Quite the manifesto there ...
Well, I'm not the one pushing the market control, taxation, and central planning. So maybe screed rather than manifesto.Oldbear83 said:
Quite the manifesto there ...
ATL Bear said:Facts don't matter. They're all in on the "dystopian American economy that needs shattering" narrative.nein51 said:
The **** it is. I have a CAT stop I see every Monday. The guys in that place are making almost $40/hr
Porteroso said:LIB,MR BEARS said:Assassin said:
SHOCKED I tell ya. I don't know whether to believe ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN, NYT or WAPO
They all seem sincere
But you will believe Project Veritas?
what is your argument if a year from now most tariffs are at 0/0?RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:
It is amazing to me that the Trump loyalists have not yet figured out that "The entire world has ripped us off for 50 years" actually translates to Americans have been able to purchase inexpensive products from the whole world for 50 years and I am going to put a stop to that.
Call it a tax, and the people are outraged! Call it a tariff and they get out their checkbook and wave the American flag. I really don't care where my toilet plunger and fidget spinners are made.
LIB,MR BEARS said:what is your argument if a year from now most tariffs are at 0/0?RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:
It is amazing to me that the Trump loyalists have not yet figured out that "The entire world has ripped us off for 50 years" actually translates to Americans have been able to purchase inexpensive products from the whole world for 50 years and I am going to put a stop to that.
Call it a tax, and the people are outraged! Call it a tariff and they get out their checkbook and wave the American flag. I really don't care where my toilet plunger and fidget spinners are made.
FLBear5630 said:LIB,MR BEARS said:what is your argument if a year from now most tariffs are at 0/0?RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:
It is amazing to me that the Trump loyalists have not yet figured out that "The entire world has ripped us off for 50 years" actually translates to Americans have been able to purchase inexpensive products from the whole world for 50 years and I am going to put a stop to that.
Call it a tax, and the people are outraged! Call it a tariff and they get out their checkbook and wave the American flag. I really don't care where my toilet plunger and fidget spinners are made.
Free trade. Doesn't change tariffs being a tax, nor does it remedy what it did to those having to deal with the current tarrif situation, which isn't a hypothetical 0/0
Did you get a job yet and quit feeding off the govt teet or are we still financing your social safety net? Please answer the question, Assman. Do you have a job? Do you pay taxes? Do you take Social Security or any other govt based subsidies? Do you have health insurance? Where does it come from? I think we know the answers, but waiting for you to answer.Assassin said:You're so well spoken.J.R. said:
I was just curious how many of those 100's of beautiful deals has Trumpy completed? uh, that would be zero. Once again, ole fat boy bully continues to write checks his arse can't cash. What a clown. Not only does he look like a complete fool, so do his minions, Old83, Little Johnny, Tin Man, Assman. All part of the plan bros!
JUST IN: 🇺🇸 President Trump says Fed Chair Jerome Powell is a "FOOL, who doesn't have a clue."
— Watcher.Guru (@WatcherGuru) May 8, 2025
So many misunderstandings and misrepresentations in there. For example, my point about our rise to be the arsenal of democracy. We became that BEFORE World War II, in an era when we ran structural trade surpluses. And remained so for two decades thereafter. We were wise enough to realize that we could not do it alone and built a globalist system to lift war-torn economies out of the ashes and build more free societies in the third world. That required us share the wealth...to open our economy effectively the way Milton Friedman recommended - unilateral free trade. We didn't demand reciprocity. Policy actually encouraged offshoring of jobs. There were reasons we did it, and benefits for doing it. Best of all, IT WORKED. We won the Cold War. Communism did not engulf the planet. But no matter how hard you try to ignore it, globalism has real costs for us and it makes no sense to continue to bear those costs it in a post Cold War world. And as we stand on the precipice of what may very well be a new "industrial revolution" (the rise of AI and robotics), we cannot just plan to buy what robots build elsewhere in exchange for ever greater shares of equity in our public and private debt. That is not a sustainable model. Today, the arsenal of democracy is a shell of its former self. Our main adversary has 53% of global shipbuilding capacity. that is a five-alarm fire for a country with 11 carrier battle groups.ATL Bear said:
Your posting style is as antiquated as your economic theories. Sorry to everyone else for the TL;DR, but this political spin and long debunked arguments devoid of any understanding of modern economies and realities needed to be dissected piece by piece.
A short periods of deficits followed by periods of trade surpluses is not a sign of economic weakness. It's the natural order. An escalating structural trade deficit of +50 years is a sign of economic DISTRESS.
You keep repeating the phrase "50 years of trade deficits = economic distress" as if it's a self-evident truth. But let's actually test that against reality. Over the last 50 years, the exact period you're calling economic distress, the United States has quadrupled its real GDP, led the world in innovation, tech, and productivity, attracted more global capital than any other country, maintained the world's reserve currency and deepest capital markets, seen stock market valuations and wealth creation explode, and we have greater manufacturing output on a real level than any point in our history. That's not distress. That's a reflection of our economic strength specifically the strength of our internal consumption, capital access, and stability. We run trade deficits not because we're weak, but because the world wants to invest here more than we want to export. That's a privilege, not a pathology.
And if trade surpluses are the real metric of national health, then maybe you'd like to trade places with Russia or Venezuela. They've run surpluses. How's their "economic vitality" working out? Let's deal in facts not economic nostalgia dressed up as wisdom.
I don't think you realize it, but you just acknowledged what the textbooks say about export-led growth = powerful, sustainable, transformative. If it can transform a poor country with cheap labor, weak currency, and a limited domestic market into a peer competitor of the mightiest nation on earth in scarcely more than 20 years, imagine what it could do for a stronger country! Trade surpluses did not cause the Chinese pathologies you cite. Poor policy decisions did. They chose to invest enormous sums to build their military into a peer competitor of the mightiest nation on earth, rather than build a consumer market. More importantly, they continued the folly of central economic planning.
You're conflating causation with correlation. Export led growth worked for China because it was a poor country (still is in many categories), not in spite of that fact. When you're starting from the bottom, export surpluses can jumpstart industrialization, especially if you have cheap labor, weak currency, and minimal domestic demand. That's not a model for advanced economies. In fact whatever magical outcome you think tariffs are going to create, we will still have SIGNIFICANT trade deficits even after whatever rebalancing occurs, perhaps even more, because our demand way outpaces our capacity.
China's current unraveling is tied to that model. Export dependence without domestic consumption capacity is a brittle system. The moment global demand shifts or geopolitical risks rise, their economy suffers.
Because what we're doing is not sustainable. It is not trade. It is just consumption financed by giving away equity in our assets.
This is straight insanity built around the political lie of how poor things are going for Americans, including middle class and blue collar Americans. You're describing a system that has powered unprecedented wealth creation, global stability, and American dominance for over half a century, and labeling it unsustainable without actual evidence (not political platitudes) it's failing. Running trade deficits is trade. We exchange dollars, which the world demands as the reserve currency, for goods and services. In return, foreign capital flows back into the U.S. to buy treasuries, equities, real estate, or to invest in American businesses. That's not "giving away equity," it's a global vote of confidence in U.S. assets and institutions. Not to mention capital in-flows that creates jobs, just like the type you like to brag about Trump bringing in.
If this arrangement were inherently unsustainable, we would have seen structural decay. Instead, we've seen the U.S. lead the world in GDP growth, capital inflows, technological innovation, and market liquidity. What you're criticizing isn't a flaw, it's a feature of being the financial and consumption center of the global economy.
Tell us you do not understand the subject material without saying you do not understand the subject material. Trade is LESS important to us than our trading partners, for the reason you cited (85% domestic consumption). The problem with the capital inflows is that they involve a loss of equity that escalates pressure on the foundation of the globalist model - the strong dollar. At. Some, Point. the house of cards will collapse. We have to create products to attract foreign held dollars rather than offering up ever greater shares of equities. "Goods for equity" is not trade. It's payment for consumption.
I don't understand the subject?? Are you reading yourself? You say trade is less important to us than to our partners (agreed), then in the same breath act like our entire economic system is teetering on collapse because of a trade deficit that's been with us for five decades… during which we've become the global financial, technological, and investment powerhouse. WTH?? I guess it goes back to your fundamental misunderstanding of the economic reality that we produce Trillions in goods and services that bring in an even greater amount of foreign investment (Trump didn't invent that), not to mention much of it being the same dollars used to purchase imports. What do you think makes up that 85%?? Do you not understand that we're producing and consuming within our borders 85% of our total economic activity? That 85% is more GDP than any country in the world by a matter of several trillions of dollars to the closest (China).
What you cite is not a contradiction. It's a fallacy built on the absolutely insane premise that trade deficits are such a good thing that we must not only continue them but grow them as high as we can! The more we have, the richer we become! (because of all the things we got from handing equity over to foreign interests).
What a complete misrepresentation. No one is saying we should drive trade deficits as high as we can, or that we should aim to maximize them, that's your strawman. What I've pointed out is that trade deficits, particularly for a large, consumption-driven, capital-attracting economy like the U.S., are not inherently destructive. They're a byproduct of our strength, not a symptom of decay.
And again, you still haven't answered the contradiction. If trade is a small portion of our economy, how is the trade deficit supposedly destroying it? You can't say trade is marginal and existential at the same time unless your entire argument is driven by populist talking points rather than economic understanding.
More theory, with implicit assumption that other countries never take any steps (currency, tariffs, quotas, subsidies, etc...) to restrict our imports or propel their exports. Tariffs reshape demand, to offset unfair trading practices. They give our industries a chance to recover, to grow, to become more efficient, etc..... China does not have the same cost advantage they had 30 years ago. Mexico either. And, of course, Canada and Japan and EU have no inherent labor cost advantage over us at all. I mean, stand back and look at how silly your point is. We were a trade surplus production oriented economy with high tariffs throughout our rise the the mightiest country on earth....the "arsenal of democracy." We didn't have then all those pathologies China has now, did we? I mean, history laughs at what you're trying to sell here.
Theory? You're arguing policy from an outdated library book. You're leaning hard on a romanticized version of U.S. economic history while sidestepping the very real, structural consequences of tariffs in today's globally integrated economy. No one is denying that countries use tools to influence trade, what I'm saying is that the modern global supply chain doesn't respond well to brute force policies like blanket tariffs, because the U.S. economy is now deeply intertwined with those supply chains in ways it wasn't during the 1940s.
Your comparison to the "arsenal of democracy" era is laughably outdated. Back then, the world was rebuilding, we had no global competition, labor costs were artificially low, and we weren't operating in real-time global markets optimized around logistics, speed, and scale. That world doesn't exist anymore.
And no, tariffs don't just "reshape demand", they distort it. They inject cost and uncertainty into systems that rely on efficiency and predictability. A few percentage points of input cost on a key component sourced abroad can ripple through a company's pricing, margins, and ultimately its ability to hire or invest. We're seeing that in real time. And that's before we even talk about retaliation, lost exports, or missed investment due to uncertainty. But the problem to be solved is our competitiveness. Most tariff structures into other countries are relatively low. But we still can't compete unless we produce locally, including in Europe and Asia. Lower tariffs from foreign countries will actually accelerate that, just like with Apple, as it will lower the cost of importing inputs, so producing locally is more economical.
And why is that? Must it always be so? Are you really saying we have no hope of ever making red iron again?
You're proving my point again by skipping over the why and diving headfirst into the what if. The reason we don't have scalable domestic alternatives for many goods isn't because we've somehow forgotten how to produce "red iron," it's because the economics, infrastructure, workforce, and regulatory landscape no longer support it.
Reviving heavy industrial production in the U.S. isn't as simple as waving a tariff wand and chanting "Make Iron Great Again." We're decades removed from the capital investments, skilled labor pipelines, permitting frameworks, and environmental standards that would even make such industries feasible here again. And more importantly, we've moved up the value chain (including in steel). The U.S. specializes in advanced manufacturing, high-value services, and intellectual property precisely because those are our comparative strengths in a modern economy.
You keep pining for a version of America that was built for the 1940s war machine, not the realities of 2025. If you're serious about re-industrializing, start with proposals for skills training, infrastructure overhaul, and regulatory reform. Until then, stop pretending tariffs will magically bring back a supply chain we no longer have and no longer need in the same form.
Never? Why will our robots be more costly to run than Chinese robots? Why must we PLAN on using our AI to design automated production lines in someone else's country?
Thank you again for reinforcing my argument. Yes, automation is the future. Yes, robots, AI, and capital-intensive manufacturing are where things are headed. But here's the part you keep skipping, those sectors don't generate the broad-based, blue-collar job resurgence you keep fantasizing about. They create high-skill, high-efficiency operations with minimal labor input. If you'll simply acknowledge that particular point at least I know we're speaking a similar language.
And if you think it's just a matter of flipping a switch to "robot mode," you've clearly never had to navigate the U.S. regulatory jungle, infrastructure gaps, workforce training shortfalls, or permitting delays. That's why companies building AI driven production lines in the U.S. are still struggling with cost overruns, staffing gaps, and productivity inefficiencies. TSMC in Arizona being exhibit A.
The very reason many of these investments happen abroad isn't because we can't build robots, it's because the entire ecosystem needed to support next gen manufacturing is more functional elsewhere. If we want to change that, the answer isn't punitive tariffs or industrial cosplay. It's targeted investments in infrastructure, skills, and regulatory reform, the very solutions you continually dismiss in favor of short-term coercion. We've put the cart so far ahead of the horse we could face unintended loss of market share as other countries rebalance and we're left with empty rhetorics and years from actual productive capacity.
LOL you are imputing what your argument needs. Hasn't Trump said something about energy dominance, reopening coal plants, turning the EPA into an agency that will help propel growht, etc....? (might not the messaging we do hear belie an agenda to make precisely the changes you cite (correctly) as necessary?) Why do you assume such is NOT happening?
"Hasn't Trump said something" is doing a lot of heavy lifting here. Oh he's said plenty. About energy dominance, coal, the EPA, even tariffs paying down the national debt and replacing the income tax. You're confusing rhetorical posture with strategic execution. Deregulation and industrial reinvestment don't magically happen because someone tweeted about coal. Real reform means overhauling permitting timelines, environmental reviews, zoning codes, labor credentialing, and skills pipelines, none of which have been meaningfully addressed, let alone reformed, under this administration's chaotic approach. The aforementioned actually requires Congress, and negotiation, and strategic coordination. Enough bombast, let's get to the real work.
LOL we've built an advantage by being an enormous consumer markets that our trade partners cannot do without.....each of them face economic calamity if frozen out of our markets. yes. That is power. But it is not a sustainable position long-term. It is the "too big to fail" model.....a customer that owes so much to the bank that the bankers cannot abandon it without running existential risk.
Ah yes, the "too big to fail" customer theory, as if being the center of global consumption, investment, and innovation is somehow a liability rather than a strength. You're describing what the rest of the world calls leverage. The same leverage that if we didn't have, Trump could just as well be yelling into the ocean in his tariff efforts.
The U.S. economy thrives because it is capital rich, highly productive, and structurally diversified, not because it's trying to match every nation unit-for-unit in basic production. We've built value by leading in design, IP, high-value manufacturing, software, biotech, aerospace, defense systems, cloud infrastructure, and more. These are sectors that not only pay far more than mass assembly labor, but define the global economy. We don't need to replicate Bangladesh's industrial model to remain dominant. We need to maintain what works, and strategically invest where it matters, not burn it all down out of some populist fantasy that economic power only counts if it's pouring molten steel.
Again, you are simply in over your head. How can you not see that the trade deficit facilitates financing of the budget deficit? The trade deficit creates an ocean of surplus dollars abroad seeking a place to call home - T-bills, stocks, bonds, real estate, etc... Surplus USD is what fed the sub-prime crisis.....we were running out of assets to facilitate capital in-flow, to the point we started putting literal junk....loans no sane banker would ever make unless coerced to do so....into mortgage backed securities.
Buddy, you're so lost you're making up invented causations. Invoking the subprime crisis as a byproduct of trade flows? LOL, that's straight fiction. That meltdown was caused by loose domestic credit standards, regulatory blind spots, and financial engineering run amok, not because we imported too many Hyundai Elantras. You're assigning global macro blame to local greed and misregulation. I think it's time to burn your business degrees and maybe catch some classes that understand the world economy after the Internet was deployed.
LOL again, "tell me you don't understand the subject material without saying you don't understand the subject material.
Listen, if you had a serious counterpoint, you'd offer it. But you didn't. Because deep down, you probably know I'm right, you just can't say it out loud without undercutting the whole house of cards argument you've built around tariffs solving problems they were never designed to. The debt crisis in the U.S. is driven by structural entitlement spending, excessive discretionary spending, and a stagnant tax base, not trade deficits. That's not a controversial take, it's fiscal policy 101.
They're not stumbling over it. They stomping it flat as a pancake, because it no longer well serves the common good of the American people.
You're not "stomping" anything flat, you're bulldozing with your eyes closed and calling it vision.
LOL the wish-casting is thinking that continuing to do the same kinds of negotiation within the current model is going to generate different, much less transformative results.
No, the actual wish-casting is believing that lobbing tariffs like grenades while improvising policy on the fly is somehow going to produce a coherent economic renaissance. What you call "transformation" is just chaos in a nice suit. I've been clear about the need for reform with strategic reshoring in critical industries, workforce upskilling, regulatory modernization, and infrastructure investment. That's how you drive transformation. What I reject is the fantasy that disruption for disruption's sake, with no plan, no timelines, no metrics is anything but political theater.
So you say there will be some benefits, but if they don't match the rhetoric they're a failure? (you're flailing....)
No, pointing out the gap between political bluster and actual outcomes isn't flailing, it's basic accountability. When you promise a revolution and deliver a marginal renegotiation, people are allowed to ask what happened to the rest of the plan.
I've said all along some investment? Great. Lower foreign tariffs? Fantastic. But let's not confuse tactical scraps for strategic victories. What you're flailing at is trying to retroactively scale down expectations to match reality, while pretending it was the plan all along. It wasn't. You're selling "industrial revival" and "tariff driven rebalancing." What we're getting is selective reshuffling, higher consumer prices, and a confused policy landscape.
It validates what I have said here repeatedly - "trade policy always serves national security policy." Yes, it would have been nice if we could have brought those jobs home, but we did not have the sills base and infrastructure to do so on such short notice. Soon, thanks to $8T+ in announced foreign investments in (disproportionately tech) production, will be able to do so. But forcing those jobs out of China NOW was a huge win for the US. It was a flexing of muscles to remind our adversary to be very, very careful.
Ah, so now moving Apple's supply chain from China to India, not the U.S., is suddenly a "huge win" for the United States? That's a stretch even for this debate. Certainly a positive but you're stretching for wins. If anything, it underscores the limits of tariffs. They didn't bring jobs home, they rerouted them to the next lowest cost, scalable option. And about that $8 trillion in "announced" investment? Let's be honest, those numbers are inflated political confetti. Much of it is going toward data centers, AI, and automation heavy projects that generate capital efficiency, not widespread job creation. Foreign investment is great, but you don't get to count that as proof of domestic manufacturing revival and complain that we're selling off equity to foreigners in the same breath.
No, it's just shaking you by the collar to quit regurgitating mantras about how globalism will cure all ills at no cost whatsoever.
If there's a collar to shake, it's the one of anyone still buying into the fantasy that slapping tariffs on allies, driving up costs for Americans, and disrupting capital flows will somehow revive a 1950s economic model in a 2025 world. I've put forward actual reform ideas which I won't repeat for the 25th time. You just put forward slogans and a "trust me, it'll work" playbook. Only one of us is thinking beyond the bumper sticker.
We are indeed powerful, but it is because of consumption, not production, and that is an imbalance which we cannot continue. China outstrips us in steel & shipbuilding by margins that are dire and imminent strategic threats. And that is a symptom of a broader problem....we can't rifle-shot a fix for the steel & ships problem unless we just tariff ourselves a protected bubble, in which we would indeed risk the pathologies you have cited about tariffs. We have to work more broadly to bring substantial percentages of production back home. Not all of it. just enough to get to an overall trade balance.
You're right about one thing. This is a broader problem. But your proposed solution of trying to tariff our way back to industrial glory is the economic equivalent of using duct tape to fix a leaking dam.
As for steel and shipbuilding, let's cut through the nostalgia. Those industries declined not because of sabotage or neglect but because other countries outproduced and outsubsidized us, and our economy evolved toward more efficient and high-value sectors. Want to regain some strategic domestic capacity? Fine, especially in defense. Then focus on the real levers, deregulation, permitting reform, skills training, and R&D. Oh yeah, how about some new legislation directing defense dollars in that direction? You claim we can't "rifle-shot" the fix, but that's exactly what's needed, strategic precision, not economic carpet bombing.
LOL why is it ok for others to engage in mercantilism against us and wrong for us to resist it, to try to create a more level field for competition? The trade deficit, its length, size, and its trend, is hardly a sign of strength, it's a sign of economic dysfunction, distress, destruction....
you are correct to cite that the world economy is a big & complicated thing. You are wrong to presume that we cannot change it to our benefit. Doing so cannot be done with an exacto knife. We've got to swing a sledge hammer to crack loose the rusty bolts of an enormous superstructure operating to our disadvantage. I mean, we run a $235B trade deficit with the EU, give them US equities to pay for it, then have to spend borrowed money to go defend the EU from the Houthis. How can we miss the irony in that...?
We cannot fail at this, and we will not. Trump is right on the big picture. He is right on the tactics of how to get there. Watch & wait. "Golden Age of America" is good political messaging for the masses, the kind of narrative building that any successful movement must do. In reality, he's indeed building a new world order.....the old one in which I got a BBA and an MBA is receiving a long-overdue coup d'grace. A new one is going to emerge. Historic times. If you don't quit *****ing, you'll miss it.
Trump as architect of a "new world order," complete with a sledgehammer in one hand and a YouTube diploma in the other. It's amazing how often "strategic brilliance" looks exactly like improvisation, chaos, and economic volatility, but hey, slap "historic times" on it and call it a renaissance.
Let's start with your continued mercantilism dodge. No one's saying we can't always work to improve our position in the global economy. Heck, running an international business, I do it all the time. Nor that we shouldn't push back on unfair trade practices. We do through WTO cases, bilateral agreements, export controls, CFIUS reviews, and strategic investment. But the answer isn't to become the thing you're criticizing, like blanket tariffs, economic self isolation, and "if they cheat, so can we" policies, which are how weak nations like China react, not leaders. And swinging a sledgehammer at the global system that made us the most powerful economy in history is the height of reckless populist theater.
You want a trade surplus with the EU? Make products they need, at competitive prices, under regulatory regimes that don't chase investment away. But no, instead we blame our allies while continuing to flood federal spending through entitlements no one wants to touch and pretending like a trade deficit is what broke the piggy bank.
If your best pitch is, "trust the chaos, it's historic," you've already lost the economic argument.
boognish_bear said:JUST IN: 🇺🇸 President Trump says Fed Chair Jerome Powell is a "FOOL, who doesn't have a clue."
— Watcher.Guru (@WatcherGuru) May 8, 2025
nein51 said:FLBear5630 said:LIB,MR BEARS said:what is your argument if a year from now most tariffs are at 0/0?RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:
It is amazing to me that the Trump loyalists have not yet figured out that "The entire world has ripped us off for 50 years" actually translates to Americans have been able to purchase inexpensive products from the whole world for 50 years and I am going to put a stop to that.
Call it a tax, and the people are outraged! Call it a tariff and they get out their checkbook and wave the American flag. I really don't care where my toilet plunger and fidget spinners are made.
Free trade. Doesn't change tariffs being a tax, nor does it remedy what it did to those having to deal with the current tarrif situation, which isn't a hypothetical 0/0
Free trade is a myth. Free trade relies on both sides of the trade to be somewhat equal. That's near impossible as commodities are…well, commodities.
So 100lbs of wheat for 10lbs of steel may work for both parties until the wheat gets destroyed in shipping or a bug destroys the crop which changes the supply, which, in turn changes the value of the trade.
Free trade also doesn't work when players don't use the same rule book. China largely doesn't use child labor any more but they definitely did which meant production costs were dramatically lower. That creates a trade imbalance whereby free trade cannot exist.
I don't like tariffs, I don't like the current model but it's disingenuous to pretend like free trade is really possible.
If it's 0/0, then there would be no tariffs from either side.FLBear5630 said:LIB,MR BEARS said:what is your argument if a year from now most tariffs are at 0/0?RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:
It is amazing to me that the Trump loyalists have not yet figured out that "The entire world has ripped us off for 50 years" actually translates to Americans have been able to purchase inexpensive products from the whole world for 50 years and I am going to put a stop to that.
Call it a tax, and the people are outraged! Call it a tariff and they get out their checkbook and wave the American flag. I really don't care where my toilet plunger and fidget spinners are made.
Free trade. Doesn't change tariffs being a tax, nor does it remedy what it did to those having to deal with the current tarrif situation, which isn't a hypothetical 0/0
If that happens, I will owe Donald Trump and many on this board an apology. I will gladly eat my crow with a little Bearnaise sauce. Let's see what happens.LIB,MR BEARS said:what is your argument if a year from now most tariffs are at 0/0?RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:
It is amazing to me that the Trump loyalists have not yet figured out that "The entire world has ripped us off for 50 years" actually translates to Americans have been able to purchase inexpensive products from the whole world for 50 years and I am going to put a stop to that.
Call it a tax, and the people are outraged! Call it a tariff and they get out their checkbook and wave the American flag. I really don't care where my toilet plunger and fidget spinners are made.
That is the difference between taxes and tariffs; you will still be paying your taxes. The tariff will be overRD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:If that happens, I will owe Donald Trump and many on this board an apology. I will gladly eat my crow with a little Bearnaise sauce. Let's see what happens.LIB,MR BEARS said:what is your argument if a year from now most tariffs are at 0/0?RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:
It is amazing to me that the Trump loyalists have not yet figured out that "The entire world has ripped us off for 50 years" actually translates to Americans have been able to purchase inexpensive products from the whole world for 50 years and I am going to put a stop to that.
Call it a tax, and the people are outraged! Call it a tariff and they get out their checkbook and wave the American flag. I really don't care where my toilet plunger and fidget spinners are made.
Bottom line is tariffs are a tax. Many have still not figured that out yet.Assassin said:That is the difference between taxes and tariffs; you will still be paying your taxes. The tariff will be overRD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:If that happens, I will owe Donald Trump and many on this board an apology. I will gladly eat my crow with a little Bearnaise sauce. Let's see what happens.LIB,MR BEARS said:what is your argument if a year from now most tariffs are at 0/0?RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:
It is amazing to me that the Trump loyalists have not yet figured out that "The entire world has ripped us off for 50 years" actually translates to Americans have been able to purchase inexpensive products from the whole world for 50 years and I am going to put a stop to that.
Call it a tax, and the people are outraged! Call it a tariff and they get out their checkbook and wave the American flag. I really don't care where my toilet plunger and fidget spinners are made.
RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:Bottom line is tariffs are a tax. Many have still not figured that out yet.Assassin said:That is the difference between taxes and tariffs; you will still be paying your taxes. The tariff will be overRD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:If that happens, I will owe Donald Trump and many on this board an apology. I will gladly eat my crow with a little Bearnaise sauce. Let's see what happens.LIB,MR BEARS said:what is your argument if a year from now most tariffs are at 0/0?RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:
It is amazing to me that the Trump loyalists have not yet figured out that "The entire world has ripped us off for 50 years" actually translates to Americans have been able to purchase inexpensive products from the whole world for 50 years and I am going to put a stop to that.
Call it a tax, and the people are outraged! Call it a tariff and they get out their checkbook and wave the American flag. I really don't care where my toilet plunger and fidget spinners are made.
How many of those countries impose taxes against us?KaiBear said:RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:Bottom line is tariffs are a tax. Many have still not figured that out yet.Assassin said:That is the difference between taxes and tariffs; you will still be paying your taxes. The tariff will be overRD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:If that happens, I will owe Donald Trump and many on this board an apology. I will gladly eat my crow with a little Bearnaise sauce. Let's see what happens.LIB,MR BEARS said:what is your argument if a year from now most tariffs are at 0/0?RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:
It is amazing to me that the Trump loyalists have not yet figured out that "The entire world has ripped us off for 50 years" actually translates to Americans have been able to purchase inexpensive products from the whole world for 50 years and I am going to put a stop to that.
Call it a tax, and the people are outraged! Call it a tariff and they get out their checkbook and wave the American flag. I really don't care where my toilet plunger and fidget spinners are made.
Then its strange how many countries employ tariffs against us.
If they do nothing but 'hurt' their people....why do they employ tariffs ?
For chuckles and grins ?
Still waiting for your answer if you have a job and are you currently receiving govt. subsidies. I don't expect an answer because it is grossly apparent the answer. How ironic you call everyone leftist, TDSers, Democrats ect, but you fit the bill of a leftist Democrat feeding at the govt trough. Will be waiting to hear what you do for work and how that qualifies you to be such an economic expert. Please dude.J.R. said:Did you get a job yet and quit feeding off the govt teet or are we still financing your social safety net? Please answer the question, Assman. Do you have a job? Do you pay taxes? Do you take Social Security or any other govt based subsidies? Do you have health insurance? Where does it come from? I think we know the answers, but waiting for you to answer.Assassin said:You're so well spoken.J.R. said:
I was just curious how many of those 100's of beautiful deals has Trumpy completed? uh, that would be zero. Once again, ole fat boy bully continues to write checks his arse can't cash. What a clown. Not only does he look like a complete fool, so do his minions, Old83, Little Johnny, Tin Man, Assman. All part of the plan bros!
Let's examine this "full and comprehensive" trade "deal" with the UK:
— BonkDaCarnivore (@BonkDaCarnivore) May 8, 2025
-The 10% tariffs on goods from the UK into the US remains (so no relief for taxpayers)
-It DOES include lower tariff quotas for UK steel and car exports. Note the use of the word "quotas", so essentially it… pic.twitter.com/Ev0gfIFj1o
They do it to protect certain industries. Trump is doing it to try to generate revenue (he would never say that out loud).KaiBear said:RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:Bottom line is tariffs are a tax. Many have still not figured that out yet.Assassin said:That is the difference between taxes and tariffs; you will still be paying your taxes. The tariff will be overRD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:If that happens, I will owe Donald Trump and many on this board an apology. I will gladly eat my crow with a little Bearnaise sauce. Let's see what happens.LIB,MR BEARS said:what is your argument if a year from now most tariffs are at 0/0?RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:
It is amazing to me that the Trump loyalists have not yet figured out that "The entire world has ripped us off for 50 years" actually translates to Americans have been able to purchase inexpensive products from the whole world for 50 years and I am going to put a stop to that.
Call it a tax, and the people are outraged! Call it a tariff and they get out their checkbook and wave the American flag. I really don't care where my toilet plunger and fidget spinners are made.
Then its strange how many countries employ tariffs against us.
If they do nothing but 'hurt' their people....why do they employ tariffs ?
For chuckles and grins ?
J.R. said:Still waiting for your answer if you have a job and are you currently receiving govt. subsidies. I don't expect an answer because it is grossly apparent the answer. How ironic you call everyone leftist, TDSers, Democrats ect, but you fit the bill of a leftist Democrat feeding at the govt trough. Will be waiting to hear what you do for work and how that qualifies you to be such an economic expert. Please dude.J.R. said:Did you get a job yet and quit feeding off the govt teet or are we still financing your social safety net? Please answer the question, Assman. Do you have a job? Do you pay taxes? Do you take Social Security or any other govt based subsidies? Do you have health insurance? Where does it come from? I think we know the answers, but waiting for you to answer.Assassin said:You're so well spoken.J.R. said:
I was just curious how many of those 100's of beautiful deals has Trumpy completed? uh, that would be zero. Once again, ole fat boy bully continues to write checks his arse can't cash. What a clown. Not only does he look like a complete fool, so do his minions, Old83, Little Johnny, Tin Man, Assman. All part of the plan bros!
We have all the leverage which is why we need to make the rules regardless of what's fair.FLBear5630 said:nein51 said:FLBear5630 said:LIB,MR BEARS said:what is your argument if a year from now most tariffs are at 0/0?RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:
It is amazing to me that the Trump loyalists have not yet figured out that "The entire world has ripped us off for 50 years" actually translates to Americans have been able to purchase inexpensive products from the whole world for 50 years and I am going to put a stop to that.
Call it a tax, and the people are outraged! Call it a tariff and they get out their checkbook and wave the American flag. I really don't care where my toilet plunger and fidget spinners are made.
Free trade. Doesn't change tariffs being a tax, nor does it remedy what it did to those having to deal with the current tarrif situation, which isn't a hypothetical 0/0
Free trade is a myth. Free trade relies on both sides of the trade to be somewhat equal. That's near impossible as commodities are…well, commodities.
So 100lbs of wheat for 10lbs of steel may work for both parties until the wheat gets destroyed in shipping or a bug destroys the crop which changes the supply, which, in turn changes the value of the trade.
Free trade also doesn't work when players don't use the same rule book. China largely doesn't use child labor any more but they definitely did which meant production costs were dramatically lower. That creates a trade imbalance whereby free trade cannot exist.
I don't like tariffs, I don't like the current model but it's disingenuous to pretend like free trade is really possible.
He asked the hypothetical. No tariffs is as close to free trade as you get. Hell even 0/0 tariffs ain't happening. Everyone ALWAYS feels they are getting ****ed. Talk to Canadians and their policies are fair due to size differential. Talk to Japan, their policies are fair to protect their culture and intellectual property. Talk to China, the US has exploited Asia so their policies are fair. You guys keep acting like there is one perspective. None of these Nations believe they are screwing the US.
Doc Holliday said:We have all the leverage which is why we need to make the rules regardless of what's fair.FLBear5630 said:nein51 said:FLBear5630 said:LIB,MR BEARS said:what is your argument if a year from now most tariffs are at 0/0?RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:
It is amazing to me that the Trump loyalists have not yet figured out that "The entire world has ripped us off for 50 years" actually translates to Americans have been able to purchase inexpensive products from the whole world for 50 years and I am going to put a stop to that.
Call it a tax, and the people are outraged! Call it a tariff and they get out their checkbook and wave the American flag. I really don't care where my toilet plunger and fidget spinners are made.
Free trade. Doesn't change tariffs being a tax, nor does it remedy what it did to those having to deal with the current tarrif situation, which isn't a hypothetical 0/0
Free trade is a myth. Free trade relies on both sides of the trade to be somewhat equal. That's near impossible as commodities are…well, commodities.
So 100lbs of wheat for 10lbs of steel may work for both parties until the wheat gets destroyed in shipping or a bug destroys the crop which changes the supply, which, in turn changes the value of the trade.
Free trade also doesn't work when players don't use the same rule book. China largely doesn't use child labor any more but they definitely did which meant production costs were dramatically lower. That creates a trade imbalance whereby free trade cannot exist.
I don't like tariffs, I don't like the current model but it's disingenuous to pretend like free trade is really possible.
He asked the hypothetical. No tariffs is as close to free trade as you get. Hell even 0/0 tariffs ain't happening. Everyone ALWAYS feels they are getting ****ed. Talk to Canadians and their policies are fair due to size differential. Talk to Japan, their policies are fair to protect their culture and intellectual property. Talk to China, the US has exploited Asia so their policies are fair. You guys keep acting like there is one perspective. None of these Nations believe they are screwing the US.
Good grief no.RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:They do it to protect certain industries. Trump is doing it to try to generate revenue (he would never say that out loud).KaiBear said:RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:Bottom line is tariffs are a tax. Many have still not figured that out yet.Assassin said:That is the difference between taxes and tariffs; you will still be paying your taxes. The tariff will be overRD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:If that happens, I will owe Donald Trump and many on this board an apology. I will gladly eat my crow with a little Bearnaise sauce. Let's see what happens.LIB,MR BEARS said:what is your argument if a year from now most tariffs are at 0/0?RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:
It is amazing to me that the Trump loyalists have not yet figured out that "The entire world has ripped us off for 50 years" actually translates to Americans have been able to purchase inexpensive products from the whole world for 50 years and I am going to put a stop to that.
Call it a tax, and the people are outraged! Call it a tariff and they get out their checkbook and wave the American flag. I really don't care where my toilet plunger and fidget spinners are made.
Then its strange how many countries employ tariffs against us.
If they do nothing but 'hurt' their people....why do they employ tariffs ?
For chuckles and grins ?
Tariffs are actually good in cases of dumping. Dumping is when companies sell products in a market cheaper than they sell the same products in their own market and are often government subsidized.
To just use an across the board tariff approach (including our allies) is reckless and irresponsible. They eliminate competition, make companies become lazy, and prices go higher. It is just that simple.
huge difference IMO. Musk is creating value and new technologies and responsible for all of his businesses. Musk has taken all the risk. Does Musk feed on govt teet? Damn right he does, but our gov't permits it. He is adding value and jobs, not draining the system with no positive inputs. My issue with the Assman is the blatant hypocrisy. He runs everyone down calling them TDS'er, Democrats , leftists ect when in fact. He's just. like many of the folks he is chitting on.FLBear5630 said:J.R. said:Still waiting for your answer if you have a job and are you currently receiving govt. subsidies. I don't expect an answer because it is grossly apparent the answer. How ironic you call everyone leftist, TDSers, Democrats ect, but you fit the bill of a leftist Democrat feeding at the govt trough. Will be waiting to hear what you do for work and how that qualifies you to be such an economic expert. Please dude.J.R. said:Did you get a job yet and quit feeding off the govt teet or are we still financing your social safety net? Please answer the question, Assman. Do you have a job? Do you pay taxes? Do you take Social Security or any other govt based subsidies? Do you have health insurance? Where does it come from? I think we know the answers, but waiting for you to answer.Assassin said:You're so well spoken.J.R. said:
I was just curious how many of those 100's of beautiful deals has Trumpy completed? uh, that would be zero. Once again, ole fat boy bully continues to write checks his arse can't cash. What a clown. Not only does he look like a complete fool, so do his minions, Old83, Little Johnny, Tin Man, Assman. All part of the plan bros!
Even if he is, how does thAt make him different than Musk. I would bet that almost all major companies have some contract, subsidy, bailout or project with the Feds. You don't require outsourcing work, run government as a business and not have government money throughout the economy.
We are virtually at "full employment". The only folks that don't have a job don't want a job.KaiBear said:Good grief no.RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:They do it to protect certain industries. Trump is doing it to try to generate revenue (he would never say that out loud).KaiBear said:RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:Bottom line is tariffs are a tax. Many have still not figured that out yet.Assassin said:That is the difference between taxes and tariffs; you will still be paying your taxes. The tariff will be overRD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:If that happens, I will owe Donald Trump and many on this board an apology. I will gladly eat my crow with a little Bearnaise sauce. Let's see what happens.LIB,MR BEARS said:what is your argument if a year from now most tariffs are at 0/0?RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:
It is amazing to me that the Trump loyalists have not yet figured out that "The entire world has ripped us off for 50 years" actually translates to Americans have been able to purchase inexpensive products from the whole world for 50 years and I am going to put a stop to that.
Call it a tax, and the people are outraged! Call it a tariff and they get out their checkbook and wave the American flag. I really don't care where my toilet plunger and fidget spinners are made.
Then its strange how many countries employ tariffs against us.
If they do nothing but 'hurt' their people....why do they employ tariffs ?
For chuckles and grins ?
Tariffs are actually good in cases of dumping. Dumping is when companies sell products in a market cheaper than they sell the same products in their own market and are often government subsidized.
To just use an across the board tariff approach (including our allies) is reckless and irresponsible. They eliminate competition, make companies become lazy, and prices go higher. It is just that simple.
He has said repeatedly his first concern is to restore middle class jobs to the US.
Too many of these jobs are below 30 dollars an hour and / or without benefits.RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:We are virtually at "full employment". The only folks that don't have a job don't want a job.KaiBear said:Good grief no.RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:They do it to protect certain industries. Trump is doing it to try to generate revenue (he would never say that out loud).KaiBear said:RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:Bottom line is tariffs are a tax. Many have still not figured that out yet.Assassin said:That is the difference between taxes and tariffs; you will still be paying your taxes. The tariff will be overRD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:If that happens, I will owe Donald Trump and many on this board an apology. I will gladly eat my crow with a little Bearnaise sauce. Let's see what happens.LIB,MR BEARS said:what is your argument if a year from now most tariffs are at 0/0?RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:
It is amazing to me that the Trump loyalists have not yet figured out that "The entire world has ripped us off for 50 years" actually translates to Americans have been able to purchase inexpensive products from the whole world for 50 years and I am going to put a stop to that.
Call it a tax, and the people are outraged! Call it a tariff and they get out their checkbook and wave the American flag. I really don't care where my toilet plunger and fidget spinners are made.
Then its strange how many countries employ tariffs against us.
If they do nothing but 'hurt' their people....why do they employ tariffs ?
For chuckles and grins ?
Tariffs are actually good in cases of dumping. Dumping is when companies sell products in a market cheaper than they sell the same products in their own market and are often government subsidized.
To just use an across the board tariff approach (including our allies) is reckless and irresponsible. They eliminate competition, make companies become lazy, and prices go higher. It is just that simple.
He has said repeatedly his first concern is to restore middle class jobs to the US.
$20 to $30 an hour is a pretty good gig for folks without a college education. That is if they don't have a drug or luxury watch addiction.KaiBear said:Too many of these jobs are below 30 dollars an hour and / or without benefits.RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:We are virtually at "full employment". The only folks that don't have a job don't want a job.KaiBear said:Good grief no.RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:They do it to protect certain industries. Trump is doing it to try to generate revenue (he would never say that out loud).KaiBear said:RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:Bottom line is tariffs are a tax. Many have still not figured that out yet.Assassin said:That is the difference between taxes and tariffs; you will still be paying your taxes. The tariff will be overRD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:If that happens, I will owe Donald Trump and many on this board an apology. I will gladly eat my crow with a little Bearnaise sauce. Let's see what happens.LIB,MR BEARS said:what is your argument if a year from now most tariffs are at 0/0?RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:
It is amazing to me that the Trump loyalists have not yet figured out that "The entire world has ripped us off for 50 years" actually translates to Americans have been able to purchase inexpensive products from the whole world for 50 years and I am going to put a stop to that.
Call it a tax, and the people are outraged! Call it a tariff and they get out their checkbook and wave the American flag. I really don't care where my toilet plunger and fidget spinners are made.
Then its strange how many countries employ tariffs against us.
If they do nothing but 'hurt' their people....why do they employ tariffs ?
For chuckles and grins ?
Tariffs are actually good in cases of dumping. Dumping is when companies sell products in a market cheaper than they sell the same products in their own market and are often government subsidized.
To just use an across the board tariff approach (including our allies) is reckless and irresponsible. They eliminate competition, make companies become lazy, and prices go higher. It is just that simple.
He has said repeatedly his first concern is to restore middle class jobs to the US.
We have to get back to industrial self reliance.
J.R. said:huge difference IMO. Musk is creating value and new technologies and responsible for all of his businesses. Musk has taken all the risk. Does Musk feed on govt teet? Damn right he does, but our gov't permits it. He is adding value and jobs, not draining the system with no positive inputs. My issue with the Assman is the blatant hypocrisy. He runs everyone down calling them TDS'er, Democrats , leftists ect when in fact. He's just. like many of the folks he is chitting on.FLBear5630 said:J.R. said:Still waiting for your answer if you have a job and are you currently receiving govt. subsidies. I don't expect an answer because it is grossly apparent the answer. How ironic you call everyone leftist, TDSers, Democrats ect, but you fit the bill of a leftist Democrat feeding at the govt trough. Will be waiting to hear what you do for work and how that qualifies you to be such an economic expert. Please dude.J.R. said:Did you get a job yet and quit feeding off the govt teet or are we still financing your social safety net? Please answer the question, Assman. Do you have a job? Do you pay taxes? Do you take Social Security or any other govt based subsidies? Do you have health insurance? Where does it come from? I think we know the answers, but waiting for you to answer.Assassin said:You're so well spoken.J.R. said:
I was just curious how many of those 100's of beautiful deals has Trumpy completed? uh, that would be zero. Once again, ole fat boy bully continues to write checks his arse can't cash. What a clown. Not only does he look like a complete fool, so do his minions, Old83, Little Johnny, Tin Man, Assman. All part of the plan bros!
Even if he is, how does thAt make him different than Musk. I would bet that almost all major companies have some contract, subsidy, bailout or project with the Feds. You don't require outsourcing work, run government as a business and not have government money throughout the economy.
no worries. He generally likes to hurl insults which I find ironic and that is why I'm up in his grill.FLBear5630 said:J.R. said:huge difference IMO. Musk is creating value and new technologies and responsible for all of his businesses. Musk has taken all the risk. Does Musk feed on govt teet? Damn right he does, but our gov't permits it. He is adding value and jobs, not draining the system with no positive inputs. My issue with the Assman is the blatant hypocrisy. He runs everyone down calling them TDS'er, Democrats , leftists ect when in fact. He's just. like many of the folks he is chitting on.FLBear5630 said:J.R. said:Still waiting for your answer if you have a job and are you currently receiving govt. subsidies. I don't expect an answer because it is grossly apparent the answer. How ironic you call everyone leftist, TDSers, Democrats ect, but you fit the bill of a leftist Democrat feeding at the govt trough. Will be waiting to hear what you do for work and how that qualifies you to be such an economic expert. Please dude.J.R. said:Did you get a job yet and quit feeding off the govt teet or are we still financing your social safety net? Please answer the question, Assman. Do you have a job? Do you pay taxes? Do you take Social Security or any other govt based subsidies? Do you have health insurance? Where does it come from? I think we know the answers, but waiting for you to answer.Assassin said:You're so well spoken.J.R. said:
I was just curious how many of those 100's of beautiful deals has Trumpy completed? uh, that would be zero. Once again, ole fat boy bully continues to write checks his arse can't cash. What a clown. Not only does he look like a complete fool, so do his minions, Old83, Little Johnny, Tin Man, Assman. All part of the plan bros!
Even if he is, how does thAt make him different than Musk. I would bet that almost all major companies have some contract, subsidy, bailout or project with the Feds. You don't require outsourcing work, run government as a business and not have government money throughout the economy.
I thought he was talking about you. Sorry.
I pay my summer help 30 dollars per hour.RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:$20 to $30 an hour is a pretty good gig for folks without a college education. That is if they don't have a drug or luxury watch addiction.KaiBear said:Too many of these jobs are below 30 dollars an hour and / or without benefits.RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:We are virtually at "full employment". The only folks that don't have a job don't want a job.KaiBear said:Good grief no.RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:They do it to protect certain industries. Trump is doing it to try to generate revenue (he would never say that out loud).KaiBear said:RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:Bottom line is tariffs are a tax. Many have still not figured that out yet.Assassin said:That is the difference between taxes and tariffs; you will still be paying your taxes. The tariff will be overRD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:If that happens, I will owe Donald Trump and many on this board an apology. I will gladly eat my crow with a little Bearnaise sauce. Let's see what happens.LIB,MR BEARS said:what is your argument if a year from now most tariffs are at 0/0?RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:
It is amazing to me that the Trump loyalists have not yet figured out that "The entire world has ripped us off for 50 years" actually translates to Americans have been able to purchase inexpensive products from the whole world for 50 years and I am going to put a stop to that.
Call it a tax, and the people are outraged! Call it a tariff and they get out their checkbook and wave the American flag. I really don't care where my toilet plunger and fidget spinners are made.
Then its strange how many countries employ tariffs against us.
If they do nothing but 'hurt' their people....why do they employ tariffs ?
For chuckles and grins ?
Tariffs are actually good in cases of dumping. Dumping is when companies sell products in a market cheaper than they sell the same products in their own market and are often government subsidized.
To just use an across the board tariff approach (including our allies) is reckless and irresponsible. They eliminate competition, make companies become lazy, and prices go higher. It is just that simple.
He has said repeatedly his first concern is to restore middle class jobs to the US.
We have to get back to industrial self reliance.
Just poking a little fun at you, my friend.KaiBear said:I pay my summer help 30 dollars per hour.RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:$20 to $30 an hour is a pretty good gig for folks without a college education. That is if they don't have a drug or luxury watch addiction.KaiBear said:Too many of these jobs are below 30 dollars an hour and / or without benefits.RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:We are virtually at "full employment". The only folks that don't have a job don't want a job.KaiBear said:Good grief no.RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:They do it to protect certain industries. Trump is doing it to try to generate revenue (he would never say that out loud).KaiBear said:RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:Bottom line is tariffs are a tax. Many have still not figured that out yet.Assassin said:That is the difference between taxes and tariffs; you will still be paying your taxes. The tariff will be overRD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:If that happens, I will owe Donald Trump and many on this board an apology. I will gladly eat my crow with a little Bearnaise sauce. Let's see what happens.LIB,MR BEARS said:what is your argument if a year from now most tariffs are at 0/0?RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:
It is amazing to me that the Trump loyalists have not yet figured out that "The entire world has ripped us off for 50 years" actually translates to Americans have been able to purchase inexpensive products from the whole world for 50 years and I am going to put a stop to that.
Call it a tax, and the people are outraged! Call it a tariff and they get out their checkbook and wave the American flag. I really don't care where my toilet plunger and fidget spinners are made.
Then its strange how many countries employ tariffs against us.
If they do nothing but 'hurt' their people....why do they employ tariffs ?
For chuckles and grins ?
Tariffs are actually good in cases of dumping. Dumping is when companies sell products in a market cheaper than they sell the same products in their own market and are often government subsidized.
To just use an across the board tariff approach (including our allies) is reckless and irresponsible. They eliminate competition, make companies become lazy, and prices go higher. It is just that simple.
He has said repeatedly his first concern is to restore middle class jobs to the US.
We have to get back to industrial self reliance.
Few with a wife and kids can even begin to survive on that.
Trump is absolutely doing the right thing. Not remotely a close call.
LOL and I plead guilty to being addicted to Rolex watches. Thankfully my wife tolerates it as long as she gets her gem stones.