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Trump Shrugs Off Potential EU Ban on U.S. Food Imports


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Posted
56 minutes ago, spidermike007 said:

Those two are real bottom of the barrel Americans. Very little talent or skill. Just how Trump seems to like them. 


Just like the rest of the US 'government' sadly. A pack of talentless, cowardly, grifters and grovelers without a spine to share between 'em.


Led by the biggest one of them all, currently groveling to Putin after threatening his friends and small countries. And so betraying everything the US at least ever claims to have stood for.

 

An elected national insult to the world like Johnson et al were to Europe.

 

All the while the Dem corpse barely twitches.

 

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Posted
10 hours ago, JimHuaHin said:

Trump will kill the USA.

 

China, Russia, North Korea and others are just sitting back enjoying the show.

They are not just sitting back. China's propanda is now full steam on the claim that the U.S. is only interested in stealing other countries resources!

 

(I perfectly know that it's rich from China).

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Posted

The one thing Elon Musk doesn't tweet about: Tariffs

 

Elon Musk undoubtedly tweets a lot, recently offering about 270 posts, reposts, or comments to his X platform during the 24 hours of Presidents' Day. It was an average day for him.

But one subject has been glaringly absent in spite of Musk's 10+ post-per-hour velocity in the early weeks of Trump 2.0: the president's tariff plans.

 

In fact, a variety of searches of Musk's posting history using the X search engine for terms like "tariff" or "import duty" revealed minimal to no results. And when the topic does pop up, it's invariably in a post that is years old and sounds very different from how Donald Trump talks about the issue today.

 

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/the-one-thing-elon-musk-doesnt-tweet-about-tariffs-132213151.html

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Posted
1 hour ago, CallumWK said:

The one thing Elon Musk doesn't tweet about: Tariffs

 

Elon Musk undoubtedly tweets a lot, recently offering about 270 posts, reposts, or comments to his X platform during the 24 hours of Presidents' Day. It was an average day for him.

But one subject has been glaringly absent in spite of Musk's 10+ post-per-hour velocity in the early weeks of Trump 2.0: the president's tariff plans.

 

In fact, a variety of searches of Musk's posting history using the X search engine for terms like "tariff" or "import duty" revealed minimal to no results. And when the topic does pop up, it's invariably in a post that is years old and sounds very different from how Donald Trump talks about the issue today.

 

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/the-one-thing-elon-musk-doesnt-tweet-about-tariffs-132213151.html

Of course.

To start with, it's not good for his business in China  as the government can easily retaliate against it.

Then there is the production in the U.S. I would not be surprised if it uses parts produced in China or elsewhere.

Finally, the boycott of Tesla has already de facto started and will certainly gain momentum in countries affected by Trump's tariffs.

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Posted

A great essay from the NY Times. It cuts through alot of the nonsense, and reveals the stunning level of Trump's ignorance. 

 

It’s a total mess. As the Ford Motor chief executive Jim Farley courageously (compared to other chief executives) pointed out, “Let’s be real honest: Long term, a 25 percent tariff across the Mexico and Canada borders would blow a hole in the U.S. industry that we’ve never seen.”

 

So, either Trump wants to blow that hole, or he’s bluffing, or he is clueless. If it is the latter, Trump is going to get a crash course in the hard realities of the global economy as it really is — not how he imagines it.

 

Ecosystems? Listen a bit to Beinhocker, who is also the executive director of the Institute for New Economic Thinking at the Oxford Martin School. In the real world, he argues, “There is no such thing as the American economy anymore that you can identify in any real, tangible way. There’s just this accounting fiction that we call U.S. G.D.P.” To be sure, he says, “There are American interests in the economy. There are American workers. There are American consumers. There are firms based in America. But there is no American economy in that isolated sense.”

 

The old days, he added, “where you made wine and I made cheese, and you had everything you needed to make wine and I had everything I needed to make cheese and so we traded with each other — which made us both better off, as Adam Smith taught — those days are long gone.” Except in Trump’s head.

 

Instead, there is a global web of commercial, manufacturing, services and trading “ecosystems,” explains Beinhocker. “There is an automobile ecosystem. There’s an A.I. ecosystem. There’s a smartphone ecosystem. There’s a drug development ecosystem. There is the chip-making ecosystem.” And the people, parts and knowledge that make up those ecosystems all move back and forth across many economies.

 

As NPR noted in a recent story about the auto industry, “carmakers have built a vast, complicated supply chain that spans North America, with parts crossing back and forth across borders throughout the auto manufacturing process. … Some parts cross borders multiple times — like, say, a wire that is manufactured in the U.S., sent to Mexico to be bundled into a group of wires, and then back to the U.S. for installation into a bigger piece of a car, like a seat.”

 

Trump just waves off all of this. He told reporters that the U.S. is not reliant on Canada. “We don’t need them to make our cars,” he said.

 

Actually, we do. And thank goodness for that. It not only enables us to make cars cheaper, but also better. All that a Model T did was get you from point to point faster than a horse, but today’s cars offer you heating and cooling and entertainment from the internet and satellites. They will navigate for you and even drive for you — and they’re much safer. When we can combine more complex knowledge and complex parts to solve complex problems, our quality of life soars.

 

But here’s the catch. You cannot make complex stuff alone anymore. It’s too complex. And if you are not part of these ecosystems, your country will not thrive.”

 

And trust is the essential ingredient that makes these ecosystems work and grow, Beinhocker adds. Trust acts as both glue and grease. It glues together bonds of cooperation, while at the same time it greases the flows of people, products, capital and ideas from one country to the next. Remove trust and the ecosystems start to collapse.

 

Trust, though, is built by good rules and healthy relationships, and Trump is trampling on both. The result: If he goes down this road, Trump will make America and the world poorer. Mr. President, do your homework.

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Posted
13 hours ago, candide said:

They are not just sitting back. China's propanda is now full steam on the claim that the U.S. is only interested in stealing other countries resources!

 

(I perfectly know that it's rich from China).

Unlike the US, China doesn’t invade other countries to steal their resources. They are more pragmatic, doing business with a win-win view for both. Many African and Asian countries are benefiting from this approach. Western countries are being left behind thanks to their hubris.

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Posted
On 2/19/2025 at 7:22 AM, TheFishman1 said:

America will never be the same you survived Trump’s first presidency barely when he tried to change the Poplar vote and steal an election he lied never admitted it he learned that from his lawyer never admit anything if you tell a lie long enough people will believe you he’s going down as the worst president ever

So you say, You don't have to like DT     Just look what he's doing for the country.

DT is the only one that 's got the guts to do something for the country 

(But you know that )  

Not like the other No hopers  that's been there in the big house.

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Posted
On 2/19/2025 at 8:34 AM, JimHuaHin said:

Trump will kill the USA.

 

China, Russia, North Korea and others are just sitting back enjoying the show.

Russian inflation 10% :cheesy:

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Posted

Why is Trump alienated our allies that we built up for 80 years and now whatever Putin the dictator says he’s repeating it’s like he’s respecting the dictators and just yesterday I heard him say that the president of Ukraine only has a 4% of the population agree with them well that’s exactly what Putin was saying the day before so anything Putin says this president of the United States is now repeating he lied about how much 80s they’ve given to Ukraine by 300% can anybody say to the president United States hey you’re going too far these Russians are not the good guys Trump is gonna be played by Putin look what Trump is promised to lower the prices of eggs but they’ve gone up 25% tariff on all the metal it’s gonna blow a big hole in the Car industry is that ignorant miracle will never recuperate from this recover he wants to throw away all the Democratic rules and he wants to be the king 

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Posted
6 minutes ago, TheFishman1 said:

Why is Trump alienated our allies that we built up for 80 years and now whatever Putin the dictator says he’s repeating it’s like he’s respecting the dictators and just yesterday I heard him say that the president of Ukraine only has a 4% of the population agree with them well that’s exactly what Putin was saying the day before so anything Putin says this president of the United States is now repeating he lied about how much 80s they’ve given to Ukraine by 300% can anybody say to the president United States hey you’re going too far these Russians are not the good guys Trump is gonna be played by Putin look what Trump is promised to lower the prices of eggs but they’ve gone up 25% tariff on all the metal it’s gonna blow a big hole in the Car industry is that ignorant miracle will never recuperate from this recover he wants to throw away all the Democratic rules and he wants to be the king 

Allies? US and USSR saved these sad sacks in war. 

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Posted
7 hours ago, Gweiloman said:

Unlike the US, China doesn’t invade other countries to steal their resources. They are more pragmatic, doing business with a win-win view for both. Many African and Asian countries are benefiting from this approach. Western countries are being left behind thanks to their hubris.

 

Hardly a win-win given how indebted  many African and Asian countries are to China, and the price that they pay for that debt.

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Posted

For the last nine years Trump has been praising Putin it almost after talks to sounds like what Putin is saying I wonder if Trump is really a Russian Putin plant it must have something really good on him because it’s weird how all of a sudden our allies are enemies in our enemies or allies is that that guy in North Korea he said they wrote love letters together the guy killed with a miss his own uncle he looks up for to dictators and I really believe that the time he’s finished America will never recuperate from him being president what did he promise the price of actually going down the first day he been in office for a month they’re going up inflation is gonna go skyrocketing with all these ideas that he has about tariffs all the expert economic people are saying he’s incorrect I don’t know could it be a plant

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Posted
On 2/19/2025 at 10:58 AM, Tug said:

Trump doesn’t care because it doesn’t affect him personally.

An unfortunate reality.

He discovered the word "groceries" and became fascinated because it was probably a life revelation that it describes household items that normal people or paid staff actually purchase whereas  in his experience  since childhood has been that such menial items simply were present and beneath consideration of how.

That ignorance extends across  every aspect of his mis-perceptions of reality.

tariffs and restrictions with immediate or even "delayed" application  does/has  not left trade partners hanging in expectation. They have immediately sought and found alternatives.

US trade deficits are on course to increase and will be coupled to inflation.

Technology bans have backfired as the market has diversified and expanded.

The  "pipe dream" of Made in the USA" has been hobbled by base resource material restrictions and the defunct factories pre exodus to China are in demolition condition anyway .

Agriculture and farming is in turmoil .

 

 

 

 

 

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Posted
6 hours ago, RayC said:

 

Hardly a win-win given how indebted  many African and Asian countries are to China, and the price that they pay for that debt.

Predictably, right on cue. So indebted that Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia are all in BRICS now…

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