• AA5B@lemmy.world
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    15 hours ago

    Well the excitement never ends and this thread is obsolete. Looks like at least some of these tariffs are already on hold. Apparently once someone actually talks to these countries, they can use their words to ask what they actually wanted.

    It may be retro-logic after inciting panic throughout the economy and everyone we used to be friends with, but currently they’re claiming tariffs are a “negotiation tactic”,”bargaining from strength’, and not just a bully throwing a tantrum. At the very least they appear ready to drop the tariff idea once something changes, but this really seems like the 10 year olds concept of being strong

  • CharlesDarwin@lemmy.world
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    22 hours ago

    Which is probably the point. One should view donvict as a foreign actor just doing things to benefit anyone BUT the United States.

  • Riskable
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    18 hours ago

    If other countries want to get serious about fighting back they need to announce they’re dropping out of the Berne Convention.

    That treaty benefits the US more than anyone else and especially not small countries. The only reason why small countries signed on to it in the first place is because of things like USAID and avoiding tariffs!

    If the US is ending USAID and putting tariffs on fucking everything then why TF would these countries continue to protect US copyrights basically forever.

    I was surprised as heck that Columbia bent over and didn’t just announce that they’re dropping out and will start hosting the biggest “pirate” website ever where they only honor the first 15 years of copyright.

  • Voroxpete@sh.itjust.works
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    1 day ago

    They warned that the tariffs, which were levied in response to Mr. Trump’s concerns about fentanyl smuggling and illegal immigration,

    I hate how much I am seeing this stated as fact, without the essential context.

    Trump is using the 1977 International Emergency Economic Powers Act to enforce tariffs without going through congress, because he knows he doesn’t have the votes for this nonsense.

    It’s not about fent and immigrants. He just needs to say that it is so that he can justify these being “emergency” measures. It’s about his weird, unfounded obsession with trade imbalances and his naive assumption that a negative trade balance represents some kind of problem.

    • tal@lemmy.today
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      22 hours ago

      I don’t know if he’s actually upset about that or playing to the crowd’s beliefs – the 2024 Republican voting public generally feels that international trade is disadvantageous to the US, and he’s done a lot to play to the views of supporters. Problem is that Trump is pretty regularly untruthful on a big-lie level, so sorting out what he’s saying because he thinks it’s politically-useful and what he actually believes does take some doing.

      I commented on this yesterday:

      https://lemmy.today/post/23134018/13920142

      In short:

      In general, Republicans, older people, the poor, white, and the less-educated believe that international trade is disadvantageous to the US.

      So if you figure that Trump’s base is Republican, older, poorer, whiter, and less-educated, they probably are going to be in favor of anything that looks like a reduction in international trade.

      So tariffs and less trade may play well with that crowd. If they think that Trump is reducing trade, he will score political points with them.

      that a negative trade balance represents some kind of problem.

      Even if it did, you’re just talking bilateral trade balances, not overall. Like, even if you thought that you needed to intervene to maintain the overall balance of trade, you’d expect to run surpluses with some trade partners and deficits with others.

      If you asked me, my guess is that Trump is most-likely just fine with international trade. He has multinational companies. He did a great deal during his first term to give the impression that he was reducing international trade (“tear up NAFTA!”) while not actually doing a lot (slightly revise NAFTA to give a little more preference to US auto parts manufacturers and a few other tweaks, rename it, announce that he’d solved our terrible, horrible trade issues). There are going to be people who do have an economics background in the loop, and Trump’s degree – long time ago though that may be – even is in economics.

      A depressingly large amount of of gaining support in politics is just saying things that the people you want to support you agree with.

      • Voroxpete@sh.itjust.works
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        22 hours ago

        Everything you’re arguing here is completely plausible, but I think your read on the final state of the revised NAFTA undersells the work of a lot of skilled negotiators from Canada and Mexico.

        Trump has historically (as in, pre-politics) demonstrated a clear and consistent belief that all trades are zero sum. Either you’re winning, or they are. It’s always important to remember that Trump is, himself, a fairly typical low information right wing voter in his mentality. He’s exactly the sort of person who would be susceptible to the kind of misinformation you’re describing.

        But you may be right, it may all just be theatre for the base. Either way, it sure as hell isn’t about the 20kg of fent siezed at the Canadian border last year.

        • tal@lemmy.today
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          20 hours ago

          Everything you’re arguing here is completely plausible, but I think your read on the final state of the revised NAFTA undersells the work of a lot of skilled negotiators from Canada and Mexico.

          Thing is, when I went into Trump Term 1, I’ve seen similar shennanigans from Republican politicians before. Like, Ron Paul – retired now – is right-libertarian, a pretty hard advocate for laissez-faire free trade. I once listened to a recording of a speech he gave in Texas, where he’s got a constituency that doesn’t like NAFTA much. He spent most of the speech railing on NAFTA (without much by way of specifics) to lots of cheering, which came as quite a surprise to me at the time. His justification was brief and a lot quieter – that NAFTA wasn’t “real free trade” because it wasn’t free enough.

          The thing is, the anti-NAFTA movement is really from people who wanted protectionist trade policy. But most people who echo that don’t really have a great handle on the specifics. They just get a high level “NAFTA == bad”.

          That is, he was advocating for the opposite of the policy that probably a lot of constituenents wanted, but doing so in such a way as to leave them with the impression that he was doing what they wanted.

          So if you’re a politician who wants to run free trade policy representing people who have been sold on protectionist trade policy, that was definitely an existing route.

          Trump’s anti-NAFTA speeches had the same sort of structure. Long, emotional, norm-violating and concrete-detail-free chunks about getting rid of NAFTA and how bad NAFTA was, then a shorter bit “or throw it out and replace it with a new deal that’s good for America”.

          When Trump proposed eliminating NAFTA in Term 1, I went and dug up his whitepaper. Same sort of idea. All-caps stuff up front that was very vague and gave the impression that NAFTA was almost-certainly going to go away, but with no specifics. The actual details further in were a lot more boring.

          Trump goes a lot farther than Paul or most of our politicians – like, Trump doesn’t restrain himself to maybe misleading statements, outright makes major, self-contradictory statements. Trump is willing to not just say something misleading, but outright lie to a degree that I think that we’re not used to with US Presidents.

          But I don’t think that he’s actually doing something new here. This is already in the playbook. He’s just willing to lie to an unprecedented degree.

          A lot of Republican voters are unhappy about illegal immigration. If you recall, the centerpiece of his Term 1 campaign was “The Wall”. He made all kinds of outrageous statements. What a lot of people focused on was his willingness to break norms. The impression he gave to a listener was that there would be a huge wall built spanning the US-Mexico border. There was tremendous noise generated about it when he was in office, lots of talk about funds and so forth…and then nothing happened.

          What I think a number of people forget – or for younger folks, don’t know – is that Bush Jr did virtually the same thing, twenty years ago. In Bush’s case, it wasn’t as prominent, and the term used was “fence” instead of “wall”. The impression it gave was again that the border would be spanned fully.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secure_Fence_Act_of_2006.

          That actually did result in some amount of fencing being constructed around official border checkpoints.

          How about Trump’s wall?

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mexico–United_States_border_wall

          On June 23, Trump visited Yuma, Arizona, for a campaign rally commemorating the completion of 200 miles (320 km) of the wall.[74] U.S. Customs and Border Protection confirmed that almost all of this was replacement fencing.[75] By the end of Trump’s term on January 21, 2021, 452 miles (727 km) had been built at last report by CBP on January 5, much of it replacing outdated or dilapidated existing barriers.[76]

          Needless to say, this isn’t the wall spanning the border that one would walk away from with the impression of Trump building after having listened to his speeches. It’s not nothing, but it’s mostly maintenance on existing fencing.

  • immutable@lemm.ee
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    1 day ago

    You know what they say when you are at the top of a global order and reap substantial benefits from having that coveted position?

    Blow it all up and hope that it’ll come out better by having you… at the top… which is where you already were… hold on.

  • Foni@lemm.ee
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    1 day ago

    The new global economic order: “The USA is not a reliable partner. Even if these tariffs are overturned by Congress or anyone else in a short time, the US government wants to impose them. They are not someone to make deals or do business with. Let’s distance them from our economy as much as possible.”

    Great job orange man