Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
China United States Businesses Government

Trump Ups Ante on China, Threatens Duties on Nearly All its Imports (reuters.com) 326

U.S. President Donald Trump warned on Friday that he was ready to slap tariffs on virtually all Chinese imports into the United States, threatening duties on another $267 billion in Chinese goods on top of $200 billion in imports now primed for levies in coming days. Reuters: The moves would sharply escalate Trump's trade war with Beijing over his demands for major changes in economic, trade and technology policy. China has threatened retaliation, which could include action against U.S. companies operating there. Hours after a public comment period closed on his $200 billion China tariff list, Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One that he was "being strong on China because I have to be."

"The $200 billion we are talking about could take place very soon depending on what happens with them. To a certain extent its going to be up to China," Trump said. "And I hate to say this, but behind that is another $267 billion ready to go on short notice if I want. That totally changes the equation." [...] The $200 billion list, which includes some consumer products such as cameras and recording devices, luggage, handbags, tires and vacuum cleaners, would be subject to tariffs of 10 percent to 25 percent. Cell phones, the biggest U.S. import from China, have so far been spared, but would be engulfed if Trump activates the $267 billion tariff list.
Further reading: Apple says Trump's China tariffs are going to hurt the company.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Trump Ups Ante on China, Threatens Duties on Nearly All its Imports

Comments Filter:
  • Covfefe (Score:5, Funny)

    by nwaack ( 3482871 ) on Friday September 07, 2018 @03:36PM (#57271870)
    Trump then went on to mispronounce the word "anonymous" multiple times and walked off stage.
    • Re:Covfefe (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Tough Love ( 215404 ) on Friday September 07, 2018 @05:11PM (#57272574)

      Looks a lot like aphasia. [wikipedia.org] At least temporarily, Trump lost the mental capacity to pronounce that word. Not the ability to recognize the word, because he caught himself and tried to pronounce it again, making exactly the same mistake again. Clearly not his dentures or a dry mouth, two theories that were advanced after a previous similar episode. [youtube.com] No, it is clear that some wires are crossed inside Trump's brain. Considering who it is, this should be a medical emergency.

      Watch his videos and you will notice a number of more subtle, but substantially similar events. And sometimes he completely loses track of the logic of a sentence he is trying to construct. These events seem to be increasing in frequency. That is my unscientific observation. This really needs to be assessed properly and scientifically by medical professionals, except not this guy. [thehill.com]

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Friday September 07, 2018 @03:36PM (#57271876)
    I don't know about the rest of /. but my wages have not kept pace with inflation. Cheap foreign goods has been the only thing that's kept my head above water. Now, you can argue that my wages will start climbing as a result of this, but a) that's not going to happen right away and in the meantime it means big inflation I can ill afford and b) it's not likely to happen since even if the factories come back they're likely to be modern factories heavy on automation, meaning few jobs.

    Tariffs are good at protecting an existing business, but you have to have a business to protect for a tariff to work. The US has manufacturing and we were already doing a good job of protecting it. We've doubled out manufacturing output in the last 40 years (while cutting the workforce by 1/3 due to automation, I might add). Broad tariffs at this point are just closing the barn door after the cows got out.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 07, 2018 @03:48PM (#57271964)

      If, and I mean if this happens, its going to hurt and hurt bad. Sorry to say that but if this ever happens (which I don't think will), it will take 10 years or longer before things settle. The chicken will come to roost after decades of cheap prices for everything we use today. Basically China was our drug dealer; we are hooked and now it may be time to face rehab which isn't going to be fun and probably put more in the poor house before all said and done.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 07, 2018 @03:50PM (#57271972)
      Did you ever stop to think that the reason your wages haven't kept pace with inflation is... wait for it... cheap foreign goods? Cheap foreign goods have decimated US manufacturing and annihilated millions of jobs. These people all compete for the remaining jobs. Companies have very little incentive to raise wages ... in fact, some people consider themselves lucky to have a job at all. But hey, at least when you need a new toaster it's pretty cheap.
      • by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 07, 2018 @03:57PM (#57272028)

        Yes, I believe he did think of that, because he said "Now, you can argue that my wages will start climbing as a result of this, but..."

      • by fluffernutter ( 1411889 ) on Friday September 07, 2018 @05:04PM (#57272532)
        I, for one, am tired of the "wait for your wages to go up because of this" game. We have been doing this dance since the Regan years.
        • by RhettLivingston ( 544140 ) on Friday September 07, 2018 @07:23PM (#57273292) Journal

          Exactly. For 90% of us, wage growth has been anemic, less than 1% per year on average, for 40 years, and cheap foreign goods have been a saving grace only in the last 15-20.

          Instead of blaming wage issues on cheap foreign goods, they should be blaming the necessity to shift to cheap foreign goods on the wage issues. After 20 years of increasing income inequality, the 90% of us getting nowhere could no longer afford American quality and had to just buy what we could afford. That resulted in the last 20 years of increasing imports of cheap foreign goods.

          Now, instead of fixing the inequality problem so that we can afford to buy American, they want to just force us back? It won't work because we simply don't have the money. I have some choice feelings about that kind of strategy.

      • by RhettLivingston ( 544140 ) on Friday September 07, 2018 @07:06PM (#57273208) Journal

        It is funny that wage growth is suddenly considered a problem in the last decade. We are rich.

        Between 1979 and 2007, the bottom 90% of the US only saw a total of 16.7% wage growth. From 2007 to 2016, the bottom 90% grew another 4%.

        If you look at the 90th to 99th percentile, you see wage growth of 56.9% over the 1979 to 2007 time frame, and another 7.9% since.

        It is only when you look at the top 1% that you see wage growth of 156.2% from 1979 to 2007 and -2.9% since.

        So, 90% of us can legitimately complain about wage growth sucking since 1979. It has been much less than 1% per year. But this is only a problem now that the top 1% have fallen from their routine 4% per year wage growth that we have a problem?

        Whatever. Cry me a river. Why does it seem that the media only represents the elite?

        Recent wage growth trends look more like a slight downpayment on an income distribution correction to me. 90% of us would be vastly happier if we simply returned to a 1970's income distribution without any change in the overall total income. Over 40 years, that bulk of our nation has only recently crossed a total of 20% gain. The rest of you, especially the top 1% who have grown by 311% over those same 40 years, are welcome to at least show enough shame to shut up if not to lobby for change.

        data [epi.org]

    • "The sudden loss of access to previously affordable goods will encourage workers to be more passionate about their career. This will spur the economy further and reduce the gap between the rich and the poor." - government analyst probably.
    • by liquid_schwartz ( 530085 ) on Friday September 07, 2018 @03:57PM (#57272030)

      I don't know about the rest of /. but my wages have not kept pace with inflation.

      This trend is very true, well documented, and has been happening since the early 70s when wages became decoupled from productivity. This has happened regardless of which party is in power so it's not a D or R issue. It's a free trade / taxes / mass immigration issue. Trump is a symptom of rage at the establishment, as is Bernie. He's actually pretty benign compared to how it will go if things don't improve. Just as people now think of Bush II more fondly based on Trump, Trump himself is likely going to be thought of more fondly than what's down the road. I expect in my lifetime to see someone make a political career out of the rage from not one banker in jail. Until the guillotines come out don't expect it to get better. The 1% have it too good and the expense of too many.

      • It's going to be Chinese robots versus US robots in a few decades, and it will literally be rage against the machine. Perhaps the time will come when Americans are ready to accept that automation is changing the world, not trade deficits. It is literally fighting a 20th century war with 19th century ideas while progress ignores the whole goddamned thing.

        • It's going to be Chinese robots versus US robots in a few decades, ...

          And to keep costs down, the US robots will be made in China.

          • In a way, it won't matter any more. When even the robots are built by robots, it's going to come down to transportation costs. It's going to be a lot cheaper to have a robot manufacturing facility in Michigan building robots for the mid-west, to be shipped via driverless trucks or whatever other automated transportation system, than to put them on a slow boat from China. It's not going to make American manufacturing jobs come back, but it will mean at the very least the manufacturing is more localized to ta

      • It's a free trade / taxes / mass immigration issue.

        Actually, according to many economists, it is a technology issue.

    • by jon3k ( 691256 )

      I don't know about the rest of /. but my wages have not kept pace with inflation.

      You should really consider changing jobs then, because my salary has continued to increase far, far faster than inflation. I'm assuming you work in tech, of course. We struggle to find decent candidates and have to pay absurd sums to get qualified people. I've given several pay increases and promotions to keep staff this year alone. They say wages are stagnant but I can tell you that's not the case in tech from everyone I'm talking to and my (anecdotal) experience. Unemployment right now is unbelievably

    • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Friday September 07, 2018 @04:21PM (#57272230)

      Now, you can argue that my wages will start climbing as a result of this

      No, you can't argue that. As Americans replace jobs designing smartphones with jobs sewing t-shirts, wages will go down, not up.

      High tariffs mean higher prices and lower wages.

      Every complex problem has a solution that is simple, obvious, and wrong. Protectionism is one of those solutions.

      • by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 ) on Friday September 07, 2018 @04:52PM (#57272470)

        Now, you can argue that my wages will start climbing as a result of this

        No, you can't argue that. As Americans replace jobs designing smartphones with jobs sewing t-shirts, wages will go down, not up.

        High tariffs mean higher prices and lower wages.

        Every complex problem has a solution that is simple, obvious, and wrong. Protectionism is one of those solutions.

        As Trump has turned the Republican partyy into the party of tariffs and protectionism, next up is a Nixonian re-implementation of wage and price controls. The freeze on Federal employee wages at a time when unemployment is low is merely testing the waters for the next phase. As the Republican party shifts it position to whatever it is that Trump wishes, and obeys his every move, ordinary citizens do not understand that any money coming in from tariffs is not for them.

        Am I wrong? Perhaps. But we shall see shortly. Trump is reinventing the Republican party as we speak, and they lack the intestinal fortitude to oppose him. I would not be terribly surprised if we nationalize industry soon, and Mitch McConnell and Paul Ryan will smile as they sign the law.

        • Yeah, I was really surprised Trump froze government wages. Not the way to convince people that the economy is red-hot.
          • Yeah, I was really surprised Trump froze government wages. Not the way to convince people that the economy is red-hot.

            There are others who need that money more. And we all know who they are.

        • As a free trade supporting fiscal conservative, I would love to see a realignment in American politics. I have recently heard some of my liberal friends saying tariffs and subsidies are bad, just because Trump supports them, and they ignore the fact that Bernie advocated the same dumb policies.

          If the Democrats can combine social tolerance with sensible economic policies, and the Republicans can concentrate all the stupidity into one party, that would be wonderful.

          • As a free trade supporting fiscal conservative, I would love to see a realignment in American politics. I have recently heard some of my liberal friends saying tariffs and subsidies are bad, just because Trump supports them, and they ignore the fact that Bernie advocated the same dumb policies.

            If the Democrats can combine social tolerance with sensible economic policies, and the Republicans can concentrate all the stupidity into one party, that would be wonderful.

            True, Republicans are pretty tolerant......

    • Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)

      by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Friday September 07, 2018 @04:25PM (#57272262)
      Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • I think Alibaba just helps you find a friend in China now. IE find a $25 bluetooth headset and basically add it to your wishlist. Then you send a $25 "Cash Gift" to your new friend through Ali, now if your new friend likes your Gift, and low and behold he has a brand new bluetooth headset he has never used, and sends it to you as a gift. Well it was a gift, so no tariff.

        Never new I had so many Friends...

      • You need not worry. If we put a 15% tariff on them, the Chinese government will simply devalue the Yuan (as they always do) so as to maintain steady employment within China. That's the biggest fear of the CCP, mass unemployment WITHIN China.

        Interesting strategy. Not only would that keep their exports attractively cheap, but it would also increase the cost of imports, thereby acting as a de facto tariff.

        Of course, currency manipulation has not helped China make friends, in the current US administration or previous ones.

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      Tariffs are good at protecting an existing business, but you have to have a business to protect for a tariff to work.

      No, tariffs are lousy at protecting existing business, unless the competition is unfairly cheating. If you use a tariff to protect business, all you're doing is giving CEOs another yacht because why compete? If they can now raise prices because of the tariffs, they will.

      It's why tariff relief is generally only given to countries found to be dumping.

      Ask any homebuyer how the 20% tariffs on Ca

  • by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) on Friday September 07, 2018 @03:36PM (#57271878) Journal

    Trump's not going to do shit about China. They're laughing at him and they know all they've got to do is wait now. It won't be long.

    Plus, any further tariffs will be written on one of those pieces of paper his staff has been snatching off his desk to keep him from fucking up completely.

    • Trump's not going to do shit about China. They're laughing at him and they know all they've got to do is wait now. It won't be long.

      Plus, any further tariffs will be written on one of those pieces of paper his staff has been snatching off his desk to keep him from fucking up completely.

      People who can read minds and predict the future belong on late night cable TV shows, 900 number call-ins on billboards, and newspaper horoscopes.

      • People who can read minds and predict the future belong on late night cable TV shows

        As St Augustine famously said, "You don't need to be a weatherman to know which way the wind's blowing."

        • People who can read minds and predict the future belong on late night cable TV shows

          As St Augustine famously said, "You don't need to be a weatherman to know which way the wind's blowing."

          I thought that was Rudy Galindo?

        • As St Augustine famously said, "You don't need to be a weatherman to know which way the wind's blowing."

          Heretic! It was "you don't need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows". Burn the witch!

    • and those went into effect. Trump has moved the overton window even further into the right. In America very few people vote consistently. About 20% in a mid term and 40% in a presidential election. About half of those people are hanging on Trump's every word. Yes, there are adults in the room, but they're terrified that overgrown toddler is going to turn on them in a primary or even a general election.

      And remember, the Republican party has very, very few people who genuinely care about the country. Even
  • Uah (Score:5, Insightful)

    by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Friday September 07, 2018 @03:40PM (#57271902)

    So much economic stupidity. At least he gave tax breaks to businesses and bailed out the industries he's nearly killed as he taxed the hell out of their supply chain.

    • Re:Uah (Score:5, Interesting)

      by gtall ( 79522 ) on Friday September 07, 2018 @04:11PM (#57272130)

      I'm sorry, which industries has he bailed out? Coal? Natural gas and renewable are still eating their lunch. Steel and aluminum? I fail to see the boom except is CEO's blowing smoke in Trump's direction, although he very much likes and believes it.

      In the meantime, he's helped tanked the farming and ag business. His tariffs are being paid by every industry and customer reliant on those imports. And now that inflation is taking off and given the eye-watering deficits and debt, the interest rates will continue to rise. That is tanking the rest of the world's economies. And sooner or later, they won't be able to afford American exports because of the dollar's strength and their own currencies weakness. See Turkey for a preview.

  • by mykepredko ( 40154 ) on Friday September 07, 2018 @03:42PM (#57271928) Homepage

    "Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results."

    Isn't it time to look at a different tool for changing the relationship between the US and China? I can't imagine this hurting anybody but the US consumer - AND I suspect that it could be a boon for other countries looking for lower cost goods for their economies.

    • I can't imagine this hurting anybody but the US consumer

      No, it hurts the Trump agenda too. [nbcnews.com]

  • Good (Score:2, Interesting)

    by sexconker ( 1179573 )

    I'm fine with buying less shit from China, or paying more for what I actually do need to buy (from elsewhere or from China when necessary).

    It ultimately means China gets less of US money. A lot less. It's China who loses here, not the US. The US is hundreds of billions in trade deficit to China. China has far, far more to lose in this game of chicken.

    China can end it all now if they just agree to one simple thing. Fair trade. If China doesn't like the tariffs and restrictions they can get rid of the s

    • Re:Good (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Dixie_Flatline ( 5077 ) <vincent@jan@goh.gmail@com> on Friday September 07, 2018 @04:01PM (#57272058) Homepage

      But trade deficits aren't inherently bad. It's not like the US is paying China a bunch of money out of its tax coffers. The trade deficit merely represents the money flowing between people and companies located in different countries. Seriously, just google 'understanding trade deficit', and nearly every single article is about how trade deficits aren't a good indicator of economic performance in and of themselves, they're just a metric of trade. And I'm not talking about left-leaning publications, I'm talking about everyone. Forbes, investment news, economists—virtually everyone agrees that a trade deficit in the right circumstances can be very good.

      https://www.nationalreview.com... [nationalreview.com]
      https://www.forbes.com/sites/d... [forbes.com]

      Really, the only person that doesn't get that is Trump.

    • Re:Good (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 07, 2018 @04:06PM (#57272092)

      I'm fine with buying less shit from China, or paying more for what I actually do need to buy (from elsewhere or from China when necessary).

      And just who the ever loving fuck do you think you're going to get it from?

      Trump has started trade wars with Europe, China, Canada, Mexico, Asia ... and is in the process of openly pissing off everyone. You're rapidly running out of friends.

      China has far, far more to lose in this game of chicken.

      China also has deeper pockets and cash reserves, and America is far more dependent on China than they realize. They've got a huge cash reserve of your money and treasury bills.

      Fair trade.

      Tell you what, America can stop it's farm subsidies and stop bitching about similar subsidies other countries have. What's that? No? Then you don't want free trade either.

      So here's a little reality check for you ... the rest of the world is losing patience with your President, and losing any feelings of friendship towards the US. We can no longer separate your asshole president from your idiot citizens who parrot the dumb shit he says.

      So, please, by all means, piss off your friends and allies. Just don't go stomping around blustering about how we have to listen to you or give a fuck your your interests.

      Because we're all fine with buying less shit from America or giving a fuck about what Trump thinks.

      • So here's a little reality check for you ... the rest of the world is losing patience with your President, and losing any feelings of friendship towards the US. We can no longer separate your asshole president from your idiot citizens who parrot the dumb shit he says.

        I hear what you're saying - you would like your country to pay for your defense from Russia.

        I think we can arrange that.

        Real friends don't leech off of others, they abide by their obligations.

        We're only making the tariffs fair and even. Trump has said repeatedly that he would welcome getting rid of all tariffs on both sides. He's said that directly to Merkel, using those exact words. Her response was to laugh.

        Eliminating all tariffs seems fair.

        Do you have a problem with fair?

        • The U.S doesn't keep bases in Europe out of good will. It does because we want Russia to know that a potential war will be fought at their borders and very far away from ours
      • Hurting the U.S by selling their T-bill holdings at below-value would cost China a fortune. It is a double-edged sward that will cut into them as much as into us.

        The rest of your comment is spot on. Trump is basically pissing away all the hard-earned friendships and good-will the U.S has gained from WW2-forward and willfully relinquishing its status as a global-leader

    • by gtall ( 79522 )

      Ah, the Trump argument of using the Big Stupid Number, in this case, the balance of trade. Your understanding of that is right out of the 1800's, like your hero, the alleged president.

      • Argue against it. The long running imbalance has destroyed the US economy. We have extreme wealth disparity in the US because of it.

    • I'm fine with buying less shit from China, or paying more for what I actually do need to buy (from elsewhere or from China when necessary).

      It ultimately means China gets less of US money. A lot less. It's China who loses here, not the US. The US is hundreds of billions in trade deficit to China. China has far, far more to lose in this game of chicken.

      China can end it all now if they just agree to one simple thing. Fair trade. If China doesn't like the tariffs and restrictions they can get rid of the same exact tariffs and restrictions they impose on us, and poof, we reciprocate.

      So are you now a socialist? You do not believe in the free market or supply and demand? Funny how conservatives have almost overnight become believers in Keynesian economics. Just like Nixon did.

      With Tariffs, it is a direct admission that you cannot compete, therefore must put artificial Taxes on other's products to artificially make them cost more.

      Elimination of anyhing resembling a free market, anti competitive tariffs, and taxes. The Republicans inch toward socialism and eventually communism.

      • I'm fine with buying less shit from China, or paying more for what I actually do need to buy (from elsewhere or from China when necessary).

        It ultimately means China gets less of US money. A lot less. It's China who loses here, not the US. The US is hundreds of billions in trade deficit to China. China has far, far more to lose in this game of chicken.

        China can end it all now if they just agree to one simple thing. Fair trade. If China doesn't like the tariffs and restrictions they can get rid of the same exact tariffs and restrictions they impose on us, and poof, we reciprocate.

        So are you now a socialist? You do not believe in the free market or supply and demand? Funny how conservatives have almost overnight become believers in Keynesian economics. Just like Nixon did.

        With Tariffs, it is a direct admission that you cannot compete, therefore must put artificial Taxes on other's products to artificially make them cost more.

        Elimination of anyhing resembling a free market, anti competitive tariffs, and taxes. The Republicans inch toward socialism and eventually communism.

        Are you a retard? (Yes, you are.)

        I'm fine with a free market. We do not have a free market. Trump wants a free market. China ALREADY imposes huge tariffs and restrictions on OUR SHIT. We are merely returning the favor in kind.

        If you want a FREE MARKET ask China to drop their tariffs and restrictions against us. The US will then reciprocate and our tariffs and restrictions against China will be dropped.

        If you think that China can go without US goods for longer than the US can go without Chinese goods,

  • by organgtool ( 966989 ) on Friday September 07, 2018 @03:49PM (#57271968)
    Trump only knows one thing: how to make threats until he gets what he wants. That childish behavior works really well against your parents and your sycophant "friends" but it's not a great strategy to use on the world stage. The previous tariffs are being blamed for the increased trade deficit this quarter and these additional tariffs will likely make that worse. It's like Trump is determined to erase any gains he can attempt to take credit for with the improved economy. Maybe the writer of the NYT op-ed can sabotage these tariffs.
    • by gtall ( 79522 )

      Re the writer on the NYT, I don't know if s/he is really in the alleged administration or just punking them. However, given the better sourced Woodword (sp?) book, it is fairly clear that few in the alleged administration have a high opinion of Fearless Leader. Battering and demeaning the hired help when the hired help can strike back is a completely different ball game than running a penny-ante company (and driving it into bankruptcy 4 times...6 depending upon who's counting).

      So it turns out the hire help

    • by fluffernutter ( 1411889 ) on Friday September 07, 2018 @05:17PM (#57272620)
      Honest question, how many of you feel threatened by Canada? That was the excuse he used to put tariffs on Canadian imports. Canada is a national threat. Some loophole from the 1960's. Piss poor way to show everyone he doesn't want tariffs. Then he complains when Canada reciprocates.
    • there was an interview with Ed McMahon where he talked about a Trump "negotiation" session. By the time Trump was done negotiating he'd given McMahon everything and got nothing in return.

      Trump went bankrupt for real several times. His banks wanted to try and recover as much as they could and Trump had a well known name & brand so they let him keep some money and go on playing the part of the rich man so they could try and use his brand to bilk people out of money. Worked too. But that wasn't Trump's
  • Why is this being framed as an economic issue, at all?

    The fucking point is to pressure them into treating their people better, not to affect the US markets.

    Since we're clearly not doing that, the rest is just theatre.
  • by Plumpaquatsch ( 2701653 ) on Friday September 07, 2018 @04:09PM (#57272114) Journal
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

    Alternative link for Canadians and Brits: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

    And if thats TLDW for you, at least watch from 14:54 to see how Trump got his Trade with China expert.

  • by llZENll ( 545605 ) on Friday September 07, 2018 @04:12PM (#57272150)

    So assuming all the tariffs are enacted, where is the 467 billion spent? Because if you say to support K-12 education, SS, or the environment then great, if you say to buy more billion dollar warplanes and to start a star wars program, then FU.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 07, 2018 @04:49PM (#57272436)

      every penny of that 467 billion is being spent on Dear Leader's ego. It's a small price to pay for such an exquisitely rare, delicate, and gilded of egos. I hear there may be one or two more out there, but I never saw one. No Collusion! Let me tell you, though, the ego that you're going to be getting... means that I'll be very happy on tv. That means more ratings. The happier I am, the more ratings I get, which means I'm worth more. And let me tell you, once all of that happiness trickles down to you dumb southerners, you'll be happier too - thus you'll get better ratings, and make more money. That'll really make those 17 angry democrats even more angry. And the more angrier they get, the less happy they'd be... so they'd get less ratings and make less money. It's win win win lose draw win. I like drawing. I make the best drawings. I colored that flag better than all those kids. Those kids are losers, let me tell you about losers. Losers have fragile egos. Not an ego like mine, mine is huge. An ego that big can't be fragile because it's big. Have you seen those photoshops of my inauguration? Ya, big like that. Bigly big. Big bigly. Happy.

  • Sun Tzu's advice (Score:4, Interesting)

    by hey! ( 33014 ) on Friday September 07, 2018 @04:37PM (#57272368) Homepage Journal

    If you completely surround an enemy, his soldiers will fight bravely. If you leave them a path to escape, they will run away.

    This is actually a pretty good time to put some trade pressure on China. They've reached the end of an era of explosive growth and the transition to something more sustainable is bound to put pressure on them. A trade war can really hurt them right now (as it can hurt us as well).

    This is a time to have your exit strategy worked out. If we have a shrewd and accurate idea of what we can feasibly walk away with, we could do quite well out of a little trade saber rattling. The thing is if we don't have an exit strategy, we can hurt our own economy and give the Chinese regime a legitimate scapegoat for its own problems.

    So this is a test of the president's acumen. Does he have the brains to know when to walk away from a conflict?

    • " Does he have the brains to know when to walk away from a conflict?"
      Do you pay attention? This moron doesn't have the brains of a turd floating in a toilet.

  • by ebusinessmedia1 ( 561777 ) on Friday September 07, 2018 @04:51PM (#57272462)
    Trump believers think they're winning, even though they're losing. This is one sign of cultism.
  • spoiled brat (Score:5, Insightful)

    by citylivin ( 1250770 ) on Friday September 07, 2018 @05:05PM (#57272542)

    "but behind that is another $267 billion ready to go on short notice if I want"

    If *I* want.

    Not advisers, not the american people, I.

    "*I* am the state"

    me me me, I I I. He has all the situational awareness of a toddler.

  • by manu0601 ( 2221348 ) on Friday September 07, 2018 @05:46PM (#57272768)
    I wonder if WTO will survive that moves between US and China. Its rules were already seen as unfair by many poor countries, and now everyone sees they do not apply to big players.
  • Seriously, trump has screwed things up all around. This is one area, where at least he is keeping his promise to address this. W/O promised that they would get China to honor their treaties and WTO as well, but did nothing.

Every nonzero finite dimensional inner product space has an orthonormal basis. It makes sense, when you don't think about it.

Working...