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Politics : The Trump Presidency -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: koan who wrote (344015)8/9/2025 8:02:34 PM
From: techtrader731 Recommendation

Recommended By
longz

  Respond to of 364323
 
how can one person be wrong about every thing that much .... if any of the readers on this board are 30 and younger and come across across an idiot like this in you life ...turn and run as far as you can ... his kind of thinking will destroy your future and life

As an aside, I think Trump's tariffs in a way are a god send, in that it is the one thing the MAGA folks can understand via rising prices, and could be the undoing of the Republican party.



To: koan who wrote (344015)8/9/2025 11:00:29 PM
From: Thomas M.1 Recommendation

Recommended By
longz

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 364323
 
Tariffs Aren’t Tantrums—They’re Strategy

Trump’s trade strategy isn’t chaos—it’s calculated disruption, using American leverage to reshape global markets and deliver wins his critics can’t comprehend.

By Steve Cortes

What Trump’s critics don’t understand—and probably never will: President Trump isn’t rattled. He’s composed, deliberate, and in control—which drives his opponents crazy.

But instead of fixating on his tone, measure his results. Trade victories are stacking up, each one strategically designed to favor America.

And why shouldn’t we enjoy these kinds of wins?

We earned them through generations of sweat, toil, and ingenuity, all of which built the U.S. consumer market into the most coveted in the world—the literal engine of global discretionary demand. Access to it isn’t automatic, and therein lies the leverage. For the first time in decades, we have a leader who knows how to employ those earned advantages.

Critics see disruption and scream chaos, but they confuse volatility with recklessness. In reality, disruption is the strategy. Tension is the prerequisite tool, and while it makes some ninnies uncomfortable, this rigged system cannot be unwound by simply asking politely. After decades of American acquiescence on trade, the old economic regime will not just submissively fade away.

Accordingly, this process isn’t accidental—it’s engineered. Trump guards the strategic sectors of the U.S. economy through calculated, targeted, and surgical incentives and prohibitions to grow domestic production of semiconductors, steel, medicine, energy, and defense technology.

Behind the TV news chyrons and hand-wringing, a blueprint unfolds. This emerging paradigm harnesses America’s unmatched strengths to reorient global trade and tip the balance back toward U.S. workers.

That kind of work demands poise, not polish. That kind of grand task necessitates brains, leverage, and calm under pressure. Think Tom Brady in the pocket: the chaos swirls, the hits keep coming—but he hangs in and delivers the throw.

Trump operates the same way. While his critics flinch, he closes. This isn’t small-ball, and these wins are not incremental. Instead, this process accelerates a truly global correction—long overdue—and only possible through business instincts brought into geopolitics.

Even former FBI hostage negotiator Chris Voss would recognize the method. In Never Split the Difference, Voss lays it out: apply pressure. Stay detached. Never settle halfway.

Sound familiar?

But Trump’s critics cannot see past their own biases to discern the mounting stack of headline-worthy wins. Consider the results, just in July:

European Union:
  • $600B in EU investment
  • $750B in U.S. energy purchases
  • Broad tariff reductions for American exports
  • 15% across-the-board tariffs for European firms—unless they move production to the U.S. and hire American workers.
Japan:
  • The tariff cap was lowered to 15% (from 25%)
  • $550B investment fund with direct U.S. veto power
South Korea:
  • 15% tariff agreement
  • $350B investment in the U.S.
  • $100B LNG purchase commitment
China:
  • Talks resume.
  • Tariff protections hold.
  • The deadline looms—and the leverage is as American as apple pie.

Tariffs aren’t punishment—they’re strategy. In this new era, tariffs represent policy and positioning. They compel the secure rebuilding of supply chains. In this process, America reclaims the leverage we are due, and reasserts our primary role in shaping the terms of global trade—not reacting to them.

So, it’s not a tantrum, not remotely. It’s a recalibration.

As Scott Adams wrote in Win Bigly, Trump isn’t unpredictable. He’s persuasive.

He throws the political equivalent of a knuckleball—deliberately unconventional and difficult to counter.

Adams and Trump recognize that superpowers don’t beg and don’t need to ask for permission. We are done allowing the ruling class of this country to profit and thrive by managing a national decline.

What beckons? Nothing less than a golden age—built on leverage, clarity, and control.

amgreatness.com

Tom