WE ARE OFFICIALY IN A CONSTITUTIONAL CRISIS.
Nothing will be quite as hilarious as a president dodging the bullet of being labeled and prosecuted as a Russian puppet, only to be taken down due to campaign law violations when he tried to cover up banging a pornstar.
Seahawks4Ever wrote:He needs to be IMPEACHED immediately and ANYBODY who doesn't agree is a TRAITOR to the United States of America.
The GOP leadership in Congress along with a majority of the SCOTUS witness BLATANT CORRUPTION, OBSTRUCTION OF JUSTICE, AND ABJECT TREASON and they have abrogated their duty to DEFEND AND PROTECT THE UNITED STATES CONSTITUTION!!!!!!!!!!!!
WE ARE OFFICIALY IN A CONSTITUTIONAL CRISIS.
Yoder will probably ban me for this, but, I do NOT CARE. I have done my DUTY to this area of the internet, I can do NO MORE. It is up to the rest of YOU to decide, will you help stop this Trumpian MADNESS or will you be part of the problem. no CITIZEN can afford to sit on the sidelines any longer!
burrrton wrote:"Nothing will be quite as hilarious as a president dodging the bullet of being labeled and prosecuted as a Russian puppet, only to be taken down due to campaign law violations when he tried to cover up banging a pornstar."
I don't think there's a snowball's chance in h3ll of that happening, but it would be quintessentially Trumpian to go out that way.
Seahawks4Ever wrote:I will cool it. First of all, I am sorry I got personal, not only was that wrong it always a sure fire way of losing a debate.
Secondly, I will stay away from the political posts because when people have intractable views no amount of debate will change someone's mind and there is no reason to keep beating a dead horse.
2. The economy will continue to hum along at 4% plus based on the regulation reforms and trade agreements.
20% of the black vote? I'd wager a ton of money against that possible result, especially if you're hanging your hat on his pardoning of Jack Johnson, of whom most blacks, indeed most people in general, have never heard of. His stance on the NFL protests will hurt him more with blacks than the pardoning of boxer that's been dead for 70 years could help.idhawkman wrote:The reality of the situation is that he will be reelected by a larger margin than he won this past election. Here's why:
1. African American vote will be over 20% for him based on their unemployment numbers and the programs he puts in place to bring up their social status.
a. Look at the boxer he just pardoned, the prison reform, Kanye West and others. This is what strikes fear in the hearts of Democrats. If Trump holds onto the 20% plus African American vote, you can close the polls now.
b. Lowest unemployment rate for African American and Hispanics in history.
c. DACA reform will get approved and the wall will be built protecting the lowest wage earners from illegals undercutting their wages.
DACA reform will get approved and the wall will be built protecting the lowest wage earners from illegals undercutting their wages.
2. The economy will continue to hum along at 4% plus based on the regulation reforms and trade agreements. (Look for N. Korea to play a big part here)
6. Peace in the middle east and on the Korean penisula will solidify American influence in the world. (Haven't heard anything about ISIS lately have you?)
burrrton wrote:Prediction: the tariffs will negate virtually all of the economic gains we've seen.
Make me eat crow if I'm wrong, but I think these tariffs are *monumentally* stupid.
And although I don't disagree with his doing it, getting out of the Iran nuke deal is already costing the economy as gas prices have gone through the roof
burrrton wrote:Agree- I tend to think those will settle back down, though, and Iran needed to know their nuke program is absolutely, 100%, non-negotiably unacceptable.
But it might not settle down in time for the midterms, and if the economy is sluggish, it will deprive the R's of a big campaign issue.
RiverDog wrote:Agreed. And although I don't disagree with his doing it, getting out of the Iran nuke deal is already costing the economy as gas prices have gone through the roof, and as a result, Wall Street has been very stagnant in the past couple of months.
1. African American vote will be over 20% for him based on their unemployment numbers and the programs he puts in place to bring up their social status.
a. Look at the boxer he just pardoned, the prison reform, Kanye West and others. This is what strikes fear in the hearts of Democrats. If Trump holds onto the 20% plus African American vote, you can close the polls now.
b. Lowest unemployment rate for African American and Hispanics in history.
c. DACA reform will get approved and the wall will be built protecting the lowest wage earners from illegals undercutting their wages.
2. The economy will continue to hum along at 4% plus based on the regulation reforms and trade agreements. (Look for N. Korea to play a big part here)
3. The new health care plan will get approved lowering costs and improving care.
4. V.A. reform will solidify his veteran and active duty votes.
5. Rising wages for the first time in decades will solidify his blue collar vote.
6. Peace in the middle east and on the Korean penisula will solidify American influence in the world. (Haven't heard anything about ISIS lately have you?)
burrrton wrote:Prediction: the tariffs will negate virtually all of the economic gains we've seen.
Make me eat crow if I'm wrong, but I think these tariffs are *monumentally* stupid.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I don't agree. If done right, Trump could revive steel and materials production domestically and help local labor for car companies. It depends on who he hits and how. It would be huge voting returns in key states if he can revive the Rust Belt economies.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Wall Street is not stagnant because of oil prices. Wall Street is stagnant because all the good news is baked into the current price of stocks.
RiverDog wrote:There's not enough capacity in the domestic steel and aluminum industry to meet manufacturer needs. They will still depend on imports, and as such, the tariffs will increase the cost to produce finished goods like autos and airliners and hurting those industries:
In the aerospace industry, about 2.5 million U.S. jobs depend on both steel and aluminum imports.
The increased cost of individual parts could create “a cascading effect that has fairly significant impacts on our industry’s global competitiveness,” Remy Nathan, vice president of international affairs at the Aerospace Industries Association told NPR.
The auto industry, which was already facing sales declines in the U.S., will also be especially impacted. Toyota, General Motors, and other car makers saw their shares drop after the news Thursday.
http://fortune.com/2018/03/02/trump-ste ... ndustries/
This is a bad decision.
Aseahawkfan wrote:You don't need to have domestic production meet all needs. You need the tariffs high enough to make it profitable to make money doing it in America. Once the market settles with the tariffs in place, then you have a strong domestic industry and still profitable foreign industries.
Car maker shares drop in the short-term and you call that a piece of evidence? It isn't. It won't be until we see the full effect of tariffs on the domestic industry. It will take time.
RiverDog wrote:US manufacturers are going to have to buy a portion of their steel and aluminum overseas, tariffs or no tariffs. That means that the tarrifs will make their end products more expensive. Especially where international competition is keen, such as the auto industry, it will hurt domestic companies as their costs will be going up while their competitors can buy their materials without the tariff than their American counterparts and thus their costs remain flat.
The fact that the stock prices of US auto manufacturers dropped immediately after the announcement is evidence. Investors know the in's and out's of all public company's finances, where they get their raw materials from, how much they pay their labor, what their market is doing, and so on. They know the business almost as well as the people that run them.
burrrton wrote:"What is the difference between a Trade War and a shooting war?
In a shooting war each government shoots at and tries to harm the citizens of the OTHER country.
In a trade war, each government raises taxes on and damages its own citizens."
NorthHawk wrote:China is completely different than France or other western countries in that China has a completely managed economy whereby it takes a long term view and then uses every way possible to achieve the goals set in that view.
For instance their rules that state any planes (Airliners like Boeing or Airbus) that they sell to China have to have a factory set up in China to produce and then sell to them.
This does two things for them: 1) it establishes an industry that wasn't in place previously thereby costing jobs in the west and 2) permits them to take technological leaps forward that would otherwise take years or decades.
My personal viewpoint is this airline component was a militarily strategic move because they had problems building jet engines to work with their own advanced fighter planes. What happened? Suddenly jet engines with state of the art design are being built in China where their engineers can copy and use in their planes.
Trump talks about Aluminum and Steel being a national security issue with allies when in fact the security issue is the transfer of technology and advanced design to a hostile nation.
The same can be said for high tech. If you want to read about stealing technology, put Nortel and Huawei in your search engine. The articles suggest they basically stole the company and cost investors billions of dollars.
That type of theft can only be approved of from the top echelon of that government as their access outside of China is monitored and restricted.
Trade wars with countries that are your allies are not the way to go if you want to have solid long term relationships, but trade wars with countries that don't care about copyrights and patents may be necessary to protect industries
and jobs.
NorthHawk wrote:I am, too but I think we have to be careful when free trading with countries whose wages are significantly lower than ours as Free Trade Agreements are of late a means for capital to flow freely and as such it will find its way to the country with the lowest costs of doing business. In my mind, one of the failings of the NAFTA was that the promise or rather expectations were that the wages in Mexico would rise to the levels of the US and Canada and then open about an 85 million people market that didn't previously exist. It resulted in what we see now, namely the dissatisfaction with having watched our jobs go south without creating a new market of middle class Mexican consumers.
It's not the fault of the employees, rather a failure with the initial agreement to not have a stated goal and verifiable results clause within the existing text.
Edit:
I didn't talk about the rule of law which in many low wage countries only exists to benefit that country and Intellectual Property (IP) theft can be commonplace.
IP is a huge concern because it doesn't help anyone as it stifles innovation and investment in that area.
I just think it's important that if you are going to trade with countries, and we all must do so, that measures are in place to limit theft.
I don't believe we should be free trading with managed economies. You can never get a fair deal from that. However, countries with similar economic philosophies can work well.
Consider the EU. Most of their wages and costs of doing business are very near the same as in North America. Sure there are some pockets of lower costs, but generally the wages and regulations are very similar.
But most importantly, there is a mature legal structure in place to stop large scale theft of IP.
Do you actually follow the business news and our trade deals with other nations
I'm basically a free trader. With our economy running the way it is, with unemployment at 20 year lows (3.8%), I don't see the need to change anything.
"Sure you can just extend the tariffs to the fabricated and finished goods that are undercutting domestic industry, but at a certain point you’re just making everything more expensive. In the end, that’s a lot of economic pain for minimal, mostly symbolic, gain."
burrrton wrote:Coincidentally, I just stumbled across this in my morning reading:
"New tariffs intended to bolster the American steel and aluminum industries are starting to have the opposite effect in a key part of the U.S. supply chain."
https://www.wsj.com/articles/steel-tari ... 1527940800
Ugh.
[edit]
A good observation from a commenter:
"Sure you can just extend the tariffs to the fabricated and finished goods that are undercutting domestic industry, but at a certain point you’re just making everything more expensive. In the end, that’s a lot of economic pain for minimal, mostly symbolic, gain."
RiverDog wrote:Plus we haven't even begun to talk about what China will do in retaliation.
burrrton wrote:
Prediction: the tariffs will negate virtually all of the economic gains we've seen.
Make me eat crow if I'm wrong, but I think these tariffs are *monumentally* stupid.
idhawkman wrote:It's nearly impossible to lose a trade war when we are so far behind in the war. We're talking hundreds of billions of dollars to China and an additional hundreds of billions to our "allies". Wealth is leaving the US at the rate of about $4Billion a day. No nation can sustain that amount of depletion for long. Our market in the U.S. is the envy of the world and every nation wants to be able to sell to the people of the U.S. They will either play fair or they will start to starve their own companies and people. Its really that simple. They are already hurting from the billions of dollars repatriated by Trump in the tax reform bill. Now they want to compound it in a tarrif war they can't win? I don't think so.
You're on. How about a frosty beverage (next time I'm in Seattle) as the wager Burrton?
It's nearly impossible to lose a trade war when we are so far behind in the war.
1. African American vote will be over 20% for him based on their unemployment numbers and the programs he puts in place to bring up their social status.
a. Look at the boxer he just pardoned, the prison reform, Kanye West and others. This is what strikes fear in the hearts of Democrats. If Trump holds onto the 20% plus African American vote, you can close the polls now.
b. Lowest unemployment rate for African American and Hispanics in history.
c. DACA reform will get approved and the wall will be built protecting the lowest wage earners from illegals undercutting their wages.
Aseahawkfan wrote:
Who have you been talking to? He's viewed as a racist by most folk of African descent I know. Latins are mixed on him for the people I know. Some despise him, some laud him. Contrary to the media's portrayal, some Latins favor immigration reform as they came here legally and would prefer others follow suit.
"Kanye West must have some power because you probably have saw I doubled my African-American poll numbers. It went from 11 to 22 in one week," he told the crowd. "Thank you, Kanye!"
Turns out, he was right, at least in part, according to a Reuters poll. The numbers were correct when examining black men, not the entire black community.
Trump's approval rating among black men increased in the week between April 22 and April 29, according to a Reuters poll. West made posted his series of tweet voicing support for Trump on April 25.
It jumped from an 11% approval on April 22 to 22% on April 29.
Among the total black community, it also nearly doubled, but the numbers were lower.
His approval among all blacks increased from 8.9% to 16.5%.
2. The economy will continue to hum along at 4% plus based on the regulation reforms and trade agreements. (Look for N. Korea to play a big part here)
3. The new health care plan will get approved lowering costs and improving care.
If his push to lower prescription costs goes through, that will help a lot of people. A lot of old folks with lower medication costs that tend to vote will help him a lot.
5. Rising wages for the first time in decades will solidify his blue collar vote.
As long as no big bumps occur, it should help. All the building and economic activity should help the blue collar vote. If he can help the car companies, should help him even more. Tariffs on imported steel and cars should help domestic steel and car companies helping in The Rust Belt. A bunch of folks talking about tariffs hurting Trump and economy really don't get the state of the Rust Belt. Only way to fix that area is to make imports more costly than domestic production. If Trump pushes it through in the right way, he can increase domestic production increasing jobs in those regions. He'll win Pennsylvania and those areas again.
6. Peace in the middle east and on the Korean penisula will solidify American influence in the world. (Haven't heard anything about ISIS lately have you?)
I hadn't heard much of Al Qaeda during Obama's later years either. You give Obama credit for that? Someone new will come along. It always does. Our defense industry needs an enemy as does our nation. We manufacture them when they don't really exist. We keep our hands in too many cookie jars until the people in that region get angry and attack us back at some point. The worst attack on America has not yet come. It will eventually be a nuclear, biological, or chemical attack that makes 9/11 or Pearl Harbor look like child's play. We've pissed far too many people off playing the World police for it not come back on us at some point. We have so many people that want to hurt us for past transgressions, we can't see them all coming. Even if it isn't Trump, some future president will pull the unlucky card when it happens.
RiverDog wrote:As in a nuclear exchange, there are no winners in a trade war. Yes, we could hurt China more than they could hurt us. We are the 500 lb gorilla, in possession of the world's largest consumer market. But we'd be cutting off our nose to spite our face.
The problem is that it would take years for us to be able to ramp up production to cover demand for items that we would no longer import, or that is costly to sell due to the tariffs. You just don't walk into an empty building and flip the switch and presto, instant widgets. Companies would have to make substantial capital investments to expand and modernize factories, and they won't make that kind of commitment overnight, particularly with the way this President changes his mind. And in the years that we're waiting for domestic production to catch up with demand, we'll be paying higher prices, as we still need to buy clothes for our kids, and the tariffs will make those things more expensive. And once we did get domestic production ramped up, prices would not go down as things like labor and environmental laws making it more expensive to operate in this country.
There's a reason why companies chose to locate their factories overseas: Our country made it too expensive to operate here. So until you get some of your liberal pals to start backing off on things like increasing the minimum wage, passing renewable energy bills, and taxing business to kingdom come, it's always going to be much, much cheaper to produce many of our products overseas than it is here.
I lived through the inflation years of the '70's, and it was a nightmare. A 10% raise was eaten up by a 15% rate of inflation. No way do I want to see that ugly b**ch raise it's head again.
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