Coming Next Year: Obama's Inflation

By Dick Morris

Mar 6, 2009

In the last five months, according to the Federal Reserve Board, the money supply in the United States has increased by 271 percent. It has almost tripled. Have car sales tripled? Home purchases? Consumer spending? Corporate investment? Not only have they not tripled, they have all declined more sharply than they have since at least the recession of 1981-2 and perhaps since the Great Depression.

So where is the money? If it isn't being spent, where is it? It is being parked, squirreled away. Consumers are using it to pay down their credit card balances, pay off their mortgages, reduce their student loans, make the payments on the car sitting in their driveway -- not the one in the dealer's lot. Businesspeople are buying T bills, investing the money and saving it. They aren't spending, either.

But one day this recession -- despite Obama's best efforts -- will end, and things will begin to look up again. Then, we can expect all of this money to come out of its parking space and get back on the highway of commerce. All at once. The inevitable result will be double-digit hyperinflation.

Since the spending and borrowing splurge is not confined to Washington, but is being mimicked all over the world, the inflation will not strike just one country but will be global in scope. The first global inflation in our history (except, perhaps, right after World Wars I and II). It will confront our policymakers with yet another unprecedented challenge and send them back, once more, to their economics texts. There, they will find that the only remedy for global inflation is global recession, a la Paul Volker. Having just emerged from a ruinous depression, nobody will be in the mood for more unemployment, but that is just what will have to happen to cool off the inflation and break the inflationary psychology that is likely to set in.

The point of this gloom and doom is that all this pain is entirely preventable. It will be caused by Obama's excessive spending and trillion dollar-plus deficits. This spending, of questionable utility in overcoming the current recession-depression, is so far out of line with what the economy can handle that it will do more harm than good when the inflation hits.

Hollywood Nights: American Idol Results (Top 13) Chris Brown Charged in Rihanna Case

By Tina Johnson

Mar 6, 2009

Hollywood nights is busy on a Thursday as Chris Brown has formally charged in the Rihanna case. On a more positive night across town, the American idol results are in and the finalists have been chosen and it appears it is an American idol baker's dozen. You can toss out that whole top twelve as they have added an extra spot right at the end of the show and now it is the top 13 for this season.

Four were chose tonight as the very young and quite talented Jasmine Murray and Megan Corkrey made it from the girls side while Matt Giraud and Anoop Desai sweated it out at the end of the show and were both given spots. Was it the right decision - it can't hurt.

In Touch has this for the ongoing soap opera of Chris and Rihanna. "Just two hours before facing felony charges in court, Chris Brown was spotted in The Beverly Hills Hotel. The singer, clad in a white button-down shirt, gray cardigan and black jeans, walked outside his hotel room door at 1:20 p.m. PT surrounded by three bodyguards. “They were laughing and joking around. Chris was in a great mood,” a hotel guest tells In Touch. According to the eyewitness, a bodyguard then asked the singer if he was nervous. “It’s all good. I’m not sweating it,” the onlooker says Chris responded. Chris is expected to arrive at the Los Angeles County Courthouse at 3:30 p.m. PT to face the charges stemming from the alleged assault on February 8 involving his girlfriend, Rihanna.

Twilight Tension: Robert Pattinson Steadies for New Moon

By Jennifer Cox

Mar 6, 2009

How much tension was there on the set of Twilight for Robert Pattinson? Most reports have the handsome young star involved with sexual tension on the set with is co-star Kristen Stewart. That has been rejected by Kristen and now reports have Rob the object of many of young Hollywood's adorable young stars, including Natalie Portman.

So what about that tension? Us Weekly magazine has a short item and this claim. "Twilight star Robert Pattinson, 22, and director Catherine Hardwicke, 53, really bared their fangs shooting last year’s blockbuster!"

"Catherine had an idea about how Robert should play his character, and Robert did not agree,” an on-set source tells the Hot Stuff section of the weekly entertainment magazine. "They would argue all the time." In fact, says the source, “I think it might be a big reason Catherine is not coming back for the second film.”

FYI, Director Chris Weitz, who shot The Golden Compass, will helm the sequel, New Moon. Us reports that denails are in and cites a Summit Entertainment spokesperson that says, “There is absolutely no truth to any of this."