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Trump sprinted into office with a singular goal: America first. What is now obvious is that he meant it, literally; since America is the world’s economic engine, America —i.e. Main Street— should collect the benefits. It’s not a secret or a joke. He’s said it over and over, but the experts just rolled their eyes and thought, more bluster.
But he’s not blustering. He’s actually doing it. ...
Trump isn’t just killing a sacred cow or two. He’s not even culling the herd. He declared war on sacred cows and started blasting away before the ink was dry on the war’s declaration. The list of vested interests on which Trump is trampling is too long to possibly number. Think multinational corporations (Nike, Apple, Pfizer), billionaire donors (Soros, Gates, Buffett), federal politicians, state and local party bosses, and Wall Street— and that’s without delving into well-connected London banksters, influential oligarchs, foreign multinationals, and allied governments. ...
But after global communism’s dusty collapse in the late ’80s —when the Cold War ended and America stood alone as the unchallenged superpower— the chessboard was reset. For the first time in history, the U.S. could have demanded favorable terms from every other country on Earth including, and especially, Russia and China. ...
It sets new tariffs on over 60 countries, with threats extending to dozens more, and a default minumum 10% tariff on every country not mentioned. Rates range from 10% to 50%, with the first round taking effect at 12:01 a.m. on August 7th (next week). ...
President Trump walked into the carefully maintained international parlor, looked around at the antique furnishings and marble fixtures, and started swinging a baseball bat. No postwar president has ever tried to break up the concretized global interests because doing so requires a kind of fearlessness verging on insanity.
He’s not worried about donors drying up. He’s not worried about savage media attacks. He’s not worried about reverse trade wars. He’s not worried about Congress going sideways. He’s not worried about a stock market collapse. He’s not worried about the military-industrial complex or the deep state. There are a million ways this could go terribly wrong for Trump, but he doesn’t care.
Why isn’t he worried? Maybe it’s because he’s already endured everything they could possibly throw at him. They impeached him twice. They indicted him 34 times. They raided his home, gagged him in court, canceled him, deplatformed him, demonized him, and declared him disqualified.
In other words, every institution that should’ve been able to stop him has already tried and failed. He’s still here— and stronger than ever. ...
The elites are angry because he’s not telling them what he’s doing. He’s just doing it.
Soon, people will start asking, if it was so easy, why didn’t anyone do this before?
Soon, people will start asking, if it was so easy, why didn’t anyone do this before?
The elites are angry because he’s not telling them what he’s doing. He’s just doing it.
MolotovCocktail says
She's holding it wrong, but I forgive her.
https://wolfstreet.com/2025/08/02/tariff-cash-is-rolling-in-hits-28-billion-in-july/

5) Uniparty Congress won't go for this. They'll come to like the tariff revenues but only in addition to how they assfuck us now. Yes, that includes the RINOs. There is no MAGA party on Congress, kiddies. Not really.
‘US hits one-kilo gold bars with tariffs in blow to refining hub Switzerland’ (FT), upending the bullion market as prices soar, and hitting Zurich on trade again;
TRADE DEAL WITH EU REACHED
https://x.com/howardlutnick/status/1958484251818545422

Narrative failure alert! This week, US News and World Report published this remarkable, expectation-defying headline:
Trump's Tariffs Could Reduce US Deficit by $4 Trillion, CBO Estimates
https://money.usnews.com/investing/news/articles/2025-08-22/trumps-tariffs-could-reduce-us-deficit-by-4-trillion-cbo-estimates
The new estimate was devastating news for corporate media, which angrily ignored the story, and ran more DC protest tales instead. The financial experts were also unavailable for comment, even though they’d predicted the exact opposite, that Trump’s tariffs would mushroom the deficit. ...
If anything, the CBO’s estimate was low. The prediction of a $400 billion deficit reduction over ten years is very conservative, since tariff revenue in 2025 is already estimated to blow past $400 billion, and tariffs weren’t in place for the whole year.
I don’t mean to minimize the accomplishment. Even $4 trillion over a decade isn’t exactly pocket change; it’s more than most major tax packages ever dare to promise.
That wasn’t the only thing experts were wrong about. On the same day, CBS News ran this delightfully contrarian story:
4 reasons why the Trump tariffs haven't caused U.S. inflation to soar
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/us-tariffs-trump-inflation-prices/
Until this week, most “mainstream” economists screamed that Trump’s sweeping tariffs would quickly push consumer prices higher, triggering a new inflation wave. Costs will just be passed on to American consumers, they cried. CBS’s article shows that didn’t happen: prices have stayed “relatively stable,” and the hysterical predictions of immediate inflationary shock did not materialize. ...
That we were right about tariffs from day one is now unavoidable. Trump’s tariff dashboard is about so much more than mere revenue. He’s using it to bring the globalists to heel. The much-desired goal of ending globalism for good would justify an enormous investment, but Trump has found a way to make trillions at the same time.
Since inflation is stable, it’s obvious that foreign treasuries are beginning to foot the bill for American objectives. Trump’s achieved the politically impossible; he’s transformed taxes into a profit center.
Think of it. For fifty years, politicians of both parties swore there were only two choices: raise taxes (career suicide) or cut spending (political suicide). Trump has once again found a third way: make foreigners pay America’s bills. And it’s fair, since the world benefits from American military and economic stability.
make foreigners pay America’s bills. And it’s fair, since the world benefits from American military and economic stability.
A federal appeals court has ruled that most of President Donald Trump's sweeping global tariffs are unlawful, potentially dealing a significant blow to the president's effort to reshape the country's trade policy unilaterally.
In a 7-4 decision, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit rejected Trump's authority to carry out most of his tariffs, agreeing with the lower court that Trump's actions were "invalid as contrary to law." However, the court delayed the impact of its decision through mid-October to allow the Trump administration to appeal to the Supreme Court, as the tariffs remain in effect.
showing they have enormous pricing power and can lose more freebies and subsidies to boot."
"Tariffs will destroy consumer prices that already skyrocketed these past few years under one-way Free Trade"
"We're gonna take in $330B in new revenues and hardly anybody noticed, because it turns out multinational corps ate the cost, showing they have enormous pricing power and can lose more freebies and subsidies to boot."

Trump tariffs bring record export business to China, trade on track for $1.2 tn surplus
According to Bloomberg, with direct access to the US curtailed, Chinese manufacturers have swiftly found new buyers. Chinese Exports also got a boost from the improvement in bilateral ties with India on the back of a flurry of visits by the leaders of the two countries. Exports to India surged to an all-time high in August.
Shipments to Africa are on pace for a record year and sales to Southeast Asia now exceed their pandemic-era peaks. This broad-based boom reflects rerouting of Chinese goods after Trump’s tariff moves.
https://www.firstpost.com/world/donald-trump-china-nato-brics-mexico-xi-jinping-india-global-economy-vietnam-13936273.html
Trump tariffs bring record export business to China, trade on track for $1.2 tn surplus
According to Bloomberg, with direct access to the US curtailed, Chinese manufacturers have swiftly found new buyers. Chinese Exports also got a boost from the improvement in bilateral ties with India on the back of a flurry of visits by the leaders of the two countries. Exports to India surged to an all-time high in August.
Shipments to Africa are on pace for a record year and sales to Southeast Asia now exceed their pandemic-era peaks. This broad-based boom reflects rerouting of Chinese goods after Trump’s tariff moves.
Patrick says
https://www.firstpost.com/world/donald-trump-china-nato-brics-mexico-xi-jinping-india-global-economy-vietnam-13936273.html
Trump tariffs bring record export business to China, trade on track for $1.2 tn surplus
According to Bloomberg, with direct access to the US curtailed, Chinese manufacturers have swiftly found new buyers. Chinese Exports also got a boost from the improvement in bilateral ties with India on the back of a flurry of visits by the leaders of the two countries. Exports to India surged to an all-time high in August.
Shipments to Africa are on pace for a record year and sales to Southeast Asia now exceed their pandemic-era peaks. This broad-based boom reflects rerouting of Chinese goods after Trump’s tariff moves.
They don't tell you that it does not make up for the volume and/or prices they got from selling to the US.
they might be dumping products in warehouses to India and southeast Asia more than usual at lower cost since it's closer.
The short reprieve from tariff news ended yesterday as CNN ran a hyperventilating story headlined, “Trump announces 130% tariffs on China. The global trade war just came roaring back.” ...
The problem with China’s new policy is that, due to globalists’ shortsighted economic policy, only China makes the good magnets now, and the magnets are needed to make lots of other, more interesting manufactured products, like bumper stick-ons saying “My Driving Scares Me Too,” and especially bombs and missiles. Yesterday, President Trump learned that China had stingily ordered countries to which it sells “rare earth” magnets not to let the U.S. have any.
President Trump was not amused.
“The United States of America will impose a Tariff of 100% on China, over and above any Tariff that they are currently paying,” Trump threatened on Truth Social yesterday afternoon. “Also on November 1st, we will impose Export Controls on any and all critical software.” Trump also abruptly canceled his next face-to-face meeting with China’s President Xi, foreclosing the possibility of attending a lavish, all-you-can-eat Asian buffet. ...
China’s embargo on “rare earths” mostly affects military manufacturing, which translates from the Chinese vernacular to even more probrems for Ukraine, which is where most of the West’s defense production is currently being Fedexed as soon as it rolls off production lines. Ukraine, currently struggling to hang on, will soon face even more shortages of critical refrigerator magnets and whimsical levitating light bulbs. And air defense missiles, of course.

Six months ago, critics warned that President Donald Trump’s tariffs would crush the economy. They said Americans would face soaring prices and crashing markets. The reality? As we near the end of 2025, the story looks very different. Growth is up, markets are strong, and strategic onshore opportunities are emerging. Let’s break it down.
Tariffs are boosting revenue.
Rather than dragging the economy down, tariffs have become a colossal source of revenue. Tariff collections hit $100 billion in the first half of fiscal 2025, and U.S. Customs and Border Protection expects that figure to eclipse $300 billion by the end of the year. That money is helping real Americans – supporting military families and making sure our service members receive their paychecks on time during the government shutdown.
Tariffs are solving America’s trade problems.
Tariffs not only provide immediate benefits but also address America’s long-term structural trade issues. This administration has used tariffs as a strategic tool to bring other countries to the negotiating table, reaping immediate benefits. From trade deals with the U.K., E.U., Japan, and more, President Trump has brought down both tariff and non-tariff barriers on American exports and secured hundreds of billions in new investment – a tremendous boost for American workers and companies.
Inflation is stabilizing.
Many Americans feel that prices are higher than ever, and affordability is a daily concern. It’s true – under the previous administration, inflation surged and stretched household budgets. But the Trump administration’s tariff policies have helped slow the rate of price increases. The Federal Reserve’s preferred measure – the PCE Price Index – rose just 0.3% in August, bringing the annual rate to 2.7%, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis. Core inflation, which excludes food and energy, held at 2.9%, right around the Fed’s target. Given consistent increases in average wage growth, real wages have remained stable.
Why hasn’t inflation surged? Because producers in the countries of origin – especially China – are absorbing much of the tariff costs to stay price-competitive in the U.S. market. Consider this: If it costs a Chinese manufacturer 10 cents to make a pair of socks and they sell it for 20 cents, even a 100% tariff raises the export price to just 40 cents. By the time that pair hits U.S. shelves at Walmart for $3, the change is small. Low production costs abroad and strong margins here at home have kept prices stable for consumers.
So while consumers are still feeling the pinch, tariffs have prevented prices from rising even faster, and as wages continue to grow and trade deals expand U.S. production, Americans can expect real relief at the checkout in the months ahead.
Manufacturing is coming home.
Tariffs are encouraging companies to produce onshore. At the same time, the U.S. has secured large foreign investment commitments – over $550 billion from Japan and $600 billion from the EU. These are the largest foreign investment commitments in American history, generating hundreds of thousands of U.S. jobs, expanding domestic manufacturing, and securing American prosperity for generations.
The bottom line: Tariffs are working.
The warnings of an economic disaster haven’t come true. Instead, the U.S. economy is growing, inflation is controlled, and markets are confident. These results show that, when used thoughtfully, tariffs can be a powerful tool – not just for revenue, but for national security and long-term economic advantage.
We’ve moved from doom to boom, from hesitation to hope, from caution to confidence, from fear to fortune, and from skepticism to success – and we’re now reaping the rewards of our sacrifice since the beginning of the year.
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In Canada the government with its controlled media, whipped up Canadians into an anti-American frenzy. They pushed not buying US products, booed the US national anthem and even had its hockey team attack the US team. Nothing happened to deter the Fentanyl. Whay do you think is going to happen now that the month is up ????
In Mexico, there was a push for cartel friendly laws and a prohibition on using GMO corn (an American product). What the fuck do you think is going to happen ???
Their respective currencies are going to look like toilet paper and that's just the start.
For China. They didn't do anything about the Fentanyl, so they get an extra 10% tariff with the thought of more to come if they don't get a move on.