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Big Beautiful Tariffs


               
2025 Feb 27, 9:20pm   28,370 views  410 comments

by Misc   follow (2)  

Trump negotiated with the Prime Minister of Canada and the President of Mexico for them to assist in cracking down on Fentanyl entering the US. He postponed the 25% tariffs on goods entering the US from these countries for a month.

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.

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1   TheAntiPanicanLearingCenter   @   2025 Feb 27, 9:27pm  

External Revenue Service!

Bezos is trying to conflate Personal Liberties with National Economic Policy in the WaPo now.
2   MolotovCocktail   @   2025 Feb 28, 8:47pm  

But I was told US consumers - not Chinese manufacturers - would be the ones paying for the tariffs!



Chinese manufacturers that planned to cut prices to help customers absorb the initial tariff bump are now contending with potentially higher duties for their clients. Those already operating on razor-thin profit margins could be squeezed even further.

Trump’s new tariff proposal adds more urgency to plans among Chinese manufacturers to shift production outside the country, especially to Southeast Asia. Making and shipping goods from other countries means U.S. importers can avoid paying the higher duties on Chinese products—that is, unless Trump targets those countries, too.


https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/other/the-tariff-pain-is-getting-real-for-chinese-companies/ar-AA1zZgRq
3   Patrick   @   2025 Mar 4, 11:12am  

https://www.coffeeandcovid.com/p/far-away-tuesday-march-4-2025-c-and


This morning, the Times began a rolling “breaking news” story headlined, “Trump’s tariffs on Canada, Mexico and China snap into effect.” Shares of German automakers with Mexican manufacturing plants tumbled in early trading this morning, as huge tariffs against China, Canada, and Mexico came into effect. And European stock markets plummeted.

Right after midnight last night, as the President has long promised, the Trump Administration slapped a whopping 25% tariff on all imports from Canada and Mexico. It also added another +10% tariff to all imports from China, doubling the existing 10% tariff on Chinese goods that kicked in last month.

China, the only one of the three to act, immediately announced counter-tariffs and sued the U.S. in the World Trade Organization.

Welcome to the economic war. In its tariffs story, the Wall Street Journal described the new taxes as ‘historic,’ both in scale and speed, explaining that even the storied and amusingly named Smoot-Hawley tariffs of 1930 were eased in more gradually.

(It’s even fun to say Smoot-Hawley. Try it.)

Trump’s well described plan is to disrupt the status quo, and force both American and foreign companies to repatriate manufacturing back to the United States. Plan for short-term disruptions. You might want to stock up on toilet paper again.

The media is waiting for us to rebel against the Terrible Orange Man because of rising consumer good prices. They’ll be waiting a long time. We lived through the pandemic’s totally useless and unnecessary supply-chain crisis. We’ll get through this without breaking a sweat.

Trump is not leaving prices to chance. He’s juiced domestic oil production, opened federal forests for timber harvesting, and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent this week announced a new “Affordability Czar.” Also, energy products (oil, gas, and electricity) were exempted from all tariffs.

Meanwhile, the Democrats are still obsessing over eggs. Prepare for scads of stories comparing pre- and post-tariff prices.
4   TheAntiPanicanLearingCenter   @   2025 Mar 5, 9:21pm  

“On the subject of the Tariff, I support a careful and strategic approach. A Tariff that fosters domestic industry, protects national defense, and ensures economic independence—especially in times of war—is essential. The hardships of the last war should serve as a lasting lesson: without self-sufficiency, our nation is vulnerable. No true patriot should be willing to jeopardize our security by relying solely on foreign commerce, which could be easily disrupted in conflict.

“Providence has blessed us with abundant resources—minerals, fertile land, and a climate suited for key materials like hemp and wool. To secure our independence, we must protect our own industries, ensuring a stable supply of vital goods. Beyond defense, the Tariff should also serve to fairly distribute labor and revenue while addressing our national debt, which I view not as a blessing, but a danger to republican liberty, fostering a privileged class at the expense of the people.

“American agriculture suffers from a lack of markets beyond cotton. By diverting surplus labor into manufacturing, we can strengthen our domestic economy and create new demand for our farmers’ goods. Instead of enriching British merchants and sustaining European laborers, we should prioritize our own. Without this shift, we risk impoverishing ourselves under a system that benefits foreign economies at our expense.

“Thus, I believe a well-structured Tariff is necessary—to pay off our debt, strengthen national defense, and ensure economic stability. These principles, which I hold deeply, are not for sale in exchange for any political office. I speak openly, without concealment, as I would despise myself if I sought public confidence through deception.”

- Andrew Jackson

https://x.com/carter_squared/status/1896786462848250116
6   Eric_Holder   @   2025 Mar 6, 12:12pm  

OkDOGEisAmountingToSomething says






Fucking circus.

Now, Donnie, go promise gates of hell to Hamas again, LOL.

Clown world.
7   TheAntiPanicanLearingCenter   @   2025 Mar 6, 1:05pm  

It's all our fault for...


10   komputodo   @   2025 Mar 14, 1:50pm  

you don't need tariffs...You just need the threat of tariffs by someone like TRUMP who you know will enforce them. That is usually enough to achieve what you want.
11   komputodo   @   2025 Mar 14, 2:01pm  

Misc says


In Canada the government with its controlled media, whipped up Canadians into an anti-American frenzy.

according to the same media..Can you imagine the media saying that they tried and failed? As long as you keep believing the lying media, one will never know the truth.
13   TheAntiPanicanLearingCenter   @   2025 Mar 26, 7:06pm  

Excited to see Massie's multiple spending bills for when the CR expires.
14   TheAntiPanicanLearingCenter   @   2025 Mar 26, 7:07pm  

Misc says

... Annnnnnnd...Trump slaps a 25% tariff on imported cars and light trucks.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/trump-announces-25-tariffs-on-imported-cars-ratcheting-up-global-trade-war/ar-AA1BIYcs

So beautiful friends, so wonderful.
15   Misc   @   2025 Mar 26, 9:35pm  

Looks like tariffs on auto parts go into effect in first part of May.

"New tariffs will be applied not just to foreign-made cars but also to car parts, including engines and transmissions. The tariffs on car parts are set to take effect “no later than May 3,” according to the text of the proclamation Trump signed.

Parts coming from Canada and Mexico that comply with the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) will be exempt from the tariffs until US Customs and Border Protections has a system in place to apply tariffs to non-US parts, according to a fact sheet published by the White House on Wednesday."

https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/03/adjusting-imports-of-automobiles-and-autombile-parts-into-the-united-states/
16   MolotovCocktail   @   2025 Mar 26, 10:08pm  

Fuck 'em in the ass, Trump! Fuck em hard!
17   zzyzzx   @   2025 Mar 27, 8:18am  

This tariff should have been implemented in the 70's.
19   HeadSet   @   2025 Mar 27, 10:40am  

zzyzzx says

This tariff should have been implemented in the 70's.

Oh, no. Do you remember the fall apart quality of cars that came out of Detroit in the 1970s? At that time, we needed competition to increase the quality of cars.
20   MolotovCocktail   @   2025 Mar 27, 5:44pm  

HeadSet says

, no. Do you remember the fall apart quality of cars that came out of Detroit in the 1970s? At that time, we needed competition to increase the quality of cars


And we would have gotten it. Foreign car manufacturers would have set up shop twenty years before they actually did.

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