Miscellaneous News

Randomuser

Senior Member
Registered Member
I'm beginning to think the libs were right about magatards and they really do have non sentient thought.

Like they are declaring victory because the Chinese stock market closed lower than theirs. Did they forget the same thing happened in the 1st trump term and the US lost that part of the trade war? Also the Buffett indicator for China is 65% while US is 170% so guess who's hurt more for every 1% of damage to the stock market especially when we are looking over a longer period.
 

Ringsword

Junior Member
Registered Member
Remember, it’s only sweatshops when it’s Chinese!

When it’s America, it’s call eco-friendly freedom-infused poverty-alleviating dignity-creating minority-empowering prisoner-rehabilitating AI-monitored artisanal-crafted hyper-quality high-fashion.

That will be $500 please, per shoe.
Wait,Gov.,Ron DeSantis of Florida has the answer apparently-Children.Since American children are rather stupid and not doing well in school studies like reading,writing and arithmetic then why not employ them in sweatshops,farm field and manual labour of all types filling in for all the illegal immigrants Trump has/will deport.Of course clean water,some food and an allowance of 1 dollar/hr is granted.I did not make this awful idea up(except for the 1 dollar/hr)it's horrifyingly,Victorian England real.I had thought DeSantis was nice guy-how wrong I was.
 

TPenglake

Junior Member
Registered Member
Trumpian propaganda has hyped the base up with constant talk of the sheer volume of countries making the phones in the White House jump 24/7 to make a quick trade deal, but today both the EU and Vietnam's offers were flat out rejected.

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True to fashion for this administration, the EU was given a simple no, while Vietnam was further insulted with Navarro calling it a "Chinese colony." I originally thought that Chinese diplomat from last year was super blunt with his whole, America will never see Japan and Korea on equal terms with the White man shtick, but turns out that comment aged like a fine wine. Something that Americans will likely see less of in the future once the tariffs kick in.

Back to the issue of tariffs. There's still one more day until the tariffs go into effect, but it does seem this time around rather than any broader strategy or PR, the Trump administration is all in on the America first ideaology. That is of course on top of the fact that Trump is turning into a mad emperor and being egged on people who were hired simply for never saying no to anything he says. Painting enemies and allies alike with the same brushstrokes under the delusion that an America isolated to North Korean levels on the international stage will somehow be a 100% self-sufficient paradise free from the supposed "chains of globalization."
 

Ringsword

Junior Member
Registered Member
Where K Trump at?
Hiding from Elon Musk.See him leer at her recently-her fecundity and nubileness has attracted the wrong eyes.BTW Kai if Elon wants to show you his new Tesla Cybertruck and take you for a ride....just don't ,scream for help in English or Chinese and call Secret Service to take you home-from a loving uncle.;););)
 
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PopularScience

Senior Member
Registered Member
India will prove to be a winner from this, like it or not. The 26% tariffs Trump placed on them is insignificant in the larger scheme of things. India will get a bigger slice of the US market because it has lower tariffs than any other poor country that manufactures anything.
Wait till Trump sanction on services outsource to India.
 

ansy1968

Brigadier
Registered Member
India will prove to be a winner from this, like it or not. The 26% tariffs Trump placed on them is insignificant in the larger scheme of things. India will get a bigger slice of the US market because it has lower tariffs than any other poor country that manufactures anything.
Maybe in 25 years in 2050, with shitty infrastructure and lack of capable technical workers how can they satisfy the immediate demand of the American. Even using the Vedic system it's impossible.
 

FriedButter

Colonel
Registered Member
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Trump says EU must buy $350B of US energy to get tariff relief​

The European Union will have to commit to buying $350 billion of American energy to get a reprieve from Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs, the U.S. president said late Monday, dismissing Brussels' offer of "zero-for-zero" tariffs on cars and industrial goods.

Trump's comments at a White House press conference were in response to European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen saying earlier Monday that the EU had offered to drop the bloc's tariffs to zero on cars and industrial goods imported from the U.S. if Trump reciprocated.

Asked by a reporter whether the offer was enough for him to back down, Trump said: "No, it's not."
"We have a deficit with the European Union of $350 billion and it's gonna disappear fast," Trump said. "One of the ways that that can disappear easily and quickly is they're gonna have to buy our energy from us ... they can buy it, we can knock off $350 billion in one week. They have to buy and commit to buy a like amount of energy."

Von der Leyen’s offer came after Trump last week slapped 20 percent tariffs on the EU and a minimum 10 percent levy on other trade partners. In response, financial markets across the world have lost trillions of dollars in value, with European stocks on Monday suffering their biggest one-day falls since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic.

"A lot of people say, 'Oh, it doesn't mean anything having a surplus.' It means a lot, in my opinion. It's almost like a profit or loss statement," Trump said.

The president was speaking in the Oval Office Monday alongside Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who traveled to Washington to hold talks with Trump and seek relief from the U.S. tariffs. In comments to the press after the meeting, the American president doubled down on his criticism of the EU but indicated he was up for doing a deal with the bloc, as long as it committed to closing its trade deficit with the U.S. by buying more American energy.

The idea of buying U.S. energy in a bid to stave off tariffs is not a new one. Almost as soon as Trump was reelected, von der Leyen suggested opening negotiations to buy more American liquefied natural gas (LNG). But POLITICO reported that the U.S. had, in response, offered no clarity about how a deal would work.

On Monday, asked whether his global tariffs were a strong-arm negotiation tactic or permanent, Trump said: "There can be permanent tariffs and there can also be negotiations, because there are things we need beyond tariffs."
He added: "If we can make a really fair deal and a good deal for the United States, not a good deal for others, this is America first. It's now America first."

Later in the press conference, a reporter asked Trump whether there were two or three countries on his list that he felt were further along in getting their tariffs lowered, Trump name-checked the EU: "European Union. I mean as badly as they've treated us, they've brought their car tariffs essentially off. I guess they brought it down to 2.5 and I hear maybe to nothing."

But he also indicated that he wanted the EU to reduce its standards to allow more U.S. goods to enter its market, referring to safety measures as "non-monetary tariffs."

"It's tariffs where they put things on where they make it impossible for you to sell a car ... they make it so difficult, the standards and the tests," Trump said. "They come up with rules and regulations that are just designed for one reason: that you can't sell your product in those countries. And we're not gonna let that happen. Those are called non-monetary barriers."

In an indication of what is driving Trump's actions, the president harked back to a time when U.S. tariffs were sky high.
"You know our country was the strongest from 1870 to 1913," Trump said. "You know why? It was all tariff-based. We had no income tax. Then in 1913, some genius came up with the idea of let's charge the people of our country, not foreign countries that are ripping off our country."

EU total energy imports is $412 billion dollars and the US already makes up 16% of oil and 45% of LNG of EU imports. Trump is demanding the EU to buy more energy then they can actually use lol.
 

Thecore

Just Hatched
Registered Member
India will prove to be a winner from this, like it or not. The 26% tariffs Trump placed on them is insignificant in the larger scheme of things. India will get a bigger slice of the US market because it has lower tariffs than any other poor country that manufactures anything.
Genetic Indian propensity to be entitled and their own sense of superiority from being the elephant god's gift to mankind or whatever will cause them to screw it up one way or another. Just like they always do.
 
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