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The Supercycle of Debt -- Economic Commentary by John Mauldin
invertorsinsight.com ^ | 1/16/04 | John Mauldin

Posted on 01/17/2004 7:38:12 AM PST by arete

Debt and the dollar, employment and interest rates, the US economy and world trade, money supply and inflation/deflation, taxes, deficits, commodity prices, politics, war, regulation plus a host of other variables. They are all related in a very complex and dynamic fashion. Changing one of them may change each of the others in often unpredictable ways, which in turn affect all the others. Today, we start a series trying to understand how they fit together and what the implications are for our investments.

We are in a stimulus driven recovery. As noted last week in my 2004 predictions, I think it will last for most of this year, if not the entire year. Yet, easy money and stimulus are not without a price. Messing with a free market is a perilous task. On the other hand, to have not acted would have insured a double-dip recession of what I think would have been of serious proportions. Will the stimulus be enough to start a self-reinforcing growth cycle? The task immediately before us is not to determine the correctness of any one policy. That is for the debating society and later letters. But for now, we need to see what the effects of the current trends and policies are likely to be.

The Butterfly Effect is the theory that the flitting of a butterfly in Costa Rica can change the weather patterns for the world. Everything is connected to everything else. It makes for an interesting New Age proposition or a late night philosophical conversation.

But the items mentioned in the first paragraph above are not butterflies. They are not even whales. They are volcanoes and earthquakes and ocean currents. They are the fuel and engine and tires and transmission of the world economy, not the fine Corinthian leather or color of the paint. (Aah, the maroon Cordoba of my youth - I must admit these less important items were of considerable importance to me.)

To set the table for our discussions, let's look at two quotes. The first is from the respected (and currently quite bullish) Bank Credit Analyst. As part and parcel of their views, they have an over-riding theme on what they call the Supercycle of Debt. This view is widely held by many market observers, including me, but their explanation is far simpler than most. Let me quote from their recent January issue (www.bcaresearch.com):

A Primer on the Supercycle

"The Supercycle is a description of the long-term decline in balance sheet liquidity and rise in indebtedness during the post-WWII period. Economic expansions have always been associated with a build-up of leverage. However, prior to the introduction of automatic stabilizers such as the welfare state and deposit insurance, balance sheet excesses tended to be fully unwound during economic downturns, albeit at the cost of severe declines in activity.

"Government policies to smooth out the business cycle were successful in preventing the frequent depressions that plagued the pre-WWII economy, but the downside was that the balance sheet imbalances and financial excesses built up during each expansion phase were never fully unwound.

"Periodic 'cyclical' corrections to the trend occurred during recessions, but these were not enough to reverse the long-run trend. Each time that liquidity was rebuilt during a recession, it failed to bring the level back to the previous recovery high. Meanwhile, the liquidity rundown during the next expansion phase established new lows.

"These trends led to growing illiquidity, vulnerability and volatility in the financial markets. The greater the degree of illiquidity in the economy, the greater the threat of deflation. Thus, the bigger that balance sheet excesses become, the more painful the corrective process would be. So, the stakes have become higher in each cycle, putting ever-increasing pressure on the authorities to reflate demand, by whatever means are available. The Supercycle process is driven over time by the building tension between rising underlying deflationary risks in the economy, and the ability of policymakers to create inflation."

From there let us go a quote brought to my attention by Michael Lewitt in the HCM Market Letter by economist Joseph Schumpeter. Schumpeter was a famous economist who brought us the insight that capitalism is a form of Creative Destruction, which we will look at in more detail below. As you read the following, think about the nature of our current recovery. Is the stimulus for the current recovery real or is it artificial?

"Our analysis leads us to believe that recovery is only sound if it does come from itself. For any revival which is merely due to artificial stimulus leaves part of the work of depression undone and adds, to an undigested remnant of maladjustments, new maladjustments of its own." - Schumpeter

Liquidity, as used by BCA, refers to the ability of businesses and consumers to put their hands on cash, either for purposes of investing or consumption. The appearance of home equity loans and mortgage refinancing has the effect of increasing liquidity. It clearly created a great deal of consumption in the late 90's and more recently, in the massive wave of re-financing last year.

But once debt is used, that source of liquidity is no longer available until the debt is repaid. As noted last week, predicting the demise of the American consumer has been a losing bet, but that does not mean that all is well. Much of the available liquidity in the form of debt has been used. How much more is available? No one knows. But let's look at some numbers from Applied Income Sciences in San Francisco:

"U.S. consumer debt is at a historic high. Excluding mortgages, the average personal consumer debt is about $18,654 per person. This is up more than 41% from 1998. The cost of servicing consumer debt is also at record levels: the average American now spends 18.1% of their disposable income servicing personal debt."

US household debt as a percentage of GDP has risen from below 50% in 1984 to almost 90% today, almost doubling in the process. That is in just 20 years. From 1964 to 1984, debt as a percentage of GDP was essentially flat, rising only a few percentage points.

Clearly debt has played a large part of the growth of the last two decades, and is equally important in the sustained consumer spending of the recent recession. The recent ability of consumers to access debt in the midst of a recession was unprecedented in world economic history, and along with the housing boom was responsible for a very mild recession. The US government and the Fed applied a very powerful cocktail of stimulus from low interest rates, tax cuts and deficit spending. The rest of the world obliged by buying our national debt in massive amounts. Combined with consumer debt, it worked to produce a recovery, and recently a most powerful one.

The Thighbone of Jobs

The old spiritual goes "the thighbone is connected to the hipbone" and so on. The key factor as to whether the stimulus of low rates and tax cuts will be viewed in the future as real or as artificial is whether or not the economy can produce jobs. Everything is connected to jobs. Consumer spending is connected to jobs. Without income growth which comes from jobs, consumers cannot continue to borrow and spend. Consumer sentiment is tied to jobs. The housing market is tied to employment as increased employment will increase the demand for housing.

Tax receipts and thus reduced deficits are obviously tied to employment. The more people who work, the greater the amount of total US savings. Increased employment is a key factor for business spending.

But the recent employment report is not an optimistic one. And if you delve deeper, it is even more problematic. My friend John Vogel sends me a detailed analysis of the employment numbers each week, often within an hour or so of the release. For the last 26 weeks, we have a comparison of 383,195 for the most recent period versus 407,788 for the prior year. 24,000 per week lower is not anything to be jubilant over. Note that both numbers are close to the 400k that economists use to determine job creation thresholds.

The economy, coming off the most powerful quarter in decades, produced a paltry 270,000 jobs. As Stephen Roach notes, "There seems to be a real disconnect between the actual numbers on the hiring front and the impressions that have been formed in financial markets. Total nonfarm payrolls have expanded by only 328,000 workers over the August to November 2003 period -- an average of 82,000 per month. That's far short of the pace of job creation that normally occurs at this stage in a business cycle recovery -- somewhere in the range of 250,000 to 300,000 per month. Yet many have been quick to interpret the recent modest pickup in hiring as a sign that Corporate America is finally breaking the shackles of risk aversion and emerging from the funk of recent years. The mix of recent hiring trends tells a very different picture.

"It turns out that fully 84% of the total increase in nonfarm payrolls over the August to November period is traceable to hiring in four segments of the labor market -- the temporary staffing industry, health, education, and government -- where combined jobs have increased by 68,000 per month. In other words, the bulk of the so-called hiring turnaround since August has been concentrated in either the contingent workforce (temps) or in those industry groupings that are least exposed to global competition. This hardly speaks of a US business sector that has consciously made an important transition from downsizing to expansion. It merely reflects the fact that scale is increasing in the most sheltered and least productive segments of the economy." (www.morganstanley.com)

Read that last paragraph again. The let's tie it to a small item buried in last week's Dallas Fed report. In the latest period, the average wage for temporary labor was $13.50 per hour versus $15.00 per hour a year ago. Further, maybe due to internet purchases, there were actually 72,000 less workers in the retail sector (think Christmas). This is distorting the seasonally adjusted numbers, which is why looking at averages of the real numbers as we did above is important.

GregWeldon offers us these tidbits about employment: Real earnings deflated in December by 0.6% and rose at less than an annualized 1% for the last four months. The slicing and dicing the Philly Fed report, which somehow was spun as positive, "...the reading posted by the Number of Employees category, FELL, as did the reading for Average Workweek. Perhaps even WORSE, is the decline in the expected Number of Employees, as the 6-month outlook fell to 15.1 from November's 17.5 ... marking a sizable drop from November's reading of 21.3. Also, the 6-month outlook for the Average Workweek fell to 16.7 from 24.6.

"Bottom line: Firms have become LESS optimistic about HIRING."

The employment numbers for the rest of this quarter are especially critical. There is a massive new supply of government bonds being sold in February. Will the employment number turn bullish and thus push up rates? Maybe just more of the same old sideways? Or will numbers surprise on the downside? What will that do to the stock market? Won't that make a difference on the dollar? But that affects rates again and the trade deficit, which drives the global economy and exports and so on and so on. It's all connected, gentle reader.

I believe the economy will be ok this year because of the stimulus from 2003 and the continuance of the tax cuts, at least through the elections. But I worry about the longer term sustainability of the recovery unless we start to produce jobs at a faster pace. When almost as many people drop out of the job market as are hired at new jobs, that is most worrisome. When incomes are not rising and hours worked are falling, as is the case for the most recent periods, that is troubling.

When you couple that with the most recent CPI numbers, which shows deflation is not yet wrung out of the system, it is most disconcerting for the longer term view. Again summarizing from Weldon's latest missive, the rate of change for all-items CPI for the last three months was zero. The trend for the last year is decidedly down. Core CPI (less food, energy and rents) is making new all-time lows, and is on the verge of outright deflation.

Now I can hear you muttering "What else is there but food, energy and rent?" which is an excellent point. From the list, there are apparel, transportation (used cars prices are down 21% over the last 6 months!), recreation and services, to name a few. The point is that for a significant part of the economy, deflation is close.

If you look at the numbers from Europe and Japan, deflation is also on the rise. Thus, it may not be surprising that interest rates, in the face of a falling dollar and rising deficits, are actually going lower. Yes, foreign central banks are buying massive amounts of US debt. Even Brazil is working to keep it currency from dropping against the dollar. In a world where the three main economic engines are supposed to be re-inflating their economies, there is curiously little inflation, if you can believe the government statistics.

But I agree with Marti Barnes of the Bank Credit Analyst when he writes:

"As far as monetary policy is concerned, the Fed has already made it clear that it is prepared to go to extreme lengths in order to prevent the economy from slipping into deflation. If the Fed wants to create inflation, then it can do so by drowning the financial system in excess dollars. Of course, the dollar would collapse, but that would be part of the reflationary process. An end to the Supercycle would be deflationary, so one way to delay the end would be to create inflation in order to devalue the burden of outstanding debt. The bottom line is that the demise of the Supercycle is not imminent. The economy will suffer another downturn in the next few years, but the authorities should still be able to find ways to prevent a terminal shakeout."

When to Buy Gold

I have been bullish on gold for two years. I get asked all the time about when to buy gold. The answer is pretty much always "now is a good time," or on the next pullback add some more. The above process of the Supercycle is terribly bullish for gold in terms of dollars. It could be dramatically bullish, although I sincerely hope not. I still look for a more Muddle Through ending, but there will be inflation at the end of the process, and that is bullish for gold. If you are in Europe, you have not yet seen a bull market in gold. But I believe it will eventually translate itself into a bull market in other currencies as well.

Gold may go nowhere this year. Or it may continue its rise. I don't know short-term, but longer term, over the coming decade, I think there is plenty of room in the gold market. I would add to any positions on a systematic basis.

Bullseye Investing , Pasadena and Miami

I fly on Sunday to Pasadena to be with good friend Rob Arnott, who is celebrating a very successful year for his business. Pimco, those smart bond people, got Arnott to run a fund called the All Asset Fund, which has risen over 19.8% since inception in 2002. It now has over $1 billion, which is cause to celebrate. Arnott, who is also editor of the prestigious Financial Analysts Journal, is one of the smartest guys I know and has earned the recognition and success he has achieved.

I then fly home, where I continue to wade through almost 800 pages of manuscript for my new book, Bulls-eye Investing, which should be out in April. They tell me it will be more than 400 pages in final form, but working with double spaced, hand edited copy is really laborious. I have to finish the final edits in less than 10 days, as it must be on press in six weeks and then on to the stores! No pressure, of course.

I will be in Miami and able to meet with clients and potential clients on Saturday and Sunday, Feb. 7 and 8. Just reply to this message, and my bride (Eunice), will contact you and set up the meetings.

Your glad he does not have to worry about his job analyst,

John Mauldin

John@FrontlineThoughts.com


TOPICS: Business/Economy
KEYWORDS: bonds; boom; bubble; bust; crash; credit; currency; debt; deflation; depression; dollar; economy; fed; fraud; gold; inflation; investing; jobs; money; recession; silver; stockmarket
"Our analysis leads us to believe that recovery is only sound if it does come from itself. For any revival which is merely due to artificial stimulus leaves part of the work of depression undone and adds, to an undigested remnant of maladjustments, new maladjustments of its own." - Schumpeter

"U.S. consumer debt is at a historic high. Excluding mortgages, the average personal consumer debt is about $18,654 per person. This is up more than 41% from 1998. The cost of servicing consumer debt is also at record levels: the average American now spends 18.1% of their disposable income servicing personal debt."

The economy, coming off the most powerful quarter in decades, produced a paltry 270,000 jobs. As Stephen Roach notes, "There seems to be a real disconnect between the actual numbers on the hiring front and the impressions that have been formed in financial markets. Total nonfarm payrolls have expanded by only 328,000 workers over the August to November 2003 period -- an average of 82,000 per month. That's far short of the pace of job creation that normally occurs at this stage in a business cycle recovery . . . "Bottom line: Firms have become LESS optimistic about HIRING."

"As far as monetary policy is concerned, the Fed has already made it clear that it is prepared to go to extreme lengths in order to prevent the economy from slipping into deflation. If the Fed wants to create inflation, then it can do so by drowning the financial system in excess dollars. Of course, the dollar would collapse, but that would be part of the reflationary process. An end to the Supercycle would be deflationary, so one way to delay the end would be to create inflation in order to devalue the burden of outstanding debt. The bottom line is that the demise of the Supercycle is not imminent. The economy will suffer another downturn in the next few years, but the authorities should still be able to find ways to prevent a terminal shakeout."

I have been bullish on gold for two years. I get asked all the time about when to buy gold. The answer is pretty much always "now is a good time," or on the next pullback add some more. The above process of the Supercycle is terribly bullish for gold in terms of dollars. It could be dramatically bullish, although I sincerely hope not.

--------------------

"In the 1930s, Joseph Schumpeter endorsed this concept, and named the pattern the Kondratieff, a name that has since been attached to this phenomenon, even as its existence remained in contention in the years after 1945. Neo-classical economists have remained wary of it, and it is only in the 1970s, as the post-World War II expansion slowed down once again that attention was drawn to it, and new research especially on innovation moved the subject forward in an important manner."

KONDRATIEFF WAVES

I'm glad to see that after all these months, Mauldin is finally getting to the point. For an interesting interview on the future prospects of investing in gold and silver for the future, follow this link --

Jim Puplava, Bill Murphy & Eric King 3 Bulls on an Island of Worry

Richard W.

1 posted on 01/17/2004 7:38:14 AM PST by arete
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To: Tauzero; Ken H; rohry; headsonpikes; RCW2001; disclaimer; Doctor Stochastic; grania; DallasMike; ...
FYI

Comments and opinions welcome.

Richard W.

2 posted on 01/17/2004 7:39:22 AM PST by arete (Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God.)
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To: arete
I don't know. John is
getting old. He doesn't sound
all that hot about

football these days. I'm
surprised he'd venture into
financial matters...

3 posted on 01/17/2004 7:46:04 AM PST by theFIRMbss
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To: arete
It has the ring of Gold huckstering about it. I wonder if the 'doom and gloom' boys are now any more credible than the 'going to the moon' boys were in 1999.
4 posted on 01/17/2004 8:13:55 AM PST by expatpat
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To: expatpat
It has the ring of Gold huckstering about it.

Well, we sure as heck don't want an huckstering goin on . . .

On the other hand . . .

Richard W.

5 posted on 01/17/2004 8:28:31 AM PST by arete (Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God.)
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To: arete
Well...I'm no expert, but it seems to me that:

The US dollar is no longer based on precious metals, so it has value only as a promise of payment. It's only worth something so long as the market accepts it. If this long-term trend of increasing national debt continues, at some point the largest bond holders will consider that the United States has become a bad risk and will begin divesting themselves of dollars. The world market value for the dollar would then fall.

Think of what that would mean in the case of oil imports. If the price of oil suddenly climbed to say, $100 per barrel, what would that do to the American economy?

6 posted on 01/17/2004 8:50:12 AM PST by Mackey ("Narrated Aisha: that the Prophet...consummated his marriage when she was nine years old...")
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To: Mackey
"If the price of oil suddenly climbed to say, $100 per barrel,"

The suppliers would probably want Canadian dollars as payment because our dollar would head for the toilet.

7 posted on 01/17/2004 8:56:01 AM PST by B4Ranch (Dear Mr. President, Sir, Are you listening to the voters?)
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To: Mackey
Well...I'm no expert, but it seems to me that:

You don't need to be and expert. When you can run down to your local electronics super store this afternoon and pick yourself up the latest big screen TV for no money down, no interest and no payments for a full year, ask yourself if this is an indication of economic strength and recovery, or if it represents economic weakness and desperaton.

Richard W.

8 posted on 01/17/2004 9:06:29 AM PST by arete (Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God.)
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To: arete
"The key factor as to whether the stimulus of low rates and tax cuts will be viewed in the future as real or as artificial is whether or not the economy can produce jobs."

The acid test is jobs. We don't have a theory driven economy, we have a political economy where people vote on their success. What happened with jobs and under-employment?

20,000,000 jobs were created in the 90's and 3,000,000 missing since, 'Productivity gains' as a sudden happening in year 2000 seems lame.

Why did jobs falter? Is it China PNTR [previously known as favored trading nation]? Is it that the tax cut that was supposed to create jobs continues to be used to goose up the market? or??

9 posted on 01/17/2004 9:23:23 AM PST by ex-snook (Where is the patriotism in the war on American jobs?)
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To: B4Ranch
The suppliers would probably want Canadian dollars as payment because our dollar would head for the toilet.

Or American real estate.

10 posted on 01/17/2004 9:26:08 AM PST by Mackey ("Narrated Aisha: that the Prophet...consummated his marriage when she was nine years old...")
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To: ex-snook
We don't have a theory driven economy, we have a political economy where people vote on their success.

I think that you are both right and wrong. Global central planning theory is behind everything that is taking place now. A small group of globatists are betting the farm on their theories and ability to "manage" our lives and our futures. As long as they can create feel good bubble econonic conditons and delay the consequences, then that is the way voters will go. It has been amazingly easy to convince people that we can borrow and spend our way to prosperity and that there is an endless free lunch. People believe cause they want to believe -- until reality can no longer be ignored.

Richard W.

11 posted on 01/17/2004 10:12:20 AM PST by arete (Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God.)
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To: arete
It has been amazingly easy to convince people that we can borrow and spend our way to prosperity and that there is an endless free lunch. People believe cause they want to believe -- until reality can no longer be ignored.

And when reality can no longer be ignored, what then?

I can imagine a global economic train wreck that would dwarf the Great Depression. There are many more market interconnections and much less self-sufficiency than there was 75 years ago.

The globalists may be planning on buying up the wreckage on the cheap as in the 1930s, but who knows how it will all shake out.

12 posted on 01/17/2004 10:42:14 AM PST by Mackey ("Narrated Aisha: that the Prophet...consummated his marriage when she was nine years old...")
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To: rohry; Wyatt's Torch; arete; meyer; DarkWaters; STONEWALLS; TigerLikesRooster; Ken H; MrNatural; ...
But once debt is used, that source of liquidity is no longer available until the debt is repaid.

I am amazed at the number of people that overlook this fact.

13 posted on 01/17/2004 10:58:18 AM PST by razorback-bert
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To: Mackey
And when reality can no longer be ignored, what then?

That's when the authorities at the Justice and Homeland Security Dept's give you a choice of either "get your mind straight boy" reeducation at Gitmo or the opportunity of becoming a Mars explorer. We don't need no doom and gloom party poopers running around loose. :-)

Richard W.

14 posted on 01/17/2004 11:16:25 AM PST by arete (Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God.)
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To: arete
I don't disagree with you at all. My point is on "As long as they can create feel good bubble economic conditions "

Are the Washington globalists in total control? I know both political parties nominate globalists but is the media also totally compliant? [Questions are rhetorical, of course.] This may explain the torching of Buchanan and the current bashing of Dean as 'uncontrolled' outsiders.

"and delay the consequences"Perot tapped in with the 'sucking sound' and social security financing. When the public heard him and responded, no third party ever got to the public debates again. The fact that Dean surfaced shows some holes in the dikes containing 'the consequences' and the Democrats may be the first to breakout ala Roosevelt. Then 'conservatism' may rise again in the Republican party.

15 posted on 01/17/2004 11:26:08 AM PST by ex-snook (Where is the patriotism in the war on American jobs?)
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To: ex-snook
Are the Washington globalists in total control?

I suspect that they are, or better yet, the big Wall Street investment banks and brokes. Politicans get elected to office and stay in office by selling their principles to the highest bidder.

Yes, Perot had it right. Like him or not, his message was that jobs were going to be leaving and boy did he ever hit the nail on the head.

"Keith McLoughlin, president and chief executive officer of Electrolux North America, said his company has been at a competitive disadvantage because all of its major competitors have production facilities - or plans to establish them - in Mexico."

Electrolux to close Greenville refrigerator factory

I figure that with all the heat that Dean is taking from both sides, he is the only one running who isn't what I call a "made man" of the Wall Street/Washington gang.

Richard W.

16 posted on 01/17/2004 11:59:51 AM PST by arete (Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God.)
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To: arete
GOLD:"If you are in Europe, you have not yet seen a bull market in gold. But I believe it will eventually translate itself into a bull market in other currencies as well." Seems to now mirror my contention with 2004 predicitions - gold is quoted in US dollars and the EURO is strong.

Beyond that, as far as a world wide Gold Bull Market for gold, that is one way of looking at it. However, the Germans are beginning to balk at the lack of parity. They are waking up to the need to not import products and export jobs, to say nothing of the huge tourist, real estate advantage going to the US.

A 41% increase in US debt seems to indicate a need for a de facto devaluation. Before I subscribe to the world wide theory,I would have to know the rate of debt for Europe, etc. In addition, our historical spending binge has always driven the world economy (in recent history).

Failure to spend results in deflation. So, although your premises indicates a gold bull market, if gold were still money, such a sustained bull charge is sometime in the future. Once we have a strong dollar again, gold will decrease in terms of its US dollar quote - I guess you could look at the soon to be falling EURO as a gold bull market for the EUROpeans as their currency declines.

Yes, I know, there has been a small dead cat dollar bounce, but that is temporary, the real ressurection of the cat will be this summer. IMHO

17 posted on 01/18/2004 8:29:23 AM PST by Henchman (I Hench, therefore I am!)
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To: ex-snook; arete
"Are the Washington globalists in total control?"

In every manner you could possibly imagine.
18 posted on 01/18/2004 12:54:45 PM PST by Beck_isright ("Those who stand for nothing fall for anything."-Alexander Hamilton)
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