Statement from Jerome Powell

(federalreserve.gov)

384 points | by 0xedb 3 hours ago ago

260 comments

  • cal_dent an hour ago ago

    The US drift into Adam Curtis' broad thesis in hypernormalisation(a) continues apace I see. Great to see J Pow putting up a fight but I fear this is all going one way.

    (a) >We live in a world where the powerful deceive us. We know they lie. They know we know they lie. They don't care. We say we care but do nothing.

    • mmooss an hour ago ago

      > I fear this is all going one way

      That belief isn't the consequence of the situation, but the cause. There is ample ability to change events, but people must believe they can act and act together, as they have for centuries of democracy and for all human history. They do it in Iran. The Republicans and MAGA movement have made changes that would have been unbelievable ten years ago.

      • JeremyNT 22 minutes ago ago

        > There is ample ability to change events, but people must believe they can act and act together, as they have for centuries of democracy and for all human history.

        This is the political will of a plurality of American voters. They certainly can't claim they didn't know what they would get, and they seem unconcerned by any of these actions that many of us find terrifying.

        It is difficult to see how we can democracy our way out of this situation.

        • ta9000 17 minutes ago ago

          Frankly I don’t think Trump 1 vs Trump 2 admin wise are the same. Many people were duped. They’re idiots, but not malicious idiots.

          • Loudergood 3 minutes ago ago

            Plenty of them are malicious idiots. See quotes of them saying "They're hurting the wrong people"

      • b00ty4breakfast 30 minutes ago ago

        If food keeps going up, it might get there but in the affluent west we run on our stomachs and as long as most of the middle class can still afford bread there won't be enough of a mass mobilization to affect any meaningful change.

      • jordanpg an hour ago ago

        Stated differently, if things really are so bad (and I would be the first to agree that things are pretty bad), then why are so many comfortable people (like me) not out on the street every day?

        There are a lot of reasons for that, of course, but the bottom line is that when things get bad enough -- much worse than they are today -- then more people will take to the street, along with whatever sacrifice that entails. We're just not there yet, because for many, there is far too much to lose.

        • baubino 9 minutes ago ago

          People are (and have been) taking to the streets. Americans tend to think that a protest must involve everyone otherwise it’s pointless. They don’t realize that protests typically involve a tiny fraction of the population. The more, the better of course, but stop sitting around waiting for it to get big. Either get out there now or find other ways to contribute. There’s plenty to be done.

        • fzeroracer 13 minutes ago ago

          People are taking to the streets. People are getting beaten, their property destroyed, their homes invaded and even murdered in Minneapolis as a result. The problem is that the US is massive; most people don't live in an active ICE zone where agents are going door to door kicking it in and pulling people out.

          But even then, people are getting angrier. The injustices in Minneapolis triggered waves of protests here in Seattle. Eventually these things compound and more people become aware that we're living in the Great American Collapse.

        • amanaplanacanal 36 minutes ago ago

          Not sure being out in the street really does much. Gives the jack booted thugs an excuse for a little recreational violence.

          A general strike might have an effect, but I'm not sure how you organize such a thing.

          • kelseyfrog 31 minutes ago ago

            You can't, because everytime that happens, a group comes out of the woodworks that says X, Y, and Z need to be done before a general strike can even be considered.

            X, Y, and Z usually involve community building, mutual aid, strike funds, housing security, and other precarity reducing actions.

          • mothballed 2 minutes ago ago

            If protests worked better than the alternatives then that's what megacorps and multinational corporations would be doing instead of bribes and lobbying. 'The people' still dont understand they're playing an entirely different sport.

          • jordanpg 25 minutes ago ago

            > Not sure being out in the street really does much.

            I agree; this phrase was just a stand in for doing something -- anything -- about the state of affairs I don't like. Other than things I can do from my couch like commenting on HN.

        • Barrin92 41 minutes ago ago

          >then why are so many comfortable people (like me) not out on the street every day?

          because a lot of people have a kind of built-in main character syndrome and believe they're the protagonists of the world and things can't really go bad. They haven't internalized that there isn't some god behind the curtain that saves them. Same reason a lot of people ignore health issues.

          That's how it goes in every country that ends up in the dirt, they all thought they were special, they all thought "surely we're not there yet" and you can pick their remains out of the rubble.

          relevant piece from a few years ago: https://indi.ca/i-lived-through-collapse-america-is-already-...

    • dredmorbius 20 minutes ago ago

      Curtis's HyperNormalisation, a BBC documentary, for those unfamiliar:

      <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HyperNormalisation>

      Video, at BBC Online: <https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p04b183c>

    • wanderingmind an hour ago ago

      Hasn't this always been the case, what is different right now is that the tech enables to do this at scale, at much higher frequency that makes them more audacious, since no regular person can keep up with it. The over saturation of lies/fake news has lead to numbness and the hyper-normalisation. So, unless something directly is affecting us currently, we won't care

      • acdha 24 minutes ago ago

        No. The modern Republicans want you to believe that because it’s an easy path to despair and inaction, which means they win, but the magnitude and degree have varied significantly in the past. Where we are now is something living Americans don’t have experience with unless they escaped somewhere like the Balkans in the 90s.

    • skissane an hour ago ago

      I think the real test will be, not whatever this administration does, but how much of that survives into the next one - how much is the new normal versus how much is a temporary aberration.

      That’s true even if the next administration is Republican (Vance or whoever), but especially true if the next administration ends up being Democratic instead-which while not certain, has decent odds-the more Trump defies norms, the more voters who will wish to go back to a “normal” Presidency

      • cal_dent 22 minutes ago ago

        One thing I think is sometimes forgotten about shifting the overton window is that it sort of doesnt matter what political leaning has their hands on the lever. When it serves a purpose, which is not always a public first purpose, people in power will leverage any lever possible. Shifts in the overton window, just add more levers and it comes down to benevolence or luck that those levers aren't used incorrectly

      • throw0101c 39 minutes ago ago

        > I think the real test will be, not whatever this administration does, but how much of that survives into the next one - how much is the new normal versus how much is a temporary aberration.

        A reminder that this is the second time that Trump has been elected.

        (People were saying what you're now saying after he was kicked out—an event that he says was rigged—the first time.)

        • acdha 15 minutes ago ago

          Exactly: there was a brief moment when it looked like Republicans were willing to hold him accountable after the January 6th insurrection but that faltered and they circled ranks, especially when Roberts signaled that Trump had the support of the Supreme Court to the extent that they were willing to concoct a new constitutional doctrine to shield him.

          A lot of people were hoping he’d just go away without them having to do anything difficult, but it’s clear that the next government has to reestablish the United States as a constitutional republic with the rule of law, even if it means hard things like trials for officials who abused their power. This kind of slide into authoritarianism isn’t an accident, and without consequences the people pushing it will keep trying.

        • rootusrootus 14 minutes ago ago

          A lot of us are really, really hoping that there is something unique about Trump that cannot be easily reproduced by the next MAGA leader. That the movement will fragment into irrelevancy as the usual elites regain control.

      • afavour an hour ago ago

        I think the test beyond that is how willing the next government will be to codify meaningful changes into law. After Trump’s first time it’s as if there was a big sigh of relief and a notion of “well, we just won’t do that again”.

        It’s very clear now that we need a lot more regulation of what presidents can and cannot do. Not to mention judicial reform. But if you’re a democrat theoretically getting power in 2028 you’re going to have immense pressure to move forwards, focus on kitchen table issues, yadda yadda.

        • Uvix 36 minutes ago ago

          Not sure how regulation helps when you have a Congress and/or Supreme Court willing to ignore it, alas.

          • dredmorbius 25 minutes ago ago

            Both institutions, and those who've failed them, must of course be addressed directly.

        • estearum an hour ago ago

          And extremely severe punishment as a deterrent against future efforts. Instead of a bunch of slow-rolled court cases and deferral back to the political process.

        • Freedom2 16 minutes ago ago

          What's the point of law if no one is willing to enforce it?

      • bilbo0s an hour ago ago

        I'm not sure?

        Some things, it just doesn't matter what the next administration does. The people of the US may, at any time, elect an administration that continues the course of breaking norms. The fact is that businesses, industries, banks, and nations have to guard against that possibility more than they need to cooperate with the next administration.

        I think it's a bit fanciful to think you can take all the policies back to normal and have, Europe for instance, say "Oh good! Everything's back to normal!" I could be wrong, but I think that ship has sailed. Europe will work towards a new normal that looks to their own interests. And no action the next administration can take will change Europe's determination in this regard.

        I think this will be as true of actors in the financial and industrial spheres as it will be of Europe in the security sphere.

  • davidw 2 hours ago ago

    This is... just crazy. One of those mostly boring bits of plumbing that has been left to professionals throughout the entire 50 years of my life - and they're trying to wreck it.

    • throw0101c 2 hours ago ago

      > One of those mostly boring bits of plumbing that has been left to professionals throughout the entire 50 years of my life - and they're trying to wreck it.

      There is even a more boring and obscure bit of plumbing, the Treasury payment system, that they/DOGE went after last year:

      * https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2025/01/musks-doge-clash...

      * https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42904200

      * https://hn.algolia.com/?q=treasury+payment+system

      Every knee must (forced to) bend.

    • abrookewood 2 hours ago ago

      It's also completely in character with Trump's behaviour. He is a dictator who wants what he wants and can't abide anyone standing in his way. He wants absolute authority to do as he wishes. This extends to removing foreign heads of state so he can access their countries resources and also threatening 'allies' so he can take their territory. We're watching him systematically destroy any good will or moral authority that the USA held.

      • jiggawatts 2 hours ago ago

        He was the owner and CEO of a private company — essentially a dictator without even a board or the SEC keeping him in check.

        For decades he hasn’t had to tolerate “checks and balances”! Nobody could say “no” and retain their jobs under him.

        The American public decided to put this type of person in charge.

        The consequences were predicted.

        • callc 17 minutes ago ago

          It goes back before Donald was in charge of the Trump real estate business. It started with a really really shitty father who desired a “killer” business instinct in his children (read: cruelty) above all else.

          Reading some of Mary Trump’s books will give some insight on the family that Donald grew up in. No love, all cruelty.

          Donald is just a rich kid who inherited a big business and learned nothing but cruelty from his daddy.

    • swagmoney1606 an hour ago ago

      There hasn't been a single point in my shorter life so far where things have been this out of control. The fed is supposed to be as non-political as possible. I know politics and the economy are intertwined, but tell me how this won't end up a disaster please. How do we get back to the USA we had even 10 years ago?

      • OutOfHere an hour ago ago

        It never was non-political if you look at the individual votes of the board members. Perhaps it was non-political in aggregate, but never at an individual level.

    • spamizbad 2 hours ago ago

      It's also for very stupid reasons: The fed dropping rates to the degree that would satisfy Donald Trump would greatly accelerate inflation which in turn would further upset voters, who would in turn blame Donald Trump (just like they did Biden before).

      • Loughla 2 hours ago ago

        Is it just a cynical view that enough voters can be convinced it's the other side at fault?

        Someone who supports trump, please let me know the logic on this. Genuinely. I'm trying to read other places about these charges but they're just so slanted that they're not really trustworthy. Is there anything to this, or is it really just to pressure the federal reserve?

        • loeg 2 hours ago ago

          I don't think it's that deep or that Trump is even thinking ahead. He just wants the rates to be lower.

          • wat10000 2 hours ago ago

            Exactly. He thinks he knows better than the experts. He thinks lower interest rates are good and people saying they should be higher are just trying to make him look bad. Nothing he does is a clever gambit.

            • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago ago

              > He thinks he knows better than the experts

              It’s a kleptocracy. He doesn’t care. He just wants cheap money from the Fed as patronage.

        • SpicyLemonZest 2 hours ago ago

          I implore you to stop being credulous before it's too late. Trump supporters deeply believe, and are not shy about saying, that anyone who stops Trump from achieving his political goals should be imprisoned or murdered.

      • crystal_revenge 2 hours ago ago

        > would further upset voters

        I continue to be surprised by people who have seen things unfold as they have over less than a year of this administration and still somehow believe we'll continue to have "free and fair" elections anytime in the near future.

        We have over, and over again seeing virtually all of the "checks and balances" we learned about as kids being overridden without consequence.

        This community of all other should be aware of how easy it is to exert total control of information (I'm still surprised this article is on the home page). Everyone consumes almost all of their information through digital, corporate controlled means. Even people getting together a organically socializing in bars, something that was common 30 years ago, has been replaced with online interactions. Trump does not need mandate from the people to continue to rule the country.

        • wahnfrieden 2 hours ago ago

          News from today: https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/11/us/trump-voting-machines-...

          > Trump Regrets Not Seizing Voting Machines After 2020 Election: In an interview, the president said he should have ordered the National Guard to take the machines

        • SpicyLemonZest an hour ago ago

          We've had a number of free and fair elections in the past year, including some where the Trump-supported candidate lost. That doesn't mean we're out of the woods, but Trump has not historically been willing to go out of his way to protect the electoral fortunes of people who aren't himself, and at least some of his allies are well aware that the peace and security we presently enjoy is not guaranteed in a post-democratic US.

      • wmf an hour ago ago

        There's no inflation if they don't publish the data.

      • voidfunc 2 hours ago ago

        Im not convinced Trump cares anymore. For whatever reason that may be, he has decided there is nothing that can stop him at this point. There is no congress or court that will hold him accountable. His supporters are unwavering and drunk on unchecked power right now.

      • bediger4000 12 minutes ago ago

        blame Donald Trump (just like they did Biden before)

        Respectfully disagree. Republican presidents get a lot more economic leeway than Dem presidents, especially from the media. This has puzzled me my entire adult life. Inflation will bother media and public, but not to the same extent it did 2021-22.

      • spankibalt 2 hours ago ago

        The MAGA crowd and their lickspittles/enablers are so far removed from reality that they only believe their leader.

        And many others will vote for system-wreckers (broadly: conservatives) again, because the democrats cannot fix much of the damage done within the next legislative periods, let alone just one... even if the miracle of a trifecta happens and SCOTUS loses its majority on top of it. Rinse, repeat.

        • quadragenarian 2 hours ago ago

          These are the very people who would help him rewrite history that yes he indeed did earn the Nobel Peace Prize as it is obviously and prominently displayed in his office, the words and records of the Nobel committee be damned.

    • dboreham 2 hours ago ago

      This week's episode of "Not the Epstein Files".

  • Dusseldorf 2 hours ago ago

    He certainly doesn't beat around the bush here. Very nice too see someone of his stature stand up and call out these shenanigans for what they are.

  • neom 2 hours ago ago

    So I'm sitting here as a Canadian wondering what the American people are going to do? I understand a lot of what the President of The United States says - I even agree with some of it, the problem is I don't feel like we're engaging with the American people anymore. I really wonder where you guys are headed and what it means for the rest of us, I spent 15 years in the states, built a public company there, I really like the Americans, but I don't want annexation. I wonder where you guys are headed.

    • mapontosevenths 2 hours ago ago

      > I wonder where you guys are headed.

      You need to know only two facts about America to guess that:

      * Fifty three percent of Americans now read below the sixth grade level.

      * As (ostensibly) a representative Democracy America's fate is dictated by the majority of it's citizens.

      Our future is to become a broken nation governed by middle-school student level thinking. The only way to build a better America is to build a better populace, and that would be contrary to the interests of the angry, spoiled, children who seem to hold all the power now.

      • datsci_est_2015 10 minutes ago ago

        I think it’s also important to talk about what it means to “read at a 6th grade level” when this is mentioned, because a lot of people (myself included) might assume that just means they could finish and understand a book intended for 6th graders.

        But there’s actually meaningful criteria that sheds some light on the critical thinking capabilities of people who can or can’t read at certain levels, especially as it pertains to propaganda. Below a certain level, people are not well-educated enough to critically assess a text against the motivations of its authors (somewhere around 9th grade). Americans are prone to conspiratorial thinking so you might think that that’s alright because they’re often skeptical of any text, but it just seems like it causes them to dig even deeper into the propaganda that’s targeted to them.

        It’s kind of like learning that some people don’t have an inner monologue, or that they aren’t capable of imagining shapes or objects abstractly in their mind. Except it’s a lot more serious as it deals with critical thinking directly: these people don’t understand that what they’re reading was written for a purpose.

    • renegade-otter 2 hours ago ago

      America has enough power to help someone else. No one has the power to save America from itself.

      The cavalry is not coming, and this fire is going to take its course.

      One day, maybe we will rebuild from scratch.

      • mandeepj 2 hours ago ago

        > No one has the power to save America from itself.

        Wrong!! Please don’t say that! We all have power inside the US. Congress had the opportunity in 2021 to correct the wrong, but Republicans kowtowed and they are still doing so. That was the easy way. Now for the hard way, American people will have to do something about it.

        Edit: Grammar

        • renegade-otter an hour ago ago

          We don't disagree. It is going to be us and only us.

      • Aurornis an hour ago ago

        > One day, maybe we will rebuild from scratch

        The current situation is bad, but this is just doomerism.

        The current administration will end. Trump can't live forever. His approval rating is already low and falling.

        We're in for a bumpy ride, but then it's going to start reverting toward the mean. Not necessarily back to the way things were, but periods of extreme like this are followed by a reversion to the mean more often than not.

        • moogly 14 minutes ago ago

          Probably the mantra Chuck Schumer recites before sleep every night.

        • csoups14 7 minutes ago ago

          > periods of extreme like this are followed by a reversion to the mean more often than not.

          Cite evidence please.

        • potsandpans an hour ago ago

          Always amusing. So sure. I like to imagine the conversations at the begining of the late bronze age collapse, or perhaps aristocrats of the western roman empire living in Gaul.

          "To say anything that challenges the current trajectory is doomerism. We're in for a bumpy ride for sure, but this will all correct itself. _it has to_."

        • wat10000 37 minutes ago ago

          Trump is not the problem, he’s a symptom. The problem is the roughly one third of Americans who think he’s great, and to a lesser extent the roughly one third who don’t care.

          After all that’s happened, his approval rating is still above 40%. Those people aren’t going away or changing their minds any time soon.

    • fooey 2 hours ago ago

      There's basically nothing the American people can do short term.

      The US government is entirely non-responsive and only nominally representative.

      Barring a wave of Republican retirements in the House, the absolute soonest there are any guardrails are after the 2026 midterms when a new congress is seated in 2027.

      • burnt-resistor an hour ago ago

        Gerrymandering, infinite lobbying corruption, and manufactured consent are supposed to keep the populace doing and thinking what the 1% want, and cheating to help them. They can't even do those properly anymore with vast resources. Perhaps billionaires and failed celebrity reality stars don't make the best public administrators.

    • voidfunc 2 hours ago ago

      Not doing much. Playing PC games and watching the world burn. Not much I can do.

      Just bought a new 5080 this week. Hoping I can hunker down in my cave for the next couple years and see what's left of the world in 2030.

      Oh yea, beer, lots of beer.

    • tptacek 2 hours ago ago

      Nothing? Trump is playing freeway chicken with Powell, he's driving a Pontiac Fiero and Powell is driving a bulldozer. The Supreme Court has already signaled that they're not on board fucking with the Fed. This will potentially cost Trump his next Fed nomination for awhile, because GOP Senators are putting a hold on his nominations until the legal stuff resolves.

    • Frost1x 2 hours ago ago

      Complain to our representatives who will do absolutely nothing because the system is ripe for abuse and we’ve put people who actively want to abuse and exploit it into office.

      I keep telling everyone and have been for a year, it’s not just our problem, due to global US positioning it’s now a world problem. Just ask Venezuela. Regardless of what you think about the end result the ends did not justify the means.

      I for one will be collecting my (completely legal) hunting rifles and weapons I’ve had in storage since I was a kid, have them professionally serviced and grab some ammunition, on the terrible case I need to defend myself which I thought I’d never ever have to consider and I’d just sell them some day. But alas we have a lot of really really stupid as well as downright toxic voters in this country.

      • jiggawatts 2 hours ago ago

        You’re all tooling up to defend against your neighbours instead of the people causing the political instability.

        The outcome of this is all too predictable.

    • Mistletoe 2 hours ago ago

      We vote. That’s all we can do. 50.5% of the people voted for this insanity in 2024. We can only hope they see how this is going and vote differently in 2026 and beyond.

    • tersers 2 hours ago ago

      Time to get your PAL buddy

  • Waterluvian 2 hours ago ago

    Remember early in his first term when he tested waters but the governmental system pushed back and kept him in check? It feels like an out of body experience to look at this and contemplate how much he’s changed about how the U.S. government conducts itself.

    • this_user an hour ago ago

      In his first term, he probably didn't yet understand how much power the office truly holds and how to wield it and just how far you can go with that. Because the main restriction on all of that power has always been convention rather than any actually robust guard rails. But no one, not even someone like Nixon, has ever dared to truly test that out.

      • CodingJeebus an hour ago ago

        He knew how much power he had back then. The difference was that the government bureaucracy worked hard to counter his agenda throughout his term. It’s why The Heritage Foundation came up with Project 2025: an organizated and cohesive plan to dismantle the bureaucracy and consolidate power. And it is working.

        • mikeyouse an hour ago ago

          The first term laid a lot of the groundwork for this term as well - had he not appointed three SC Justices, things would look very different. This court has said basically that all executive actions including pretextual investigations via the DOJ are legal and that there is no such thing as agency independence, even when written into the laws that created the agencies.

        • throw0101c 33 minutes ago ago

          > He knew how much power he had back then. The difference was that the government bureaucracy worked hard to counter his agenda throughout his term.

          He did not know. He was also not expecting to win, and so had to scramble to get people appointed.

          He asked around and got people who were experts in their respective fields. The problem is that those experts (a) knew his ideas were bad, and (b) had integrity. It was, by and large, Trump's appointees that worked hard to counter his agent and not the government bureaucracy.

          Trump did not make the same 'mistake' this time around: he appointed folks not for their competence but for their loyalty to him. That was and is the only criteria for serving under Trump.

      • cosmicgadget an hour ago ago

        Cause most of the capricious use of power is expensive and people used to care about the budget.

        • estearum an hour ago ago

          No? Because most people who have held POTUS aren’t malignant narcissists.

      • 3eb7988a1663 an hour ago ago

        I hate to assign him so much agency. The man seems a complete buffoon who lacks the ability to plan anything beyond real estate fraud. Instead, I look to all of the people in his orbit who can orchestrate long term goals. Sure, he will self sabotage many schemes, but will directionally go where the handlers want. Vance, Miller, Heritage Foundation, etc are the ones guiding most policy decisions.

        That tariffs have been so absolutely scattershot, says Trump actually is the one calling the shots there.

        • moogly 9 minutes ago ago

          His orbiters/handlers are totally throwing all kinds of stuff at him to see what sticks to his cooked brain. It's clear he's barely aware what's happening anymore. The only coherent things he can focus on are things from the 80s and 90s heydays and old and recent grudges.

        • datsci_est_2015 3 minutes ago ago

          It’s clear that he’s very easily persuaded on many topics that he already has a slight bias towards, but that he also has his pet projects that his handlers don’t want to mess with because that would jeopardize their political capital (ball room).

          Quick heuristic I have is: vanity project = Trump; neocon pet project = Heritage Foundation; anything related to racial purity = Stephen Miller; quackery = RFK and other grifters.

          The tariffs are partially his bias, but also Navarro who lost his mind somewhere around 2015 and became an economics pariah.

    • jayd16 2 hours ago ago

      He was rewarded with full control of every branch of government. What did we expect?

      • esalman an hour ago ago

        And that happened even after they arrested him and tried to put him in jail. What's happening now might be shocking but not unexpected at all.

        • rjbwork 43 minutes ago ago

          >tried to put him in jail

          They really didn't. It was a dog and pony show under the belief that he would not make his way back into power. The dems/reps did not want to set a precedent of holding a president to account for doing terribly illegal things. They didn't intend to actually do anything to prevent this.

          And so here we are.

      • colejhudson an hour ago ago

        Through what mechanism is he controlling the other branches of government?

        • galleywest200 an hour ago ago

          The GOP in Congress abdicating its role and deferring to the executive, as well as SCOTUS continually using the “shadow docket” to rule in his favor with little to no explanation provided.

        • cosmicgadget an hour ago ago

          Congress: anyone falling out of line will lose his support in midterms.

          Judiciary: appointments and ideological alignment with some of the Supreme Court. Thomas and Alito are fully controlled, Kavanaugh just loves a powerful executive, the rest aren't controlled but often in agreement.

          Then there's his use of executive power to punish his adversaries, e.g. Perkins Coie.

        • zaptheimpaler an hour ago ago

          The question is through what mechanism are other branches curtailing his power? It seems to be limited to strongly worded letters and speeches, indignant comments and scathing news reports but nothing real.

        • vannevar 41 minutes ago ago

          Through the flawed primary system. Relatively few people vote in the primaries, which means they skew towards extremists. Trump can motivate MAGAns to vote in Republican primaries, which makes MAGA essentially a gatekeeper to Republican seats even in districts where the electorate at large is Republican rather than MAGAn.

          He's not directly controlling the judiciary yet, but he has appointed wildly extremist judges and threatened judges who rule against him with impeachment, so he's certainly making an effort.

    • kemayo an hour ago ago

      He's also appreciably more senile now, and a common manifestation of that is lowered inhibitions. I'm not saying that Trump was great at 70, but now that he's 80 he's considerably less in control of himself.

      (If you doubt this, go watch some clips and compare how he talks now to how he talked during his first administration. If you were concerned about Biden's state in 2024, you should be concerned about Trump now.)

    • epolanski an hour ago ago

      Trump #1 came unprepared, that hasn't repeated.

  • jacquesm an hour ago ago

    Shots fired. Even the republicans will not be able to ignore this and they know that if Powell caves in the American economy will likely collapse. So who will speak up in his defense?

    • breakyerself an hour ago ago

      It's probably going to collapse anyway. He's been hitting all of the pillars of the economy with a sledge hammer.

      • altmanaltman 27 minutes ago ago

        I wonder how the stock market would look if AI wasn't such a big driving factor. Or how it would look if there was no sledge hammer. Insane times.

      • jacquesm 40 minutes ago ago

        Yes, but for now the USD has more or less survived. If Trump forcibly removes the FED chair on a pretext things could go downhill very fast. You can probably kiss the USD as a reserve currency goodbye overnight and China is going to have a real problem given the amount of debt they hold. This could easily knock the last pillar that holds it all up away.

    • moogly 17 minutes ago ago

      > Even the republicans will not be able to ignore this

      GOP: "Hold my beer."

  • prodigycorp 2 hours ago ago

    Many times I've disagreed with Powell, but major props for this statement.

    • ptero 2 hours ago ago

      I came in to say the same thing -- major, major respect to Powell.

      I am not a big fan of his earlier policies (or of Greenspan's and anyone after him for that matter). His "unlearn the importance of M2" did not age well. He made the tail end of the ZIRP more painful than it needed to be. But those were honest mistakes from a public servant who did his best and believed in what he is doing.

      And standing up for what he believes is right, against this insanity from the president is the gold standard of what we need from public servants. My 2c.

    • pizlonator 2 hours ago ago

      Yes.

      His statement is firm and well articulated. I have nothing bad to say about the man right now

      • lamontcg 2 hours ago ago

        I have bad things to say about him. But they're firmly on pause. What Trump wants for the Federal Reserve is far worse.

        And anyone who is a hard-currency quantity-theory-of-money conservative, should also be appalled by it.

        Trump is way worse than what the harshest critics of the Federal Reserve think about it. Nobody right or left should support it. Only the billionaires will profit off the monetary disorder.

        • AnimalMuppet 2 hours ago ago

          > Only the billionaires will profit off the monetary disorder.

          Maybe not even them. Certainly not all of them.

    • toomuchtodo 2 hours ago ago

      Courage in short supply, refreshing to see it flexed.

      • davidw an hour ago ago

        I hope that some heads of universities, CEO's and people running important journalism outfits are looking at this and feeling a deep sense of shame.

      • abrookewood 2 hours ago ago

        It's honestly depressing how little push back there seems to be.

  • boringg an hour ago ago

    Best of luck JPow - that was a perfect statement from the Fed.

    It seems like theres a bit of an inflection point right now in the US. I wonder how much entropy the system can handle it has to be near a breaking point.

  • retrocog 2 hours ago ago

    Its crazy how you can see where things are heading and still be surprised when they arrive there.

    • whatever1 2 hours ago ago

      Everyone calling it out was named a doomer.

      Well doom is here. Congrats.

      • LorenPechtel 2 hours ago ago

        Fundamentally, people don't like situations with no good answer. I see it again and again, present a problem with no good answer and most people will resort to the answer that aligns with their political leanings even when faced with clear evidence they are wrong.

        Look how quickly big business rolled over for The Felon--because they saw what mot people have been denying since the election.

      • throw0101c an hour ago ago

        > Everyone calling it out was named a doomer.

        Or labelled:

        * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trump_derangement_syndrome

      • retrocog 2 hours ago ago

        Gradually (last 3 decades) ==> Suddenly (we are here)

  • cosmicgadget an hour ago ago

    I wonder if we'll see another round of resignations at Justice like the Eric Adams thing.

    Powell normally talks around the political pressure he's been subjected to. Funny to see him call it out right here.

  • throw0101c an hour ago ago

    Observation:

    > Some countries that have prosecuted or threatened to prosecute central bankers for the purpose of political intimidation or punishment for monetary policy decisions: Argentina, Russia, Turkey, Venezuela and Zimbabwe.

    * https://xcancel.com/jasonfurman/status/2010532384924442645#m

    * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jason_Furman

    And Senator Thom Tillis (R-NC)

    > If there were any remaining doubt whether advisers within the Trump Administration are actively pushing to end the independence of the Federal Reserve, there should now be none. It is now the independence and credibility of the Department of Justice that are in question.

    > I will oppose the confirmation of any nominee for the Fed—including the upcoming Fed Chair vacancy—until this legal matter is fully resolved.

    * https://xcancel.com/SenThomTillis/status/2010514786467959269

    who sits on the United States Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs (which oversees the Fed):

    * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Senate_Committee...

  • YY438723874623 2 hours ago ago

    America has reached the inter-departmental warfare stage of failed states it seems. As an appreciator of all sorts of banana republics, kleptocracy and military juntas, this is a very familiar pattern of behavior.

  • derangedHorse 2 hours ago ago

    I dislike the existence of the Fed, but I dislike the idea of the executive branch being in control of monetary policy even more. I'll be tuning in to see how the case progresses.

    • pixelatedindex an hour ago ago

      Do you have an alternative to the Fed? Likes and dislikes has nothing to do with it. Or let me ask you another way — why do you dislike the Fed?

      • seanmcdirmid an hour ago ago

        You can dislike a solution but admit that you can't think of a better solution, or specify that it is better than an even worse solution.

        I can see why someone would have a issues with "a bunch of rich bankers appointed by politicians" controlling American monetary policy. But I can't really see a better way at least, until we can achieve a post-scarcity economy or something.

        • throw0101c an hour ago ago

          > I can see why someone would have a issues with "a bunch of rich bankers appointed by politicians" controlling American monetary policy.

          Yellen had a long academic career before going into public service (with various roles at the Fed before becoming Fed chair):

          * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Janet_Yellen

          Bernanke had a strictly academic career before going into public service (and was/is probably one of the foremost experts on the Great Depression, something that was handy in 2008/9):

          * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ben_Bernanke#Academic_and_gove...

          Greenspan was in the finance world pre-Fed. Volcker was in government for his entire career pre-Fed:

          * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Volcker#Career

          I think people over-estimate how many "rich bankers" are in the Fed, especially at the FOMC.

          Bloomberg's Odd Lots podcast with some Fed members in recent years, especially the more obscure regional ones, about their work, and how they often go out and talk to local businesses about what's happening 'on the ground'.

        • pixelatedindex an hour ago ago

          I’m not denying that, but that’s not how I read the comment. That comment comes across as a relief that the Fed is under attack, but is more upset that the source of attack is the executive branch.

      • ProllyInfamous 17 minutes ago ago

        I dislike the Fed because it has (since 1913) held an unnecessarily powerful control of our nation's (and world's) money supply.

        JFK was likely assassinated for attempting to retain the species backing of silver; less than a decade later Nixon would take us off the gold-backed dollar "temporarily" (i.e. 1971 - present) — the dollar's plummet since 1913 (and 1971 specifically) has been monumental.

        The Fed simply has too much power to destroy the dollar savings of Americans (which is why cash and low interest bonds are so detrimental for long-term wealth preservation).

        ----

        But I am glad the the Fed Chairman's brass-gilded balls are so big, in this struggle against our absolutely out-of-control unified executive theory President.

        Personally, bitcoin and gold/silver make up the majority of my savings. Have been slowly DCA-ing out of stocks and primarily into those, these past few years... accelerated since learning the majority of stock trades in 2025 occurred in dark pools (i.e. no price discovery via public markets).

      • hypeatei an hour ago ago

        The libertarian view is that interest rates should be decided by the free market and not a central bank. Mainly due to what we're seeing now (the executive trying to take it over) and that a small board of people can make bad decisions that have reaching effects.

        • zozbot234 an hour ago ago

          This is actually quite correct. The Fed Funds policy interest rate is a clumsy instrument because it involves chasing the ever-shifting balancing point of an inherently unstable system. You "cut" rates to increase money creation, which actually pushes your long-term rates higher due to expected inflation and leads to even more money creation for a constant policy rate, and vice versa. This can all be fixed very simply by changing the instrument to a crawling exchange rate peg, which has an inherently stabilizing effect, as seen from the effectiveness of currency board systems - that system doesn't shift against you if you stick to a bad peg, whereas it very much does if you stick to a bad policy rate.

          The long term policy goal (stability in the path of nominal incomes (prices + real activity) in the very short run, and prices in the medium-to-long run) would be unaffected, but the whole operational aspect would be simplified quite a bit.

          • throw0101c 44 minutes ago ago

            > The Fed Funds policy interest rate is a clumsy instrument because it involves chasing the ever-shifting balancing point of an inherently unstable system.

            I don't know about "inherently unstable system", given that as central bank independence has grown so has, generally speaking, monetary stability:

            * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Moderation

            • zozbot234 24 minutes ago ago

              Great Moderation basically involved the adoption of price stability as a long-term policy target, as opposed to trying to keep long-term fixed exchange rates. There's no reason to change the policy target, the issue is wrt. the policy mechanism/instrument.

        • breakyerself 35 minutes ago ago

          Markets don't always seek equilibrium. Some aspects of the economy tend to be governed by vicious and virtuous feedback cycles. Always leaving everything to markets feels like more of a religion than a reasonable policy position.

        • don_neufeld an hour ago ago

          I wonder if any libertarians have considered reading about the history of banking?

          The Federal Reserve was not created “just because”. The US banking system was wildly unstable when run… largely as the libertarian view would have it.

      • the_real_cher an hour ago ago

        I believe the fed replaced the gold standard.

        • drpepper42 38 minutes ago ago

          No it did not. I don't know why people repeat this so often but it is very frustrating. Nixon unilaterally ended the gold standard because the US was printing money to pay for Vietnam and the rest of the world called the US on its bullshit. The end of the gold standard is relatively recent in history and the verdict is still out on the impact.

          • defrost 28 minutes ago ago

            The post-World War II Bretton Woods system was a limited form of the pre 1920s depression gold standard.

            Both the silver standard and bimetallism have been more common than the gold standard.

            Tying complex multi faceted economies to the physical abundance of specific raw materials fails to capture the full value of activities and assets.

            The true gold standard was a blip from the 1870s to the early 1920s.

            • drpepper42 13 minutes ago ago

              I think your observation assumes that inflating the value of gold relative to the rest of economy is a problem - if you do not care about that I'm not sure it matters.

              In any case gold served as a strong check on monetary policy even if it had problems. Certainly it is possible to have a "sound" monetary policy without gold. I'm just not convinced in societies ability to affect sound governance of monetary policy without some "stronger" guard rails. Especially not in today's climate.

      • jgalt212 an hour ago ago

        I dislike that the Fed operates as if the happiness of the investor class is their number one priority.

        • cman1444 an hour ago ago

          Of the dual mandate, which would you say prioritizes the investor class, and how would you approach it differently?

          • lovich 18 minutes ago ago

            You asked about which piece "of the dual mandate", but the OP said "operates as" which I am going to reply to.

            Does the Fed can any data from labor sources or unions? I am asking in honest because the few reports from them that I have looked into(mostly around unemployment) all seem to be polls solely sourced from investor class assets like companies.

            If they are only sourcing from one biased source for their data, they wouldn't have to have a bad mandate or manipulate it, to operate like it was for the benefit of the data source, right?

          • jgalt212 38 minutes ago ago

            > promote maximum employment and price stability (low, stable inflation, targeting 2%)

            The dual mandate says nothing about asset prices. The only prices it mentions are those involved in CPI calcs.

        • pixelatedindex an hour ago ago

          > if the happiness of the investor class is their number one priority

          The investor class has capital, and America is capitalist. I’m not the biggest fan either but we gotta acknowledge the reality we live in.

    • ksherlock 35 minutes ago ago

      Monetary policy is actually under the purview of the legislative branch.

      Section 8: Congress shall have the power ... To coin Money, regulate the Value thereof ...

      You probably don't them in control, either.

    • breakyerself 40 minutes ago ago

      The FED is much maligned, but has brought a lot of stability to the economy.

    • didip 26 minutes ago ago

      Who should own the money printer if it’s not the feds?

  • omnivore an hour ago ago

    What an unhinged moment in time. At some point, they'll need to be courageous people with the ability and funds to speak up and say enough. But will they? It does not appear so.

  • collinfunk 2 hours ago ago

    It seems like they learned a lot from the Letitia James and James Comey cases, which are going great (not in the way they intended).

  • jshchnz 2 hours ago ago

    this is a big deal, markets gonna tank tomorrow morning... and then realize AI is still a thing and recover

    • garbawarb an hour ago ago

      Or realize it means interest rates are sure to be dropping.

    • ajross an hour ago ago

      AI is a bubble; well, the stock market as a whole is, being led by an AI boom. At the end of a bubble (and it's not clear if we're there yet) markets find ways to self-finance. A crash means not just that the value is lower, but that the leveraged bets are now due, and those have to be paid by selling more.

      When it crashes (and it's not clear when that will be), it will crash back to a cash-value baseline. And, sigh, it's not clear where that is. But it won't magically start going back up. The cyclic reinvestment engine needs to be reinvented every time.

  • b00ty4breakfast 39 minutes ago ago

    I can't say I'm the biggest fan of the financial apparatus in general but it is more than a little heartening to see someone in the federal government with a spine for once.

    • jacquesm 38 minutes ago ago

      He's one of very few adults left at that level.

      • callc 31 minutes ago ago

        It might be childish, but I think the “act like an adult” (or not) is a good way to frame the bad behavior that’s been so present lately.

        It encapsulates so much of how I want to describe things.

        Selfish behavior - this adult is just a child who didn’t learn to share.

        Mean and vindictive behavior - didn’t learn to empathize as a kid

        Lying? You’re still a child. Grow up and then join the adults.

        • mattgreenrocks 13 minutes ago ago

          Very apt for the current moment.

          Adults push back on aggressors when necessary. Children cower behind the adults.

  • egberts1 an hour ago ago

    It all started with all grants and department expenditures being tagged with the employee ID, of supervisory.

    Latest 2024 budget expenses, a fairly good percentage were chocked with no ID, no supervisor or delgated authority.

    Better now, no ID, no money from Treasury.

  • nipponese 2 hours ago ago

    Unprecedented times call for unlikely youtube heroes.

  • duxup 5 minutes ago ago

    Trump can’t tolerate anyone in government who isn’t a total Trump sycophant.

  • hazard 2 hours ago ago

    And of course equity futures immediately dropped on the news

    • scottarthur 2 hours ago ago

      Yep, we’ll see how the free market responds. Wonder if it will be a TACO Tuesday (or even Monday)

    • dashundchen 2 hours ago ago

      Guarantee there are dozens if not more in the admin insider trading like they have on so many announcements. Market manipulation right out in the open.

      The slimiest swampiest criminals, they need to be put on trial.

  • igonvalue 2 hours ago ago

    Here's Trump and Powell publicly disagreeing about these exact Fed renovation costs in July 2025: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EvYljCN970s

    Powell corrects him in real-time. Worth watching given today's statement.

  • hash872 2 hours ago ago

    From an institutional engineering POV (warning- I am a grouchy old former political scientist), it would be interesting to come up with institutional solutions for some of the problems America is facing right now. Specifically I think I'd remove the Attorney General role from the President's authority and give it to Senate, to nominate & confirm exclusively. Let's say 51 votes to confirm and 55 votes to impeach. Even among presidential systems, the US cabinet is unusually presidential-centric. I'm not a big LatAm expert, but I think they typically separate the public prosecutor from the president's nomination capacity.

    Of course I would strongly prefer to not be a presidential system at all. But if we're discussing post-Trump constitutional reforms that could plausibly pass, I think removing the Attorney General/DOJ from the president's purview and also placing some checks on the pardon power seem doable

    • nabbed an hour ago ago

      >Of course I would strongly prefer to not be a presidential system at all.

      Having grown up in the US and having blinders on, I always thought all those parliamentary systems seemed unstable and sometimes comical. But now I see the value in it. Once a leader has demonstrated he is not up to the task, has grown out-of-touch, or has descended into madness, he can be replaced by his party, and if that didn't happen, a no-confidence vote could trigger an election. No guarantee either of those things would happen, but the option exists. The fixed four-year term idea now seems artificial and inflexible.

      I suspect the current US leader and maybe even the previous US leader (maybe in his 4th year) would have suddenly found himself a back-bencher.

  • AgentOrange1234 2 hours ago ago

    Wow that's bold.

    • jacquesm 36 minutes ago ago

      It is. It is also rare and late. Possibly too late. But let's hope it is not and that this will inspire some other people to draw lines in the sand.

  • olalonde 2 hours ago ago

    As a side note, is there a compelling reason why interest rates aren't set algorithmically? I assume human intuition isn't really a factor in setting them. This would eliminate concerns about political motivation.

    • stetrain 4 minutes ago ago

      The design of the algorithm, and the control over what data is fed into it, would be subject to political motivations.

    • lamontcg 2 hours ago ago

      Economic models are complex and far from perfect, and we're still waiting for Hari Seldon's psychohistory models to be created to tie together macroeconomics and macropsychology.

    • martinald 2 hours ago ago

      But who sets the algorithm? Whichever department of branch of govt was in charge of that would become have the enormous power, and political motivation would then fall to that.

      Equally the same for data that goes into the algorithm - if you can control that you control interest rates.

    • blurbleblurble an hour ago ago

      There's some slippery feedback loops involved, even if the models were very good, the reflexive nature of doing something like this would be very hard to get around

    • mandeepj 2 hours ago ago

      > is there a compelling reason why interest rates aren't set algorithmically?

      Can’t believe you are saying that!! Then anyone can manipulate it like they manipulate stocks by writing hit pieces one day and gushing articles a few days after,

    • hrimfaxi 2 hours ago ago

      Would that make it easier or more difficult to guide, I wonder?

  • pixelatedindex an hour ago ago

    I’m a little shocked to see the quality of some comments here - I would expect a more grounded discussion. This is like Reddit / YouTube comment history. Someone please tell me this is a Wendy’s.

    Sure the Fed isn’t perfect. But we don’t really have a better solution as of now because our financial systems are extremely powerful and anyone in office would love to abuse it if they can.

    Sure, the renovations are ridiculous. But it’s not like this administration is austere in the slightest, so that’s a bit rich. Not to mention the cronyism prevalent across the cabinet.

    • hyperhello 39 minutes ago ago

      HN has better baseline conversation, but Social Media is inane by its very nature.

    • pests an hour ago ago

      Why are the renovations ridiculous?

      • pixelatedindex an hour ago ago

        Not the renovations themselves but the cost is supposedly at 2.5B. Personally I don’t really mind but I also don’t think government buildings need to be all that fancy with marble flooring.

        • pests 33 minutes ago ago

          It was budgeted at 1.9B (in 2019). Most of the cost overruns are from unexpected site issues like asbestos (more than thought) and water table problems. The buildings are historic, they already had marble. The marble was taken down and saved, this marble will be re-used. Some pieces are damaged, those will be new marble. These buildings are near 100 years old. I also don't think they have marble floors, but facades and other stonework.

  • closingreunion 2 hours ago ago

    The titanic amount of generational neglect that has allowed even a fraction of voters to look at Trump for more than a second and find him qualified for any public office is truly fantastic.

    This is one of the clear examples that Trump is seeing Putin's Russia as a model for his vision for the USA.

  • AnimalMuppet 2 hours ago ago

    "The threat of criminal charges is a consequence of the Federal Reserve setting interest rates based on our best assessment of what will serve the public, rather than following the preferences of the President."

    Thank you, Mr. Powell. We really want interest rates set to serve the people, not the whims of the President.

  • trashface an hour ago ago

    I wonder if the fed's lawyers advise him on this or if he has to use his own lawyers

  • laidoffamazon 2 hours ago ago

    I’m aghast but numb to this now.

    The biggest question for me now is how the usual defenders of this lawless administration will try to defend this or both sides it.

    • luxuryballs an hour ago ago

      The defense is that the status quo has become archaic and self-serving instead of serving the public so the current operations people doing some house cleaning and tossing a few rooms to see what’s going on in there is overdue, changes need to happen and power structures need to be shaken out a bit to make sure they are not getting in the way of the people they were created to act on behalf of, and scatter the ones who are “helping themselves” to the public coffers.

      This just needs to happen every across all government, it’s like brushing your teeth to kick out the bacteria, but each individual institution needs a different kind of “floss” depending on the nature of the ways they have strayed from their original purposes.

      • __loam 20 minutes ago ago

        It's a funny defense coming from the most corrupt administration since Nixon

    • esalman an hour ago ago

      Easy, he committed fraud by blowing up the renovation budget.

  • jordanscales 2 hours ago ago

    Threats like the ones Powell's receiving would be the end of any other presidency. Why tech elites continue to align themselves with this clownshow will be a source of incredible shame that I'll hold onto forever.

    • kettlecorn an hour ago ago

      I think a lot of largest tech companies feel that they'll face retribution from the current administration for not being supportive enough but would not from future admins.

      For many of the smaller players I think there's unfortunately a lot of people who realized there's significant money to be made in grifting. Many of the largest crypto proponents have pivoted into endeavors, whether crypto or otherwise, that profit off of being rewarded for being part of the 'correct' tribe.

      • pixelatedindex an hour ago ago

        > I think a lot of largest tech companies feel that they'll face retribution from the current administration for not being supportive enough but would not from future admins.

        The Democrats should play hardball but the geriatrics can barely take a swing.

        • shermantanktop 16 minutes ago ago

          They don’t know where the plate is, what the game is, or what day it is. They’re just hoping for ice cream when the nurse comes around with the meds. Meanwhile they are retelling stories from the 1960s for the hundredth time.

          Even the young ones act like this.

        • jordanb an hour ago ago

          This is exactly it and parallels what happened with the end of the Wiemar Republic. There was an asymmetry in response between the Nazis and the government. You can see that in the limited prosecution and light sentences of the Beer Hall Putsch perpetrators.

          The tech titans like Thiel see the Trump administration as a "big bet" a startup investment. They can "shoot for the moon" and try to realize the network state. If they fail, they figure they'll just toss the Democrats some campaign contributions and all will be good.

          • jacquesm 34 minutes ago ago

            The scary thing is that they're probably right about that. You can buy your way out of treason now.

    • cal_dent an hour ago ago

      Mafioso politics

    • epolanski an hour ago ago

      As I've written in another post, everyone is doomed to either align or face his rage.

      • jacquesm an hour ago ago

        So, better face his rage then. If those are the options the choice is clear and easy.

    • option 2 hours ago ago

      The tech CEOs will have to do a whole lot of explaining, relocating and, perhaps, other things once this clown show is gone after 2028

      • afavour an hour ago ago

        I really wish that were true but they won’t. They’ll just keep on keeping on.

  • tolerance 2 hours ago ago

    For people who don’t know what this is about and why everyone else is concerned…me neither.

    2025-10-03

    "You Decide: What Does the Fed’s Rate Cut Mean?”: <https://cals.ncsu.edu/news/you-decide-what-does-the-feds-rat...>

    2025-12-10

    A divided Federal Reserve cuts interest rates for a 3rd straight time”: <https://alaskapublic.org/news/national/2025-12-10/a-divided-...>

    "‘Silent Dissents’ Reveal Growing Fed Resistance to Powell’s Cuts”: <https://archive.is/JDlB0#selection-1235.0-1235.64>

    2025-12-30

    "Fed Minutes Reveal Split on Interest Rates Headed Into 2026”: <https://money.usnews.com/money/personal-finance/articles/fed...>

    "Deep Divide Inside Fed Raises Questions About Timing of Further Rate Cuts”: <https://archive.is/7XdPo>

    "Trump says he will 'probably' sue Fed's Powell”: <https://www.aa.com.tr/en/americas/trump-says-he-will-probabl...>

    HTH

  • epolanski an hour ago ago

    One of the very few lonely voices.

    It's quite impressive how scared everybody is of this administration. News outlets, international leaders even in face of threats, big tech, including the delusional Musk who thought he could've handled the president's rage.

    Hell even his own party is scared of speaking up, you either fall in line or you risk falling victim of the most vicious direct attacks, even if you've been a huge and core voice for the president, see senator Marjorie Green.

    From Russia, to Belarus, from the Philippines to Argentina, from Hungary to Poland it's crystal clear what a failure of democracy it is to have a presidential republic.

    • cosmicgadget an hour ago ago

      The turning point may have been when the Supreme Court decided a president couldn't be criminally liable for anything done in office. Having no fear of consequences is quite an enabler.

  • Loughla 2 hours ago ago

    Holy shit.

    So our monetary policy will be just set at the arbitrary whims of the president if this new scheme works.

    Why does all of this feel like it's just sliding completely out of hand? Am I just being a doomer?

    • davidw 2 hours ago ago

      I find myself seeking out non-doomer people to read, since the doom and gloom doesn't really help, it's just demotivating. "Look for the helpers" and all that.

      This outlet has some good things from time to time, like https://www.liberalcurrents.com/we-are-going-to-win/

      That said, yeah this is really bad.

    • nemomarx 2 hours ago ago

      Lots of respected limits and lines on government power are just being casually broken, so I don't think you're wrong. Whatever's going to happen next it probably won't have the stability of the past.

    • toomuchtodo 2 hours ago ago

      Because it is, you are not. Checks and balances are at their limits (judicial branch), or non existent (Congress).

    • consumer451 2 hours ago ago

      Well, you see... he is part of the "un-elected deep state."

      Clearly, that is a problem that needs to be solved.

      • Aurornis 2 hours ago ago

        I know you’re being sarcastic, but Trump was the person who nominated Jerome Powell as chair.

        This move is public punishment for not falling in line.

        • consumer451 14 minutes ago ago

          Thank you for pointing this out. It is really interesting, the difference between Trump 45 and Trump 47.

          I would like to add one quote to be logged on this website:

          > "I go back and forth between thinking Trump is a cynical asshole like Nixon who wouldn't be that bad (and might even prove useful) or that he's America's Hitler," he wrote privately to an associate on Facebook in 2016. [0]

          - Trump's future Vice President, JD Vance

          If we survive the fall of Pax Americana in the next few years, and journalists and historians are again allowed to exist in a free environment, I really hope that they get to the core of how we got from 45 to 47.

          [0] https://www.reuters.com/world/us/jd-vance-once-compared-trum...

    • Apreche 2 hours ago ago

      It’s been completely out of hand for some time now.

    • Uvix 2 hours ago ago

      "Has been set," not "will be set". We've been operating under the new scheme for months. Despite Powell's protestations, there was no evidence for cutting rates, and lots of evidence for doing the opposite. Unfortunately he gave in to Trump... but that obviously wasn't enough.

    • blackjack_ 2 hours ago ago

      The only reasonable conclusion at this point is that the fascists in the white house see their deep unpopularity, obvious loss of power in the near future (they have lost nearly every election in the past year by a landslide), and the Epstein files closing in. The obvious outcome will be at minimum jail and ridicule due to their continuous and obvious corruption, high crimes and misdemeanors like invading Venezuela, trying to invade Greenland, and sexual crimes against children. So they have to accelerate chaos to try and destroy law and order before it catches up with them and destroys them.

      Its time to put up or get put down by masked goons.

    • Analemma_ 2 hours ago ago

      I hope I turn out to be wrong, but the most convincing explanation I've seen for the "why" is that the 1945-2000 period was an anomaly, and now we're reverting to the mean: despotic governments, frequent wars for territory, and massive wealth inequality leading to powerful oligarchies as the only other important political players aside from the despot. This was the norm for the overwhelming majority of human history and perhaps it was massively hubristic to think we had escaped it for good.

      • whatever1 2 hours ago ago

        Probably it coincides with the fact that the last people who remember WW2 are now gone.

        None of us understand the devastation that a WW incurs.

      • Thegn 2 hours ago ago

        With the added fun of nuclear weapons!

  • jmclnx 2 hours ago ago
  • ball_of_lint an hour ago ago

    Powell for president please

    • __MatrixMan__ an hour ago ago

      Nobody who takes money as seriously as either party to this case should be president. Leaders should be focused on outcomes not abstractions.

    • cosmicgadget an hour ago ago

      He printed way too hard when Trump asked him to in '20.

      • fib11235 an hour ago ago

        My understanding is the United States has one of the strongest post-pandemic recoveries, the printing was definitely a factor.

        • cosmicgadget an hour ago ago

          I'm not arguing against QE I am saying there was too much of it and we could have had recovered just fine without the severe inflation that landed us in the current predicament.

          • estearum an hour ago ago

            Lower inflation and higher growth than every peer nation?

            The Fed absolutely crushed it. Totally unambiguous.

            • cosmicgadget 30 minutes ago ago

              Here are some ambiguous things:

              1. Inflation

              2. Comparing peer economies

              3. Counterfactual timelines

              • estearum 20 minutes ago ago

                What country did better (other than the imaginary retconned one in your head), so we can discuss the comparison directly?

  • et-al 2 hours ago ago

    What's a pleb supposed to do now? Convert every paycheck to BTC, gold, or EUR?

    • ProllyInfamous 27 minutes ago ago

      The most-unamerican thing you can do right now is HOLD bitcoin/gold/silver.

      If you still want fiat — and they're available — Swiss Francs are deflating least-quickly.

      Otherwise, as a fellow pleb, my best advice is to get enough bullets for occassional hunting (and other tax-free methods of living) and protection.

      If you're of a draftable age/gender, I'd either get extremely fit or extremely disabled. If you're a lard-ass, I'd get to a state where you can live without medicines.

      —fellow blue collar american

    • closingreunion 2 hours ago ago

      Toilet paper and ammunition.

    • rvz 2 hours ago ago

      You might as well for the next 3 years.

  • macinjosh an hour ago ago

    This is logical end game of having these economic controls at all. Put a steering wheel on it someone will drive it.

    A true free market isn’t at whims of any one person.

  • jb1991 2 hours ago ago

    Venezuela, Greenland, and this. Anyone notice how these extreme events all happened around the same time of the Epstein files getting released with highly publicized questions about all the redactions? It certainly seems like a distraction game.

    • blurbleblurble an hour ago ago

      Not to mention what's happening in Minnesota

  • voidfunc 2 hours ago ago

    Exciting two weeks to start the year!

    • jb1991 2 hours ago ago

      I don’t think “exciting” is the right word.

      • voidfunc 2 hours ago ago

        Where's your sense of adventure?

        • jb1991 2 hours ago ago

          There is a time for adventure, and this is not it.

        • AnimalMuppet 2 hours ago ago

          "And did you find adventure?"

          "No. Neither does anyone else. Adventures happen to other people. When it happens to you, it just looks like trouble."

          - The Ballad Of Sir Dinadan, by Gerald Morris, quoted from memory

    • throwaway_2494 2 hours ago ago

      You know this part of the problem!

      Politics is now consumed as entertainment, and ask any writer of books or screenplays and they will tell you _conflict_ makes for good entertainment.

      Politics should be _boring_. The fact that we demand to be entertained by our political system is a big part of the problem.

      • JumpinJack_Cash 2 hours ago ago

        Far too many people decide to occupy the us vs. them part of their brain with National politics as opposed to sports.

        Both are basically useless as it relates to your personal quality of life but at least with the latter you can see nice geometric combinations between players on a pitch and some incredible athleticism in between

        • hrimfaxi 2 hours ago ago

          The issue being that one actually impacts your life and the other is a spectacle.

          • JumpinJack_Cash 2 hours ago ago

            No it doesn't come on.

            If your life can be impacted more than 5% by [ insert name of the person residing in the White House] then you are either a politician or someone not doing a proper job at navigating through life and hedge your bets (financial or otherwise)

            • throwaway_2494 an hour ago ago

              [...] send not to know For whom the bell tolls, It tolls for thee.

            • blurbleblurble an hour ago ago

              This is just inflammatory

  • JKCalhoun 2 hours ago ago

    Wild. Some kind of fucking banana republic.

  • Aurornis 2 hours ago ago

    Terrible. Trump was even the person who nominated Powell in 2017, and now he’s being squeezed for doing the job of Federal Reserve Chair instead of bending to demands.

  • camillomiller 28 minutes ago ago

    What about another nice dinner with all the Silicon Valley CEOs paying their respect to the orange dictator? I'm sure that will appease him. What a bunch of spineless puppets.

  • hypeatei an hour ago ago

    They're already pursuing a case against another Fed board member, and now this? I have a feeling these two cases are going to suffer the same fate as the Letita James and James Comey cases: thrown out due to incompetence and/or malfeasance. It's a disgusting, clear weaponization of the DOJ.

    MAGA, of course, tried to accuse Biden of weaponizing them during his term so that they could justify the Trump 2.0 revenge tour. Now we're here.

  • idiotsecant 40 minutes ago ago

    If Trump does try to politicize the fed he is going to do the one thing that the American political system will not tolerate - messing with the money of the most powerful capital class in the world. Normally, the incentives of this class are most aligned with grinding the rest of us into a fine powder suitable for lubrication of the engines of commerce, but hopefully just this once they'll come to the rescue. My only fear is that the short term quarterly obsessions that we've built might actually lead to some business supporting this decision out of a suicidal drive for short term gains.

    • CamperBob2 36 minutes ago ago

      If Trump does try to politicize the fed he is going to do the one thing that the American political system will not tolerate

      I've lost track of the number of times I, and others, have said that.

      Turns out there really are no brakes on the Trump Train. In the parlance of the metallic-headgear fans, any other POTUS would have been treated to a nice convertible ride through downtown Dallas by now.

  • brcmthrowaway 2 hours ago ago

    Does anyone have a steelman argument for this?

    • Aurornis 2 hours ago ago

      Do you think that criminal prosecution for Jerome Powell for maybe doing something wrong with some building renovations under timing that just happens to coincide with the President’s personal and public vendetta against this person is worth steelmanning?

      At some point it stops being steelmanning and starts becoming an invitation for some propaganda to distract from the obvious.

      • zamadatix 2 hours ago ago

        The more obvious something seems the more valuable steelmanning becomes, precisely because if the only steelman arguments you get (if any) are propaganda at best (instead of reasons you just hadn't considered) then you can be that much more confident your outrage is based in reason rather than feelings. My guess is there won't be many coming up with steelman arguments for this one though anyways.

        Inviting propaganda is good, let the obviously weak arguments come front and center to be logically considered and ridiculed rather than put in small private group chats where they seem to grow and grow. This only works, in any way, if people stop saying things aren't worth having consideration about because it's obvious to them.

        • Aurornis an hour ago ago

          I understand the theory of steelmanning, but in cases like this it's just an high-brow version of the "both sides" style of journalism where you pretend like both sides are similarly plausible and deserve equal consideration. At the extremes, the steelmanning can turn into a game of giving the other side more consideration.

          > Inviting propaganda is good, let the obviously weak arguments come front and center to be logically considered and ridiculed

          That's literally what I'm doing: Ridiculing the obviously weak arguments.

          And do you know what's happening? My ridicule and dismissiveness are being talked down, while you invite someone to "steelman" the argument instead. This pattern happens over and over again in spaces where steelmanning is held up as virtuous: It's supposed to be a tool for bringing weak arguments into the light so they can be dismissed, yet the people dismissing are told to shush so we can soak up the propaganda from the other side.

    • unclad5968 2 hours ago ago

      As a casual follower of economic news and completely ignorant of politics, my guess is that the administration believes the fed isn't acting according to mandate of stability and jobs. I have no clue how valid that is

      • sidibe 2 hours ago ago

        Trump thinks lowering the interest rates means market goes up before election. That's all there is to it everyone knows it's not about stability and jobs

    • drpepper42 2 hours ago ago

      The interest rates? If you wanted to crash demand for dollar various things makes a bit more sense. Venezuela might be more about threatening BRICS if you squint at it. The EU–Mercosur agreement looks like it might pass - timing is kind of weird. There is maybe a kind of logic to it for exports but I think it lowers the standard of living for us plebs.

  • rvz 2 hours ago ago

    So this is the bar for the next country to surpass the US as the world's economic super-power, if this continues it's most likely going to be China to surpass the US.

    An opportunity for the EU to stop its bureaucracy and cleanup its act. If it cannot convince anyone that they are next, then one can argue that democracy is completely finished.

    If this nonsense continues it will be the UAE + Saudi Arabia + China, cutting off the west and that's that.

    • AnimalMuppet 2 hours ago ago

      If that's the bar, well, China is not a sterling example of central bank independence and the rule of law either.

      • Herring an hour ago ago

        China hasn’t dropped bombs on foreign soil in 45 years. I think I’m ok with that situation.

  • jgalt212 an hour ago ago

    Trump is, of course, wrong. But the independence of the Fed being at stake is a myth. Since the bursting of the dot com bubble, the Fed has operated as if the well being of the investor class is their number one priority.

  • JumpinJack_Cash 2 hours ago ago

    I am surprised by the negative comments, the low interest rates = better thesis has always been somewhat popular on HN , now just because Trump is saying it (and operating to get there) it becomes an issue or something not to be aligned with.

    There are countless comments and discussions on this board about how:

    1) interest rates should be zero,

    2) interest rates being non-zero create a misallocation of capital where there is a return on an investment without any ingenuity or creation behind

    3) Banks are too risk averse to lending and their risk averse behavior is due to the risk free rate they enjoy when they park money at the Fed and when they buy T-bills

    No matter how little ingenuity or creation is required to keep afloat a zombie company or a dubious startup, for sure it's a notch higher than what happens when that money is parked at the Fed or invested in t-bills...

    • layer8 an hour ago ago

      Even if one disagrees with Fed policy, the way Trump is having the DoJ criminally prosecute Powell under unrelated pretexts is disgraceful and undermines the Fed’s independence.

  • the_real_cher an hour ago ago

    Monero up around 20% today.

  • shrubble 2 hours ago ago

    I’m of the opinion from the old Yiddish proverb: “when the cat and dog are fighting, the mouse is safe”.

    If the admin is fighting with the Federal Reserve, it means they are not focused on figuring out how to further screw us over…

    • Aurornis 2 hours ago ago

      They have had no problem screwing people over on multiple fronts at the same time. This is wishful thinking.

      > If the admin is fighting with the Federal Reserve, it means they are not focused on figuring out how to further screw us over…

      Messing with interest rates for short term political gain would screw us over.

    • Philpax 2 hours ago ago

      I don't think a fight with the Federal Reserve will stop ICE from murdering civilians.

    • refulgentis 2 hours ago ago

      Puerile and uninformative, unfortunately. I respect that each of us has their world view, but if the last decade has shown anything at all, it is that when you are in the public square, you are asking for interlocution, not for escapism to be indulged. And the best thing is to do as you implicitly ask, and interlocute.