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Trump Dictatorship and All Things Politics

As with all things, it is a mixed bag. I do applaud finally going through the government finances to make a sincere effort at eliminating fraud, waste, and abuse. I support forcing immigrants to go through the official channels set up by the Legislative Branch rather than turning a blind eye to our southern border. I'm glad to see someone who isn't obviously senile sitting as a figurehead while unelected mystery men run the most powerful nation on earth. While I am not cheering anyone losing their job, it is a reality that many government departments have needed modernization for a long time and there is far too much redundancy is many of the government's services.

As for the tariffs, no. I'm not happy with them and have become even more opposed as I've learned the numbers were derived from trade imbalances. That is retarded. I had hoped Trump was using them as a lever to get other nations to drop tariffs they have against US goods, but then other nations started dropping those and we hit them with tariffs anyway. That is where I step off the train.

You have an interesting set of priorities. What you call a mixed bag I would call a total failure. The positives you mentioned don’t really impact your life as much as the negative. Like not even close.

How do you weigh this out with yourself exactly? Because what he did was make you think those things are wins, when you end up taking a complete and total loss. Like nuke the economy bad loss.

Is that what you tell your kid when you can’t afford his training anymore?


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How do you weigh this out with yourself exactly? Because what he did was make you think those things are wins, when you end up taking a complete and total loss. Like nuke the economy bad loss.
Are you familiar with the marshmallow test? It is a test to measure a child’s ability to delay gratification. The nature of your argument is to say eating the marshmallow is better than not eating the marshmallow, and you totally ignore down-the-line consequences. All of the things I listed, getting rid of fraud, modernization, reduction of redundancy, etc., have long term benefits.

With the tariffs, I’m not so sure they do have long term benefits. The architect of this idea says they will, and I’m not talking about Trump. He didn’t come up with this idea. Scott Bessant has been pushing it for years. Trump is only the one selling the goodness of tariffs to the American people, and I’m not buying what he’s selling. I'm open to being proven wrong, but my instinct is that free trade is better than taxed trade.
 
The Rapist went with a liberal coating of orange for his "Liberation day". His hooker wife should get involved ASAP, since if there's one thing she knows it's makeup.

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One thing I find kind of interesting is that the biggest issues around election time were inflation and illegal immigration/the border.

Doesn't seem like anyone even talks about or cares about illegal immigration/the border now. It was a huge issue last fall but now I never hear about it. Haven't heard any numbers on it at all really. Are there less illegal immigrants crossing the border now? No one really seems to care anymore.
 
One thing I find kind of interesting is that the biggest issues around election time were inflation and illegal immigration/the border.

Doesn't seem like anyone even talks about or cares about illegal immigration/the border now. It was a huge issue last fall but now I never hear about it. Haven't heard any numbers on it at all really. Are there less illegal immigrants crossing the border now? No one really seems to care anymore.
Also, people are dying in floods and tornados and stuff but no talk about that either. Nothing about how much aid people are or aren't receiving. Seemed to be a huge talking point when weather disasters hit the US while Biden was president. Crickets now tho.
 
Also, people are dying in floods and tornados and stuff but no talk about that either. Nothing about how much aid people are or aren't receiving. Seemed to be a huge talking point when weather disasters hit the US while Biden was president. Crickets now tho.
I seem to remember Trump lying about how North Carolina was neglected after a storm cuz of Biden or Ukraine or something.

Dodge came by and has actually damaged FEMA’s ability to assist during emergencies and not a peep from the media. It’s interesting how the media and to invent conspiracies from the (boring) Biden administration and how they neglect to discuss at all any of the very many conspiracies from the Trump administration. I don’t know if there are too many for them to report on or if their parent companies don’t want to criticize Trump enough to risk losing tax cuts or being disappeared to El Salvador.

But this seems concerning

Good luck to those red states that have been damaged by storms and will soon be damaged by hurricane season. Thoughts and prayers
 
Let’s get one thing straight: America wants its manufacturing back. Like a long-lost lover who left for China, Mexico, Vietnam, and India with promises of cheaper labor and more affordable gadgets, we now want it all to come home. And what better way to do that than by slapping some juicy tariffs on imported goods? Now tariff on our friends like Canada and EU too?



Trade wars, we are told, are like that tough love intervention. The goal? Two-fold:

1. Bring back factories to the USA.

2. Fix the trade imbalance, so we’re not always the one picking up the tab at the global dinner table.



Sounds brilliant, right? Like a rom-com script with a happy ending and manufacturing jobs dancing back into Detroit. But wait, before we roll out the red carpet and rename ourselves the United States of Assembly Lines, let’s ask a few questions that no one seemed to answer before starting this global economic drama.



Question #1: Do we even have the factories?

Short answer: Nope. Long answer: NOPE.

China currently does $7.0 trillion worth of manufacturing a year. The U.S.? About $2.5 trillion. That gap is not a pothole—it’s the Grand Canyon. And no, you can’t leap over it with a good ol’ American high five and a patriotic playlist. Do we even need to make these low cost items?



Question #2: Do we have the workers?

Also, not really. Remember when everyone was told to go into tech, finance, or become a YouTuber? Yeah, that didn’t create many machinists or great engineers. But here’s where it gets interesting: robots and AI are catching up. In a few years, we could build smart factories. The question is, are we investing in that? Or just raising prices on toaster ovens and pretending it’s progress?



Meanwhile, back at the checkout counter…

Here’s what actually happens with tariffs:

A product from abroad gets taxed. The government says, “Oh, only 30-60% of that will be passed on to the consumer.” That’s a cute way of saying, “You’re going to pay more for literally everything, but we’ll pretend it’s for your own good.”



Exporters might lower their prices. Importers might cut profits. But let’s be real—neither of those groups like doing that. So guess who ends up holding the bag (or, more accurately, the overpriced bag of rice)? You, dear citizen.



Now, the government collects some of that sweet tariff money. Victory? Sort of. It’s like winning a game of Monopoly by taxing everyone out of the game—then using the money to fund wars or give billionaires a tax cut so they can buy another yacht with a built-in helipad.



Meanwhile, the American middle class is just trying to afford a roll of toilet paper.



Yes, the idea of “Make America Great Again” is noble. But maybe let’s not bulldoze what’s already working just to rebuild it with more expensive bricks. We already dominate in innovation, services, military, AI, and… uh… streaming TV shows. Let’s play to our strengths!



Instead of trade wars, how about trade smarts?

• Invest in smart factories and robot-assisted production.

• Educate the workforce so they’re ready for the jobs of the future, not the 1950s.

• Use AI to make healthcare better (and actually affordable).

• And for the love of all things decent—let people buy affordable toilet paper again.



Let’s not forget—we the USA helped build China’s factories. We trained them, supplied them, outsourced to them, and then got mad when they got good at it. That’s like training someone to play chess, losing, and flipping the board.



Bottom line: No country is richer, nicer or better than America. We send billions and billions of dollars to the world over the years and continue to do so with our tax money! But other countries are all developing; But that doesn’t mean we act like the jealous ex throwing tariffs like tantrums. Let’s not sink our own economy out of spite.



This isn’t just economics. This is therapy. And America needs to talk it out, not tariff it out.



Signed,

A Concerned Citizen with a Receipt from a store That’s 30% More Expensive Than Last Year, 15% down in 401k and watching the world brazen for more financial storms! Love you America just don’t lose your cool image!
 
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