April 2nd Reciprocal Tariffs

327,259 Views | 3994 Replies | Last: 6 days ago by RD2WINAGNBEAR86
LIB,MR BEARS
How long do you want to ignore this user?
FLBear5630 said "Long term - over 1 year, real economic concern. They may cave now, but they are working on NOT being in this position again. We may get some "diplomatic lip service", but the EU, China and even our allies on Asia are looking at other markets and diversification. What will the long-term picture look like when they develop other options. Trump may hold all the cards on this hand, but the game is more than one hand."

It sounds like you prefer the slow, festering, untreated sore to a cure.

Yes, in a year or two other countries will explore their options and at the same time US companies will be exploring theirs as well.

It is not, and never has been a static situation except for the American taxpayer, consumer, and producers getting screwed including generations of Americans not even born yet.

It's obvious you prefer your semi-comfortable status quo over making things better for the grandkids.
Oldbear83
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Some folks are just panic pushers.

That which does not kill me, will try again and get nastier
Doc Holliday
How long do you want to ignore this user?
whiterock said:

J.R. said:

What the administration has done relative to how tariffs were implemented were a total FUBAR. What you do if you have issues with countries with trade, you have those discussions behind closed doors. You can be frank and forceful to get their attention. If you need to threaten them, that is ok if they don't get the message and work together with a real plan behind closed doors. If that doesn't work, you go to plan B and institute tariffs if one thinks that is the next step. You just don't declare a trade war filled with vitriol in public. Very unprofessional and we got the response we deserve. It isn't Trump hate, he just wants to be a public bully and tough guy and just see where that has gotten us. Being a bully served him well in the development business, he this ain't the Bronx.
except that we've tried what you suggested and it manifestly failed.

It doesn't matter whether the nations who trade with us like us nor not. They have nowhere else to go to replace the surplus they have with us. They will publicly posture to look tough, and behind the scenes work to limit the damage by cutting a deal.

You are comically out of your depth here, on politics as well as diplomacy. If there is one nation in the world who can throw some scheisse around and force everyone else to swallow, its the USofA. We have the largest, deepest consumer goods market in the world and 11 carrier groups to boot. Nobody improves their circumstances by flipping us off. They all get weaker and poorer if they get cut off from our markets. They are not going to let that happen just because Trump is calling them the governor of the 51st state (or somesuch).

One of the unsung values of the public diplomacy Trump is doing is that it is freezing the issue for public debate. And as that debate rages, we can see the telltale signs of an establishment that is spent, failing to deliver on the things it was erected to do, out of ideas, and defending itself purely as a hierarchy of power, couching its positions as morality and issuing histrionic allegations that anyone who disagrees with them is deplorable, or worse.

Trump is letting everyone know that the days of structural US trade deficits are over. If you don't like how he's doing it, fine - tell us how ANOTHER 50 years of trade deficits is good for us. Go on. We're waiting.
Yep. They're all going to bend the knee.
FLBear5630
How long do you want to ignore this user?
LIB,MR BEARS said:

FLBear5630 said:

ScottS said:

LIB,MR BEARS said:



We've seen alot of panic from the TDS side in the short run. But, this is about the long game. If China is already caving, I think this is great news. I think the long game will show evening the tariffs between us and other countries.
Actually, the concern is opposite.

Near Term - less than 6 months, concern because they are destroying a lot of lives for speed and extremism. No one disagrees that changes are needed, they are always needed as conditions change and (in this case the reaction to bad decisions by the Biden and the first Trump Admin). But to do it this way, has hurt a lot of people that have done nothing but their jobs.

Short term - 6 months to a year, no concern. They will all "cave" because they are heavily invested in the US market.

Long term - over 1 year, real economic concern. They may cave now, but they are working on NOT being in this position again. We may get some "diplomatic lip service", but the EU, China and even our allies on Asia are looking at other markets and diversification. What will the long-term picture look like when they develop other options. Trump may hold all the cards on this hand, but the game is more than one hand.

But, hey this will be a MAGA dream isolationism, and little say beyond our shores.


Any fool can smell a rotten egg but nobody ever lays a better one. Dems and RINOs have had decades to lay a better one and always passed on the opportunity in favor of lining their own pockets and those off their donors.

Now, we're getting a different egg from a different chicken. We don't know if it's rotten or not but it is uncomfortable pushing that sucker out.

Trump is getting all the blame because he has refused to to stick with the same rotten egg that everyone complained about but chose to do nothing.

Take a deep breath and push
Ok, fair enough.

The Shock from Shock and Awe is complete. He has EVERYONE's attention.

So, how about ratcheting down to a sustainable level? If not, we have traded one unsustainable for another. Things can't keep knee jerking like this and survive.
boognish_bear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
boognish_bear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
LIB,MR BEARS
How long do you want to ignore this user?
FLBear5630 said:

LIB,MR BEARS said:

FLBear5630 said:

ScottS said:

LIB,MR BEARS said:



We've seen alot of panic from the TDS side in the short run. But, this is about the long game. If China is already caving, I think this is great news. I think the long game will show evening the tariffs between us and other countries.
Actually, the concern is opposite.

Near Term - less than 6 months, concern because they are destroying a lot of lives for speed and extremism. No one disagrees that changes are needed, they are always needed as conditions change and (in this case the reaction to bad decisions by the Biden and the first Trump Admin). But to do it this way, has hurt a lot of people that have done nothing but their jobs.

Short term - 6 months to a year, no concern. They will all "cave" because they are heavily invested in the US market.

Long term - over 1 year, real economic concern. They may cave now, but they are working on NOT being in this position again. We may get some "diplomatic lip service", but the EU, China and even our allies on Asia are looking at other markets and diversification. What will the long-term picture look like when they develop other options. Trump may hold all the cards on this hand, but the game is more than one hand.

But, hey this will be a MAGA dream isolationism, and little say beyond our shores.


Any fool can smell a rotten egg but nobody ever lays a better one. Dems and RINOs have had decades to lay a better one and always passed on the opportunity in favor of lining their own pockets and those off their donors.

Now, we're getting a different egg from a different chicken. We don't know if it's rotten or not but it is uncomfortable pushing that sucker out.

Trump is getting all the blame because he has refused to to stick with the same rotten egg that everyone complained about but chose to do nothing.

Take a deep breath and push
Ok, fair enough.

The Shock from Shock and Awe is complete. He has EVERYONE's attention.

So, how about ratcheting down to a sustainable level? If not, we have traded one unsustainable for another. Things can't keep knee jerking like this and survive.


He put a 90 day hold on things to get deals done. Let's get to the end of the 90 days at least before panicking.
ATL Bear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

Assassin said:

boognish_bear said:


If Trump can find a way to fully or partially eliminate personal income tax, that would be huge
that is the explicit policy - to raise more money from tariffs and less from income taxes.
But, that only works if imports remain at current levels. It is a balance. Look at the Deloitte analysis for next five years. Imports are reducing. Government spending as part of economy, reducing. Real business investing, reducing. Consumer spending, reducing. Real GDP, reducing. Unemployment, increasing. CPI, down .5%. (That is a positive).

Does this look like a scenario for less taxes?



Source is Deloitte, this is a reputable source. These guys are not clowns or Mother Jones. This is baseline, there is also a up scenario and down scenario. I thought baseline was best for conversation, keep it bias free (as possible).
read that article again. note the word "scenario." (meaning a projection, not current developments).

The economy seems to be slowing slowing, which would be expected. You can't stop the kind of deficit spending we've engaged in the last 5 years and NOT have the economy slow. Trump has already addressed the investment portion. We are now approaching $10T in announced foreign investments. Sure, not all of that will happen in 2025 or even 2026, but we don't need all of it to happen in that timeframe, just enough to offset the reduction in government spending (approx $1T). Should not be a problem, given that the amount we need to hit the books over the next 18 months is a very small percentage of the total.

Consumer spending is not, in fact, declining.....yet (although it likely will do so soon).
https://www.mckinsey.com/industries/consumer-packaged-goods/our-insights/the-state-of-the-us-consumer
Unemployment is driven by new entrants, not job losses.
https://www.cnn.com/2025/04/04/economy/us-jobs-report-march-2025/index.html
Fed has reduced growth projections, but is still projecting economic expansion for 2025-2027.
https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/fomcprojtabl20250319.htm

Reduction in CPI is actually a sign of a slowing economy. Lower gas prices? a slowing economy uses less gas. and so on and so on. You will see that same dynamic on trade.....trade deficit will narrow as an economy slows. To the extent a trade deficit is structural (and ours explicitly is), a yawning trade deficit is a leading indicator of coming expansion (businesses stocking up inventory to meet growing demand).

Again.....avoid the temptation to let microeconomic challenges cloud the view of the macroeconomic situation. Trump is making macroeconomic changes. He's changing the landscape, the laws of gravity that dictate the way things will flow. By definition, existing supply chains cannot cope with those changes. THAT IS THE POINT! 70+ years ago, sovereign power chose to engage in globalism as a response to a rising USSR. Because that response was effective, it is no longer useful = it achieved its objective, ergo its costs (trade deficits) are no longer offset by advantages. So sovereign power (belatedly) defined new objectives - decouple from China and bring a greater percentage of supply chains back home.

note that Apple has announced it will move all of its US-oriented iPhone production out of China by 2026, relocating most of it to India. That, my friend, is tariffs at work. Trade policy always serves national security policy. Trump created macroeconomic conditions that will drain China of most of its US-oriented production over the next decade. SOME of that production will come home.
#winning



The problem you keep having is confusing government budget deficits and trade deficits as if their resolution is equivalent and resolution approaches are the same. It's mind boggling how you've leaned into this misguided concept.

The trade deficit isn't a wound. It's a byproduct of American strength in our currency, our markets, our consumer base, and our role as the global economic anchor.

You keep trying to close the trade deficit like it's a budget shortfall, but you're missing the entire point of modern economics. We don't measure success by exports minus imports. We measure it by productivity, innovation, capital investment, and long term competitiveness.

Trade deficits are a signal not a sin. And mistaking them for failure is how you end up designing policies that punish your own people to chase a number that never needed fixing. Even your India reference only solved a targeted geo-strategic shift, that began during the Biden admin btw, that could have been specifically targeted instead of attacking the world putting everyone on the defensive and more likely to find/shift to alternative solutions, or worse depress global demand which is manifesting as we speak.

And to help assess the scope of the problem you are fixated on, here's real data. We can certainly attack more strategic production opportunities here, but they are not tariff driven.

Trump is chasing a political agenda while sacrificing our broader strategic advantages.
FLBear5630
How long do you want to ignore this user?
boognish_bear said:




You guys are surprised? We are now going to force the EU to China.

Russia to China
EU to China

India next? Japan? So Korea? Lets see if Trump can get a clean sweep
Assassin
How long do you want to ignore this user?
FLBear5630 said:

boognish_bear said:




You guys are surprised? We are now going to force the EU to China.

Russia to China
EU to China

India next? Japan? So Korea? Lets see if Trump can get a clean sweep

So you are saying that China is gonna screw the EU and Russia next? I could see that happening to the EU, they are spineless, but not Putin
Facebook Groups at; Memories of: Dallas, Texas, Football in Texas, Texas Music, Through a Texas Lens and also Dallas History Guild. Come visit!
KaiBear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Trump is attempting to remedy 50 years of horrible trades policies.

It's unrealistic to expect such remedies to be painless.

I expect a 5-15 percent reduction of our net worth over the next 6-14 months.

However I support Trumps actions.
boognish_bear
How long do you want to ignore this user?




MT_Bear
How long do you want to ignore this user?

RD2WINAGNBEAR86
How long do you want to ignore this user?
KaiBear said:

Trump is attempting to remedy 50 years of horrible trades policies.

It's unrealistic to expect such remedies to be painless.

I expect a 5-15 percent reduction of our net worth over the next 6-14 months.

However I support Trumps actions.
15 percent of disappearing net worth is just a drop in the bucket for retired Aggie Bug Scientists.

We elected Donald Trump to fix a lot of problems. Not to create more problems by destroying the world economy. I'm not sure any of us voted for "short-term" pain. I know I didn't.

"Stand with anyone when he is right; Stand with him while he is right and part with him when he goes wrong." - Abraham Lincoln
FLBear5630
How long do you want to ignore this user?
KaiBear said:

Trump is attempting to remedy 50 years of horrible trades policies.

It's unrealistic to expect such remedies to be painless.

I expect a 5-15 percent reduction of our net worth over the next 6-14 months.

However I support Trumps actions.


You know, I get where you are coming. What bothers me is who is paying, not the wealthy. Those who broke it got rich, now the middle and working class are supposed to be understanding and take the hit? Sorry, I paid for **** too long taking the hit in 08, 00's and 90's and to take the hit again. am not understanding enough to take Trump's hit. Figure it out, but don't **** with my retirement...
RD2WINAGNBEAR86
How long do you want to ignore this user?
FLBear5630 said:

KaiBear said:

Trump is attempting to remedy 50 years of horrible trades policies.

It's unrealistic to expect such remedies to be painless.

I expect a 5-15 percent reduction of our net worth over the next 6-14 months.

However I support Trumps actions.


You know, I get where you are coming. What bothers me is who is paying, not the wealthy. Those who broke it got rich, now the middle and working class are supposed to be understanding and take the hit? Sorry, I paid for **** too long taking the hit in 08, 00's and 90's and to take the hit again. am not understanding enough to take Trump's hit. Figure it out, but don't **** with my retirement...
Great post FLBear. When Donald Trump says "they have been ripping us off for the last 50 years" , he is actually correct. He is wrong on the who. It is our own damn politicians in Washington, D.C. that have been ripping us off and half of the country doesn't give a *****



Just swapping out old Swamp creatures for new ones.
"Stand with anyone when he is right; Stand with him while he is right and part with him when he goes wrong." - Abraham Lincoln
boognish_bear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
ATL Bear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
KaiBear said:

Trump is attempting to remedy 50 years of horrible trades policies.

It's unrealistic to expect such remedies to be painless.

I expect a 5-15 percent reduction of our net worth over the next 6-14 months.

However I support Trumps actions.
GDP 50 years ago was $1.7 Trillion, it's currently $26 Trillion.

50 years ago we exported $180 Billion, today we export $3 Trillion

50 years ago exports made up 5% of GDP, today they make up 11%.

50 years ago capital stock value (physical assets like machinery, buildings, infrastructure) was $6.5 Trillion, today it is over $60 Trillion.

Now this is the one that apparently pisses everyone off. 50 years ago, aggregate market capitalization was $700 Billion, and today it's $40 Trillion.

I can't believe how bad we screwed this thing up…
boognish_bear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
KaiBear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
FLBear5630 said:

KaiBear said:

Trump is attempting to remedy 50 years of horrible trades policies.

It's unrealistic to expect such remedies to be painless.

I expect a 5-15 percent reduction of our net worth over the next 6-14 months.

However I support Trumps actions.


You know, I get where you are coming. What bothers me is who is paying, not the wealthy. Those who broke it got rich, now the middle and working class are supposed to be understanding and take the hit? Sorry, I paid for **** too long taking the hit in 08, 00's and 90's and to take the hit again. am not understanding enough to take Trump's hit. Figure it out, but don't **** with my retirement...
If we don't reverse the drain of jobs overseas and our expanding federal deficit.......our entire economy is going to collapse.

Will make the Great Depression look like nothing.

Unfortunately our electorate generally doesn't have the intelligence or patience to endure corrective measures.
Assassin
How long do you want to ignore this user?
KaiBear said:

FLBear5630 said:

KaiBear said:

Trump is attempting to remedy 50 years of horrible trades policies.

It's unrealistic to expect such remedies to be painless.

I expect a 5-15 percent reduction of our net worth over the next 6-14 months.

However I support Trumps actions.


You know, I get where you are coming. What bothers me is who is paying, not the wealthy. Those who broke it got rich, now the middle and working class are supposed to be understanding and take the hit? Sorry, I paid for **** too long taking the hit in 08, 00's and 90's and to take the hit again. am not understanding enough to take Trump's hit. Figure it out, but don't **** with my retirement...
If we don't reverse the drain of jobs overseas and our expanding federal deficit.......our entire economy is going to collapse.

Will make the Great Depression look like nothing.

Unfortunately our electorate generally doesn't have the intelligence or patience to endure corrective measures.

Said better than I...
Facebook Groups at; Memories of: Dallas, Texas, Football in Texas, Texas Music, Through a Texas Lens and also Dallas History Guild. Come visit!
Redbrickbear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
KaiBear said:

FLBear5630 said:

KaiBear said:

Trump is attempting to remedy 50 years of horrible trades policies.

It's unrealistic to expect such remedies to be painless.

I expect a 5-15 percent reduction of our net worth over the next 6-14 months.

However I support Trumps actions.


You know, I get where you are coming. What bothers me is who is paying, not the wealthy. Those who broke it got rich, now the middle and working class are supposed to be understanding and take the hit? Sorry, I paid for **** too long taking the hit in 08, 00's and 90's and to take the hit again. am not understanding enough to take Trump's hit. Figure it out, but don't **** with my retirement...
If we don't reverse the drain of jobs overseas and our expanding federal deficit.......our entire economy is going to collapse.

Will make the Great Depression look like nothing..



Not to mention that FL fails to see the very real threat of mass political violence and revolution.

We can't keep going on with an upper class getting richer and everyone else barely getting by.

Trump's election (twice) is already a blinking red light warning that the American people have entered a pre-revolutionary stage.

Trump himself is a type of revolution in truth.

If he fails we should prepare ourselves for actual violent movements to come after him (on the right and left)
historian
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Assassin said:

FLBear5630 said:

boognish_bear said:




You guys are surprised? We are now going to force the EU to China.

Russia to China
EU to China

India next? Japan? So Korea? Lets see if Trump can get a clean sweep

So you are saying that China is gonna screw the EU and Russia next? I could see that happening to the EU, they are spineless, but not Putin

EU has a much larger population & economy than Russia. In terms of the global economy, Russia is almost inconsequential. Geopolitics is something else…
boognish_bear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
boognish_bear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
KaiBear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Redbrickbear said:

KaiBear said:

FLBear5630 said:

KaiBear said:

Trump is attempting to remedy 50 years of horrible trades policies.

It's unrealistic to expect such remedies to be painless.

I expect a 5-15 percent reduction of our net worth over the next 6-14 months.

However I support Trumps actions.


You know, I get where you are coming. What bothers me is who is paying, not the wealthy. Those who broke it got rich, now the middle and working class are supposed to be understanding and take the hit? Sorry, I paid for **** too long taking the hit in 08, 00's and 90's and to take the hit again. am not understanding enough to take Trump's hit. Figure it out, but don't **** with my retirement...
If we don't reverse the drain of jobs overseas and our expanding federal deficit.......our entire economy is going to collapse.

Will make the Great Depression look like nothing..



Not to mention that FL fails to see the very real threat of mass political violence and revolution.

We can't keep going on with an upper class getting richer and everyone else barely getting by.

Trump's election (twice) is already a blinking red light warning that the American people have entered a pre-revolutionary stage.

Trump himself is a type of revolution in truth.

If he fails we should prepare ourselves for actual violent movements to come after him (on the right and left)


Americans have not experienced true privation in almost a century.

My father did; back in Los Angeles during the 30's. He never totally got over the depression. Even constant combat in WW2 didn't seem to affect him as much.

Dad never wasted a penny. Was happiest saving money to put into the bank.
Assassin
How long do you want to ignore this user?
KaiBear said:

Redbrickbear said:

KaiBear said:

FLBear5630 said:

KaiBear said:

Trump is attempting to remedy 50 years of horrible trades policies.

It's unrealistic to expect such remedies to be painless.

I expect a 5-15 percent reduction of our net worth over the next 6-14 months.

However I support Trumps actions.


You know, I get where you are coming. What bothers me is who is paying, not the wealthy. Those who broke it got rich, now the middle and working class are supposed to be understanding and take the hit? Sorry, I paid for **** too long taking the hit in 08, 00's and 90's and to take the hit again. am not understanding enough to take Trump's hit. Figure it out, but don't **** with my retirement...
If we don't reverse the drain of jobs overseas and our expanding federal deficit.......our entire economy is going to collapse.

Will make the Great Depression look like nothing..



Not to mention that FL fails to see the very real threat of mass political violence and revolution.

We can't keep going on with an upper class getting richer and everyone else barely getting by.

Trump's election (twice) is already a blinking red light warning that the American people have entered a pre-revolutionary stage.

Trump himself is a type of revolution in truth.

If he fails we should prepare ourselves for actual violent movements to come after him (on the right and left)


Americans have not experienced true privation in almost a century.

My father did; back in Los Angeles during the 30's. He never totally got over the depression. Even constant combat in WW2 didn't seem to affect him as much.

Dad never wasted a penny. Was happiest saving money to put into the bank.
The Greatest Generation
Facebook Groups at; Memories of: Dallas, Texas, Football in Texas, Texas Music, Through a Texas Lens and also Dallas History Guild. Come visit!
Mitch Blood Green
How long do you want to ignore this user?
RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:

FLBear5630 said:

KaiBear said:

Trump is attempting to remedy 50 years of horrible trades policies.

It's unrealistic to expect such remedies to be painless.

I expect a 5-15 percent reduction of our net worth over the next 6-14 months.

However I support Trumps actions.


You know, I get where you are coming. What bothers me is who is paying, not the wealthy. Those who broke it got rich, now the middle and working class are supposed to be understanding and take the hit? Sorry, I paid for **** too long taking the hit in 08, 00's and 90's and to take the hit again. am not understanding enough to take Trump's hit. Figure it out, but don't **** with my retirement...
Great post FLBear. When Donald Trump says "they have been ripping us off for the last 50 years" , he is actually correct. He is wrong on the who. It is our own damn politicians in Washington, D.C. that have been ripping us off and half of the country doesn't give a *****



Just swapping out old Swamp creatures for new ones.


They haven't been ripping us of. We gave away those jobs for profit. Then we created tax policy that rewarded the wealthy, those that moved the jobs overseas for profit.

Trickle down is the greatest lie ever told.
FLBear5630
How long do you want to ignore this user?
KaiBear said:

FLBear5630 said:

KaiBear said:

Trump is attempting to remedy 50 years of horrible trades policies.

It's unrealistic to expect such remedies to be painless.

I expect a 5-15 percent reduction of our net worth over the next 6-14 months.

However I support Trumps actions.


You know, I get where you are coming. What bothers me is who is paying, not the wealthy. Those who broke it got rich, now the middle and working class are supposed to be understanding and take the hit? Sorry, I paid for **** too long taking the hit in 08, 00's and 90's and to take the hit again. am not understanding enough to take Trump's hit. Figure it out, but don't **** with my retirement...
If we don't reverse the drain of jobs overseas and our expanding federal deficit.......our entire economy is going to collapse.

Will make the Great Depression look like nothing.

Unfortunately our electorate generally doesn't have the intelligence or patience to endure corrective measures.

Depends on where you are in the cycle. 90 and 08 I had much more tolerance for corrective action as I had amble recovery time. Pushing 60? Time is at a premium... Much less tolerance for "correcting generational flaws", especially to be lectured by someone that played a role in causing it. Under his first term leadership the deficit, budget and size of Government all grew. Now, he is destroying people's lives in the name of correcting the playing field.

Sorry, no problem making changes, but make the incrementally not this knee jerk method.

I know you are in a different financial tax bracket, but for the majority of the working class (upper middle, middle and working) they will be paying the bill in their day to day life. But, the BU crowd will say that is because they made poor choices "Qu'ils mangent de la brioche".
boognish_bear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
FLBear5630
How long do you want to ignore this user?
boognish_bear said:


boognish_bear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Oldbear83
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Abe Vigoda was great in Joe vs the Volcano
That which does not kill me, will try again and get nastier
Assassin
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Oldbear83 said:

Abe Vigoda was great in Joe vs the Volcano
Better in Barney Miller as Fish
Facebook Groups at; Memories of: Dallas, Texas, Football in Texas, Texas Music, Through a Texas Lens and also Dallas History Guild. Come visit!
FLBear5630
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Oldbear83 said:

Abe Vigoda was great in Joe vs the Volcano
One of my favorite movies. Loved the luggage salesman.
First Page Last Page
Page 49 of 115
 
×
subscribe Verify your student status
See Subscription Benefits
Trial only available to users who have never subscribed or participated in a previous trial.