he rescued the stock market after the 1987 crash giving rise to the Fed Put, organized the rescue of Long-Term Capital Management 1997, the Asian crisis of 1998. The whole period form 1982 -2007 was known as “the great moderation.” Unfortunately, it came crashing down with the financial crisis of 2008. Just as in the days of ancient Rome, a slave in the chariot of a conquering general would warn that all glory is fleeting, the ghost of Hyman Minsky should whisper in the ear of every Fed chair that “stability leads to instability.” I think Warsh understands that and let us hope he won’t be a slave to President Trump.

 

All that said, Alan Greenspan was a giant in the world of central banking. May his memory be a blessing.

Thursday, June 18, 2026

The Purim War- Part 8: Trump Capitulates

 As we noted in a prior post, Trump is completely transactional and has no loyalty to his ally Israel. (See: https://shulmaven.blogspot.com/2026/06/the-purim-war-part-7-israel-learns.html ) Little did we realize at the time how craven Trump would be with his capitulation to Iran. Trump has gone from “unconditional surrender” to practically whatever Iran wants. The 14-point Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) leaves open Iran’s nuclear program and enables them to continue their ballistic missile program. Indeed, the MOU calls the termination of the war in Lebanon without mentioning Hezbollah and without Israel being a signatory to the deal. Recall Israel entered the war cheek by jowl with the U.S. in the most coordinated inter-allied cooperation since World War II.

 

Perhaps more troubling is that Iran is now given sanctions relief to sell its oil on the market thereby funding the regime that is now desperate for cash. Although the deal keeps the Strait of Hormuz to be free from tolls for 60 days, it leaves open the very real possibility of tolls going forward. This is in complete contradiction to international law and America’s long held position on freedom of the seas. (See: Shulmaven: The Purim War- Part 5, Deadlock in the Strait of Hormuz* )

 

Put bluntly, in exchange for temporarily opening the Strait of Hormuz, which was wide open prior to the war, Iran has conceded nothing. To be sure, if Iran fails to move forward on eliminating its nuclear capacity, the U.S. reserves the right to resume the war.  Trump has threatened this, but his threat has zero credibility with the midterm elections just around the corner. What we have ended up with is something worse than Sherman-Malley-Obama-Biden deal of 2015.

 

In 1938, just after the Munich summit with Hitler, Winston Churchill called out Neville Chamberlain with the following:

 

   “You were given the choice between war and dishonour. You chose dishonour, and you will have war.”

 

I fear that instead of peace, Trump has set the stage for the next Iran War in the not-too-distant future.

Monday, June 15, 2026

My Review of Liaquat Ahmed's "1873: The Rothschilds. the First Great Depression......"

A Good Deflation

Liaquat Ahmed of “The Lords of Finance” fame has written a new account of the long depression of the last quarter of the 19th Century. To me, Ahmed mixes up depression with deflation. A depression signals a massive decline in aggregate output, which did not happen and a deflation signals a sustained decline in the price level, which did happen. I have covered some of the ground here in two prior reviews (See:  https://shulmaven.blogspot.com/2016/02/my-amazon-review-of-robert-j-gordons.html and https://shulmaven.blogspot.com/2017/09/my-amazon-review-of-richard-whites.html )


In the late 1860’s Europe witnessed a great railroad boom that was interrupted by the Franco-Prussian War of 1870. France was required to pay a huge indemnity to the newly united Germany. Instead of being a burden, it turned out to be a boon as the Rothschild banks, who are featured prominently in the book, fund the payment with two massive bond issues. Money came out of the woodwork from all over Europe to buy the bonds and that lead to a surge in economic activity leading to a boom in lending to eastern Europe and to Latin America. It all came unglued when the Vienna stock market crashed that rippled into Germany. Sixty years later a bank failure in Vienna would also deeply impact Germany, but to a far greater extent. In the U.S. the trigger was the collapse of the Jay Cooke & Co. banking operation that financed the Union during the Civil War and became undone with the failure of the Northern Pacific Railroad. 

 

According to Ahmed the crash was exacerbated by Europe moving away from a bi-metallic standard (gold and silver) towards a full gold standard. Similarly in the U.S., the Coinage Act of 1873, later known as “The Crime of 1873” limited the use of silver coinage. With the U.S. and Europe operating under the straitjacket of the gold standard, money in circulation declined and a deflation ensued. Indeed, in the U.S. both leaderships of the Republican and Democratic parties supported hard money

 

All of this was going on against the backdrop of improved global transportation which lowered shipping costs worldwide. For example, both the Suez Canal and the U.S. transcontinental railroad were completed in 1869. Later in the 1870’s and especially in the 1880’s there were huge advances in farm and industrial mechanization. Thus, if other things being equal, prices should have fallen and fall they did.

 

The wholesale price index fell from 140 in 1870 to 116 in 1878, a decline of 2.3% a year. Prices continued to fall and did not bottom until 1899 at an index level of 81. Thus, for the entire period prices declined at an annual rate of 1.9%. This price deflation obviously wreaked havoc for indebted farmers, triggering a populist revolt across the prairie. Their cause was to allow for unlimited silver coinage to expand the money supply and increase prices. Of course, the urban workers would have issues with this.

 

In Europe the political climate darkened with moves against free trade and the creation of the modern version of antisemitism partly tied to the Jewish Rothschild banking family. Indeed, the term “antisemitism” was coined in the Germany of the 1880’s. Further exacerbating the sour mood was the level of opulence of the bankers and industrialists of the gilded age.

 Although there were depressed conditions on the farm, industrial production boomed. There was only a modest decline in U.S. industrial production between 1873 and 1876, but by 1880 industrial output was one third higher than the decade before and it would double in the 1880’s. Industrial production was aided by the surge of immigrant workers flooding into the country from eastern and southern Europe. This explosive growth in industrial activity is the opposite of a depression. Further, in 1879 three major inventions would soon change the world: the incandescent light bulb, the telephone and the internal combustion engine.

 

By the end of the century gold discoveries in South Africa and Alaska eased the monetary pressure and prices started to increase. The deflation was over, but not before the hard money McKinley would defeat the soft money Bryan in the 1896 presidential election.

 

Although I come to a different conclusion than Ahmed, I do recommend his book. He brings insight into the popular feelings of the day, and you get a sense of the people and personalities of that era.