Tech Group Urges US To Recruit Allies To Take on China, Not Tariffs (venturebeat.com) 186
A trade group representing top technology companies on Monday told U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin that it opposes the Trump administration's focus on tariffs to try to change China's unfair trade practices. From a report: The Information Technology Industry Council said in a letter to Mnuchin that it supports the Trump administration's "Section 301" investigation into China's abuses of intellectual property, but instead of tariffs, it advocates a U.S.-led international coalition to put pressure on Beijing. "Our opposition to tariffs is pragmatic. Tariffs do not work," wrote ITIC President and CEO Dean Garfield. "Instead of tariffs, we strongly encourage the administration to build an international coalition that can challenge China at the World Trade Organization and beyond," Garfield added. "Numerous countries share the United States' concerns about China and its unfair trade practices. The United States is uniquely well-situated to lead that coalition."
Draw a Red Line in the sand (Score:5, Funny)
we strongly encourage the administration to build an international coalition that can challenge China at the World Trade Organization and beyond
That's worked so well in other places.
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The World Trade Organization, and all of its trade treaties, are too corrupt to bother with. International terrorist organizations need to be utterly eliminated, whether they work in weapons or financials.
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Then there's the little fact that China routinely ignores anything the WTO says anyway...
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Then there's the little fact that China routinely ignores anything the WTO says anyway...
That is simply not the case!
First you seem confused about how the WTO settles disputes: https://www.wto.org/english/th... [wto.org]
Second, here is a list with the details of every dispute China has been involved with in the WTO: https://www.wto.org/english/th... [wto.org]
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Might be far better than what we're getting from the WTO and the UN. Especially now that ballistic missiles and nukes
are obsolete- welcome to the Drone Wars.
Re: Draw a Red Line in the sand (Score:2)
Especially now that ballistic missiles and nukes are obsolete
Surely you can make up more interesting stuff than that...
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I really hope you're joking.
Ballistic missiles are rarely purely ballistic, or they would be easy to both predict and shoot down. The hard part is relative velocity, in the 15-20,000 mph range. It really is rather like trying to shoot down a bullet with another bullet, except it's actually WAY harder. Now that bullet can split into multiple warheads, most of which have at least minimal course correction abilities. Add radar stealth coatings, decoy warheads, ECM technologies, etc., it rapidly becomes clear t
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NO, we have interest in this trade war. While Trump has been tearing up treaties the rest of the world has been signing them.
Going forward, China is viewed as a more important trade partner than the USA.
The USA is only4% of the worlds population and effectively stagnant, where as Asia is 60%, and in China the middle class is growing...bigly.
So in the interest of MAGA, USA first, allow us to say...USA last because we don't want to get caught in this shit storm.
And as
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NO, we have interest in this trade war. While Trump has been tearing up treaties the rest of the world has been signing them.
Spoken like a true elitist. While you have been signing them, your populace has been growing increasingly discontent at having their standard of living thrown away for the benefit of the international financiers. Prepare for more Brexits, Trumps, and M5S's.
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We are also unhappy about the huge protections the US has for its agriculture sector.
We went through this trauma 20-30 years ago and have more Market freedom than the USA.
and over all, we are a much happier people than the USA.
This trader is all about the USA unwilling to recognise it is only 4% of the worlds population and that China will soon (if not already) over take th
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or perhaps you mean like healthcare where it costs us less money ?
But feel free to let us know how well the US does in: Education, Healthcare, Law and order, Freedom, Freedom of the press, free speech , social mobility, corruption, Racism, infant mortality , life expectancy, Bankruptcies, Drug addiction, Capitalism, democracy, etc etc etc because from where I sit, the US is NOT great, not great
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Re: Draw a Red Line in the sand (Score:3)
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Yeah, the stronger dollar is actually a problem for US domestic production. Exports rise and imports decline when the dollar weakens a bit. Everyone screams at how they want a strong dollar, but this is actually rather short sighted. Our national interest is best served by a weaker (within reason) dollar. It also makes it relatively cheaper to pay down our national debt, as most of it is valued in, wait for it: US dollars.
Our most valuable national asset, both strategically and economically, is the fact tha
Re: Draw a Red Line in the sand (Score:2)
...
/snicker
If they don't work (Score:3, Interesting)
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At what?
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Tariffs have turned China from a third world nation into a quasi-first world nation. Free trade has turned the US from a first world nation into a quasi-third world nation. Gee, maybe there's a relationship?
Re: If they don't work (Score:2)
#dunce
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Sure, we may have hamstrung our country and doomed it to oblivion, but hey, at least we got cheap consumer goods out of the deal!
Economics in the current year people. The negative effects of policy don't matter so long as they make consumer goods cheaper because as we all know cheap consumer goods will keep the everyone happy forever and it's inconceivable that our Utopian materialist philosophies could possibly be wrong in any way let alone leading to certain doom!
TL;DR; Modern Neoliberal Economics: The only thing that matters is increasing GDP. All other concerns are secondary at best, and in all likelihood ignored entirely on th
Yeah, whinning is more likely to work (Score:4, Interesting)
I absolutely loathe drumPft, everything about him, from his absurd "hairstyle" to his voice, diction, "policies", etc.
However, I favor sanctions. We should sanction smartly though to protect our high tech manufacturing industries. So we could be a powerhouse like Germany, which protects its industries. China protects its acquisition of technology, why shouldn't we also work to help our industries?
This "Tech Group" sounds like they favor inaction and ineffective whining because, apparently, they have more to gain by importing Chinese goods than by helping strengthen the American middle class. Damned blood-sucking corporatist vampires.
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I absolutely loathe drumPft, everything about him, from his absurd "hairstyle" to his voice, diction, "policies", etc.
However, I favor sanctions. We should sanction smartly though to protect our high tech manufacturing industries. So we could be a powerhouse like Germany, which protects its industries. China protects its acquisition of technology, why shouldn't we also work to help our industries?
This "Tech Group" sounds like they favor inaction and ineffective whining because, apparently, they have more to gain by importing Chinese goods than by helping strengthen the American middle class. Damned blood-sucking corporatist vampires.
Please explain what you mean by this? Germany is a part of the EU so they have no sanctions against China.
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They protect their industries by keeping them in-country. This is done because all corporations have an advisory board made up of rank-and-file employees, who clearly have a vested interest in the company remaining and zero in it leaving. I wasn't trying to imply they had sanctions on China, sorry if it read that way.
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But in this case, the horses have already left the barn. Closing the door now will do nothing to help the middle class.
Re: Yeah, whinning is more likely to work (Score:4, Insightful)
Except it clearly isn't, or the Chinese wouldn't be trying so hard to convince us otherwise.
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I get the feeling that somewhere in the madness of your post, there is something coherent. Could you re-post with some examples of what you are talking about, right now it's too abstract to comprehend. If you respond by insulting my intelligence, you won't make any progress, as I'm just asking for clarification.
Also, who is co-opting Marxist sloganeering and what institutions are on the side of the people to help oppose these AstroTurfers?
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They protect their industries by keeping them in-country. This is done because all corporations have an advisory board made up of rank-and-file employees, who clearly have a vested interest in the company remaining and zero in it leaving. I wasn't trying to imply they had sanctions on China, sorry if it read that way.
Although I believe that works councils are a good idea your claim seem a bit generous as they are advisory boards only and not unique to Germany. Other countries have a legal right to union representation in the governing board, with the same rights as other board members (limited to a minority of the total board obviously). There are also European Works Councils for companies with employees in more than one EU country.
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I don't know about other countries' particular configurations, I know that in Germany those boards are in-place as per their Constitution. A Constitution that was put in place and dictated primarily by American and Russian generals after defeating the Germans in WW2. I don't recall if these boards are made up of Union members, I know that at a bank, the gardener can be part of the board. Advisory boards are not ignored if that is what you are implying by saying I am being a bit generous. What I get from
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Thing is, China expected this to happen one day and planned according. It made sure that the US couldn't screw China without screwing itself. It made sure it was mutually assured destruction, while at the same time pushing into other markets that the US is ignoring (like Africa) or pissing off (like Europe).
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The US more or less ignores Africa because our industry got tired of losing their money to kleptocrats. The Chinese will learn too.
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China is building a lot of infrastructure in Africa. It's working very well for them.
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The building part always works. It's the getting paid part that doesn't. After the infrastructure is built, the Africans will call the Chinese imperialists and deny them whatever contract terms were promised them.
The Chinese will get burned, same as _everybody_ else did.
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You do realize that Europeans came and extracted the wealth of these nations while destroying their society and way of life? The only injustice is that these extractors weren't impaled and burned on a pyre as they arrived. I cannot believe that in this day-and-age anyone with two or more working brain cells can even jokingly put forth that the Europeans got a raw deal, FFS!
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And yet, the only nation in Africa that isn't a complete shithole is the one where Europeans ruled the longest.
Even there, the current rulers can't help themselves.
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Could it be that they ended up shitholes because their resources were extracted with all benefits going to those who stole the land and resources, leaving the natural population impoverished financially and intellectually? They're coming back and feel that they aren't shitholes but it does take a while to dig out when you have been oppressed and impoverished for hundreds of years. Fuck all the European vermin that went and destroyed literally every society and land that they came upon.
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This started 20 years ago, and hasn't happened yet. Is it possible that we were imperialists and this is different?
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No.
As the poster notes, so long as the Europeans held the governments they did OK at resource extraction. He's wrong there was any wealth there to begin with. Dirt becomes ore when you have the technology.
But since then, it's a 100% money pit. Investment/burn cycles run decades.
De Beers group is about the only one left making money, because they just pay off the dictators. Even that's ending. They were just extracting sunk costs for a century or so.
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Please never say that again. "You know who" might hear it.
Re: Yeah, whinning is more likely to work (Score:2)
Re: Yeah, whinning is more likely to work (Score:2)
LMOL (Score:2)
Tariffs do work, ask Japan.
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China is not manipulating its currency, how exactly would they that anyway?
Their currency fixed bound to the US$ since ages.
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Tariffs work fine (Score:1)
tl;dr; Barn Door's open, animals are gone.
Alternative (Score:1)
What the US needs to do is get together with the UK and a couple of other allies and create an effective 'hacker' team and ddos the crap out of the palace in Beijing. After which we could do the same to the Kremlin, and maybe the entire country of Syria. It is time we started fighting on the third front in the virtual world, We have the technology, we have the personnel and we certainly have cause.
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It is and has been happening to the west for sometime. State sponsored hacker groups originating from government owned facilities in China, Russia, Iran and Syria have been hacking at US installations and infrastructure for years now. It won't start a world war it will just up the ante in the ongoing cyber war that has taken the place of the cold war. Foreign entities need to know that the west is willing and able to defend itself in the cyber world as well as the 'real' world.
Good results so far. (Score:3)
Should we be working with our allies to combat unfair trading practices? Of course!
Should we do so in a calm and collected manner? Of course!
Was the president warned about retaliation a thousand times before the first tariff? Of course!
Does he think he's smarter than everyone else and nothing can dissuade him from taking the more perilous actions? Of course!
This is the bed people have made, it's time to sleep in it.
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Imports reduce the amount of American labor spent on obtaining a thing (i.e. you work 3 hours for American-made pants, 1.86 hours for the same exact quality of Chinese pants, and more than 3 hours for American-made pants at a higher quality, assuming the American manufacturing industry has equivalent or better experience and expertise in manufacturing compared to China). That reduces American poverty and frees up American labor to do things like build great new technology industries. If the cost differen
Let's make everything overseas! (Score:2)
Imports reduce the amount of American labor spent on obtaining a thing (i.e. you work 3 hours for American-made pants, 1.86 hours for the same exact quality of Chinese pants, and more than 3 hours for American-made pants at a higher quality, assuming the American manufacturing industry has equivalent or better experience and expertise in manufacturing compared to China). That reduces American poverty and frees up American labor to do things like build great new technology industries.
Wow, what an insightful comment!
If we make everything overseas, it would eliminate US poverty altogether!
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If we make everything overseas, it would eliminate US poverty altogether!
We practically do. We make computer chip designs here, as well as software, medicine, and of course infrastructure. We provide services here. We do technology research and engineering here. Most of the stuff we've ever made is now acquired from overseas, except farming.
Speaking of farming...
We used to employ 90% of the workers (at 80-100 hour work weeks) as farmers--down to age 13 (or below). We used to put kids in factories for these long hours, too. Child labor. Remember that?
Through a long ser
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Imports reduce the amount of American labor spent on obtaining a thing (i.e. you work 3 hours for American-made pants, 1.86 hours for the same exact quality of Chinese pants, and more than 3 hours for American-made pants at a higher quality, assuming the American manufacturing industry has equivalent or better experience and expertise in manufacturing compared to China). That reduces American poverty and frees up American labor to do things like build great new technology industries. If the cost differential is more than trivial, it net-creates American jobs because moving and selling all those goods also requires labor.
But then your $25/hr factory job gets shipped overseas and you can only get a $8/hr job as a bartender, and so your standard of living got worse. And then the retail stores don't actually bother to reduce prices at all; only electronics products have gone down in price (imo due to technological advancement). The price on most other items, from durable goods, cars, healthcare, education, childcare, and housing have skyrocketed in recent years while U.S. median wages actually decreased. Most of the Americans
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then your $25/hr factory job gets shipped overseas and you can only get a $8/hr job as a bartender
Depends, really. We create more high- and low-paying jobs over time.
You are attempting to argue on principals of comparative and absolute advantage. These theories only explain that more goods and services might be produced. But they DO NOT EXPLAIN TO WHERE THEY ARE DISTRIBUTED.
So, pants cost 1.83 hours of minimum-wage labor if made in China and bought by Americans. They cost 3.0 hours of minimum-wage labor if made in America and bought by Americans. That's your answer of to where they are distributed.
You also have to realize that trade and technology are roughly the same, in this sense: they both reduce the (local) jobs required to produce a thing, and leave your economy to adjust the labor force by spend
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The first tariff was decades ago. Imposed by China.
China's got shit to retaliate with. See the trade balance. They can't put in new tariffs, because they've had them all along. Sure, they tariff pork, which is 1% of the value of China's exports. That's just not going to work for them.
Also: China's banking system continues to be a mess. US treasuries are the quality part of China's banking reserves. Think about that...they _can't_ say no to a central committee members child. Imaging what those loan port
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While Trump has been ripping up trade agreements, China has been making them.
While Trump has been pissing people off, China has been talking nicely.
Chinas middle class is growing, the US is stagnant, the US could be locked out of the biggest growth market there is
China has rare earth materials the US needs, I guess China can stop selling it to the US to balance trade...
So while the USA places tariffs on things like Aluminium which will o
Ummm how about both? (Score:2)
No one in that region other than North Korea is cool with China. For all of the white progressive derping about "American imperialism," it's rather telling ain't it that even Vietnam is seeking to build a real relationship with us. Let that sink in--a country whose northern half we treated about on par with how the Soviets treated Afghanistan--prefers us to China.
China is colonizing Africa. Look it up if you don't believe me. There are quite a few million Chinese who have moved there in the last few decades
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The world is going to bitterly regret not standing up to China and aggressively asserting its interests against them.
So true. That's why I often post about the US looking after its own interests and letting the world go to hell. No reason to waste blood and treasure when it's not appreciated. Secure the borders and focus on getting our house back in order. The US wasn't perfect by any means, but it could have been much worse. China is going to prove just how true that statement is.
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Yea that turned out really well in the early 1940s.
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No one prevents Europeand or americans to move to Africa.
Sorry, but to say it pluntly: the time that countries have to react on other countries development, even thinking that they need to react, are over. Over long ago. Half the communist regimes on the world are/were there because the US supported the dictors there before some 'revolution' killed them. That the world is slowly dragging itself out of the shithole the USA put us in is a good thing.
You had 50 years, actually 70 years, chance to depose africa
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Tariffs sure work for China (Score:1)
Congratulations on recovering from that coma. (Score:2)
we strongly encourage the administration to build an international coalition
Has the author of this memo been in a coma for the last two years?
Get the Pacific countries onboard! (Score:2)
If only there was some way we could create some sort of "Cross Pacific Collaboration"; a coordinated block of pacific countries with free trade agreements and aligned tariff rules. That would be an amazing way to counter China. Too bad nothing like that was ever negotiated...
China already losing, soybeans bought by Europe. (Score:4, Informative)
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Also the pork tariffs are a joke because one of the largest pork exporters is a Chinese company.
Misunderstood (Score:2)
I think that this whole tariff circus misunderstands the economic relationship between the US and China. US corporations have exported much of their manufacturing to China, which offers poorer working conditions, more human rights violations, a sufficiently skilled workforce, and good transport infrastructure. These conditions help to drive down the cost of manufacturing and ensure a robust and reliable supply chain for the US market.
This arrangement is of enormous benefit and profit to US corporations. Unf
soory, but tariffs are needed (Score:1)
Free Trade (Score:2)
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As you likely know: governments.
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And in that lies the main problem with international trade as presently constituted: it is all about the specific individual good and never about the common good.
Re: What is an unfair trade practice? (Score:4, Insightful)
And your silly notion of "The Collective" doesn't fucking exist: human beings -are individuals.
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"human beings -are individuals." which is most people live in cities, to take advantage of the things that communal living gives.
Re: What is an unfair trade practice? (Score:2)
Only this time it's happening at a far faster rate.
Re: What is an unfair trade practice? (Score:2)
Re: What is an unfair trade practice? (Score:2)
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http://www.konbini.com/en/ente... [konbini.com]
Bugger throwing shoes, nothing says "Fuck off" like a sex toy to the face.
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As it should.
Whenever someone is put in charge of 'the greater good' they define it as their personal good.
Never trust anybody who says: 'We're all in this together'. No we're not! People that say that never mean they are taking on your problems, they mean their problems are going to land on you and your resources belong to them. Fuck them!
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China has no unfair trade practices.
Actually trade is not done between nations, but between companies.
Do you wake up every day and actively look for opportunities to be dumber than you were the day before?
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I think that it is already dumb enough and now just looks for opportunities to demonstrate already achieved dumbness.
Yes China engages in unfair trade practices (Score:2)
China has no unfair trade practices.
You mean except for currency manipulation, import/export restrictions, forex controls [export.gov], foreign ownership restrictions [chinaunique.com], government subsidies, government ownership of businesses, and a fistful of other shady practices?
While I wouldn't claim the US is pure as snow either let's not pretend that China the nation state doesn't act on behalf of Chinese companies.
Actually trade is not done between nations, but between companies.
A) Governments purchase goods too and a lot of them, both foreign and domestic. B) Nation states are HEAVILY involved in international trade. If you thi
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Bad in history?
Every asian country has restrictions regarding what forreigners can own.
Up to you read up and comprehend why that is so.
Regarding ownership of businesses ... are you really that dumb? For every business that is state owned I show you one that is orivate owned.
China is not manipulating its currency, it is bound to the US dollar since decades.
I understand the topic very well. The US want to tax europeand chinese steel, because that tax will magically let pop up steel plants in the USA ...
Then i
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The Chinese currency is bound to a basket of currencies, not the usd specifically.
As there are Chinese forex controls there is an artificial shortage so the renminbi is probably overvalued rather than undervalued.
Chinese steel imports are 3.35% of total US steel imports by value http://www.politifact.com/trut... [politifact.com]
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And when the companies really have no choice but to do what a nation's government tells them to do, what does that imply?
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Any examples for that?
Probably they are not companies then, but parts of the state?
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I only can read about 200 Chinese "characters" no idea why you sent those links ...
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It's actually possible for there to be no winners, and we'll probably get to see that.
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The bus was late this morning! It's a terrorist bus! Oh no, it's raining! These are terrorist clouds! Etc ..
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Marxist Hacker 42 was perfectly happy until you stepped in with your terrorist comment.
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You criticized him. You terrorist.