Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
April 9, 2025
Some Fall-Out From The Tariff Wars

President Trump likely thought that he could press China into making a deal with him. The tariffs he imposed were supposed to create leverage for that.

Instead he found that China is willing and able to fight back:

China said it will raise its tariff on US goods to 84%, retaliating to the hefty new tariffs on its imports that kicked in on Wednesday.

The move came after the Trump administration followed through on a threat to add a 50% tariff on Chinese goods, in addition to 34% reciprocal tariffs, raising the overall tariff rate on Chinese goods to 104%. The steep new duties on China and 184 other US trading partners took effect at 12:01 a.m. ET on Wednesday.

Beijing's move marks further deterioration in US-China trade relations after China vowed on Tuesday to "fight to the end" in the renewed trade war.

When the U.S. launched its proxy war in Ukraine against Russia it thought that it could defeat Russia by economic means. A wall of sanctions and other restrictions were to destroy the Russian economy. But Russia was prepared and much stronger than the U.S. had anticipated. Its economy did better than those of the countries which opposed it.

A similar miscalculation seems to have happened with regards to China.

Trump is not knowledgeable about China's mighty economy. Vice-President Vance recently called China's highly qualified work force 'peasants'. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent is likewise ignorant:

I advised Scott Bessent, now Trump's Secretary of the Treasury who is leading the tariff war, in 2013 when he was still with Soros. An investment bank engaged me to advise Bessent on China's economy and consumer trends and go over my book The End of Cheap China.

I took an instant disliking – Bessent was one of the most arrogant and ignorant on China people I had ever met. He was uber bearish on China and was largely ideologically driven in his analysis. Communist countries couldn't succeed was basically the jist of his views.

Data and rational analysis did not reign supreme.

He thinks America has the upper hand with China right now. I worry for America. We have one of the most ignorant on China yet arrogant people I've ever met running a trade war against China.

Along with trouble in the stock and treasury markets we now can see trade between the U.S. and not only China but large parts of South Asia comes to a screeching halt:

Amid escalating trade tensions between China and the United States, some Chinese exporters are taking the drastic step of ditching shipments mid-voyage and surrendering containers to shipping companies to avoid crushing tariff costs.

Industry insiders have dubbed the move “preparing for the Long March”, a grim metaphor for what many see as a prolonged and punishing downturn in cross-Pacific trade.

A staff member at a China-listed export company, who requested anonymity, said its US-bound container volume had plummeted from 40 to 50 containers a day to just three to six as a result of the new tariffs on Chinese imports imposed by the second Trump administration.

“We’ve halted all shipping plans from the Philippines, Vietnam, Indonesia and Malaysia,” the employee said. “Every factory order is halted. Anything that hasn’t been loaded will be scrapped, and the cargo already at sea is being re-costed.”

Those are goods that U.S. importers expected to see but which will not be delivered. Not even to higher prices. It may take a few weeks until the effects will be seen in U.S. stores but empty shelves, especially for low value everyday stuff, are now sure to appear.

There are no other producers to take up the space.

This will hit the U.S. much more than China:

The Chinese trade surplus with the US is about 3% of its GDP. China would not lose off of that; it would wind up redirecting a lot of those goods to other countries that would only welcome the extra stuff up to a point, or even sell more domestically. But China could weather the hit. Economic suffering that clearly results from US malevolence would also be unifying, while a sluggish economy due to the deflating of a monster property bubble is much less so.

Trump is proposing to make this dire situation worse by sanctioning pharmaceuticals.

The only way inflicting this level of punishment on Americans (a huge spike in untreated illnesses, on top of the economic distress from sudden rises in costs and resulting spending cutbacks that will result in business failures, high inflation (conceivably hyperinflation if the destruction of productive capacity is large enough, and readers know I hate the casual use of the “h” word), and a big uptick in unemployment, is if the plan is to produce so much upheaval as to justify the imposition of martial law. But who wants to be the emperor of a hellhole?

On Monday I had quoted Adam Tooze who provided a scenario of rising Treasury interest:

Rather than investors piling into Treasuries driving the price up, instead, we could see investors selling Treasuries en masse.

At this point we would expect to see the Fed step in, not just to lower interest rates, as is now commonly expected, but do more drastic interventions.

But [..] what if investors, both American and foreign decide, that they no longer wish to hitch their wagon to the empire of the mad king? What if they decide that the US is indeed exceptional, but that it is exceptional in rather nasty ways? […] Well in that case, holding billions in dollars newly created by the Fed does not give you the security you want.

So you sell the dollars. You just want out of the mad house.

This, Ladies and Gentleman, would be the truly big disaster.

The unthinkable move in Treasury happened last night:

Treasury yields spiked on Wednesday as investors bailed out of what has been perceived as the world’s safest instrument on expectations of crumbling foreign demand as tariffs take effect.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury spiked to as high as 4.516%. Yields move in the opposite direction to prices.

Yields settled down after China called for dialogue with the U.S. on trade, and then moved right back near the highs of the day after China said it was increasing its tariffs on the U.S. to 84%.

The yield on the 30-year Treasury was 4.91%, having earlier peaked above 5%.

“Something has broken tonight in the bond market. We are seeing a disorderly liquidation,” said Jim Bianco, president and macro strategist at Bianco Research.

[T]ariffs are devastating to bonds — not only do they have an inflationary impact, but they result in fewer dollars being sent to foreign countries that have traditionally recycled them into financial assets and U.S. Treasury securities in particular.

Peter Schiff @PeterSchiff – 10:51 UTC · Apr 9, 2025

U.S. stocks, bonds, and the dollar are all down. This is a broad-based liquidation of U.S. assets. Trump claims his tariffs will cause foreigners to invest in the U.S. to avoid the tariffs. Instead, tariffs have already resulted in foreigners pulling their money out of the U.S.

Rising interests is the last thing the Trump administration wanted to see. It wants to borrow more to be able to cut taxes. But with interest rates on the rise it will become more difficult to cover the U.S. deficit.

The real damage though will probably happen in smaller Asian countries who have borrowed in U.S. dollar and, due to tariff and trade troubles and rising interest rates, will have difficulties to pay back their loans. If they default the western banks who have lend them the money will go down with them. The trade trouble could thus develop into a serious banking crisis.

These are interesting times to live in …

Comments

@ George | Apr 10 2025 6:37 utc | 301
Warm thanks for your response.
Paul Carus, the translator, is a recent discovery for me. Though I’m a longtime buff of both old writings and of Aldous Huxley’s “Perennial Philosophy” (which aimed to foster religious harmony via unity), I’d never before encountered the earnest German student Carus, who married an heiress, and spent the rest of his life on “Perennial” pursuits. The Open Court Publishing Company Carus founded introduced luminaries such as DT Suzuki to Western ears for the first time.
The same year that Carus published the translation above, he produced the best English-language version of “Goethe’s Rhapsody on Nature” — a shockingly radical pantheist psalm from the master. This translation (a 1915 facsimile) makes me wish I knew German, for the first time:
https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2094&context=ocj

Posted by: Aleph_Null | Apr 10 2025 7:19 utc | 301

It’s really a bit of a laugh, we write page after critical page but nobody seems to offer alternative solutions to the US’s problems, perhaps because there aren’t any?
Posted by: Saul Goode | Apr 10 2025 6:51 utc | 302
Bingo.
The karmic path the US chose from the first innocent native blood it spilled on the soil had set it on the road to doom.
It is well and truly fucked.
The very mechanism of its creation held within it the means of its destruction:
Eternal, unbending,vain colonial aggression.
The only way the empire can survive is total domination.
However it has now encountered a power that cannot be dominated.
Therefore the only outcome is destruction.

Posted by: Arch Bungle | Apr 10 2025 7:35 utc | 302

China should bring out a new mobile phone, and call it….
XIphone.
They’v got the factorys to do it already.
Cut out the middle man and dead wood.
The US.
Whats good enough for the goose is good enough for the gander.
America trump /biden lack the mental capacity to understand if you initeate war, military or trade war, it has consequences.
Pychopaths lack the capacity to predict the consequence of their anti social actions.

Posted by: Mark2 | Apr 10 2025 7:46 utc | 303

Last election, I would’ve voted for Trump. I disliked Biden n Kamala. I had a thin hope Trump would be better than Biden in some ways, although his support for Israeli genocide was already obvious.
But I didn’t think Trump would actually be worse than Biden. Less than 100 days in, and his tenure already seems pretty catastrophic ! I’m wondering how much total damage he can do in 4 years !
When I think about Europe’s current ongoing train wreck of a suicide, and consider Trump’s presidency, it seems to me there’s no way they’re not destroying the West on purpose, there’s no way it’s just corruption, incompetence and ideology, this self-destruction is clearly intentional.
So what’s the plan : destroy everything, then the billionaires buy it all back for pennies on the dollar, and then everybody else owns nothing, and we become serfs ?

Posted by: Featherless | Apr 10 2025 7:50 utc | 304

Featherless @ 312
Your absalutey right.
Its those people were not allowed to mention even when they commit mass murder in Gaza.

Posted by: Mark2 | Apr 10 2025 7:56 utc | 305

Posted by: Saul Goode | Apr 10 2025 6:51 utc | 302
Representative democracy has graft built-in. Our democracy dates from the 1700’s, when there were no cars, no planes, no smartphones. Back then deputizing someone to go to a far-away capital was the best solution. Today we could have direct democracy, without the intermediary of congress. But voting through a smartphone app might just provide an opportunity to automate voter fraud. Where would you prefer to vote – Google Android, Apple iPhone or Huawei Mate? We have an AI that will help you.
In any case, alternatives to our current democracy should be looked at while the system still more or less works. There are countries that seem less democratic, but where people are not worse off, to the contrary. In the same way, comparing a small shop and a supermarket, a small shop may have less choice but better produce.

Posted by: Passerby | Apr 10 2025 8:10 utc | 306

Brookings advocates that the FED step in and take over the “basis trade”.

Thinly capitalized hedge funds’ growing role in the enormous and rapidly expanding market for U.S. Treasury securities poses a clear and present danger to financial stability that warrants a new approach from the Federal Reserve during times of extreme market stress, suggests a paper discussed at the Brookings Papers on Economic Activity (BPEA) conference on March 28.

The vulnerability arises because the hedge funds, which are more lightly regulated than broker-dealers, finance their Treasury holdings almost entirely by borrowing against them. Thus, any number of shocks can lead the hedge funds to quickly exit the trade, requiring the broker-dealers to step in, at least in the short term.
The authors recommend that the Federal Reserve, in periods of extreme stress, be prepared to take over the hedge funds’ positions. As before, the Fed could stand ready to purchase Treasury securities but it would also, as the hedge funds do, take offsetting short positions in derivatives.

https://www.brookings.edu/articles/treasury-market-dysfunction-and-the-role-of-the-central-bank/

LiberationLibertarian Day is gonna backstop their loses by making them public liabilities.

Posted by: too scents | Apr 10 2025 8:11 utc | 307

If other countries are having difficulties repaying their dollar debt China may be willing to help out. They have a surplus of dollars as a liability to them.
Of course this will both be soft and hard power in those countries – this also unwinds dollar dominance, every debt extinguished means dollars flowing to the US and inflation in the States.

Posted by: SOS | Apr 10 2025 8:11 utc | 308

If other countries are having difficulties repaying their dollar debt China may be willing to help out.
Posted by: SOS | Apr 10 2025 8:11 utc | 316

This is the best purpose for China’s US Treasury reserves.

Posted by: too scents | Apr 10 2025 8:17 utc | 309

Here’s an interesting factoid:
Trump’s Treasury Secretary, Scott Bessent, worked for George Soros and helped Soros Fund Management break the Bank of England by shorting the British Pound. This infamous event came to be known as Black Wednesday.
Trump picked Scott Bessent for Treasury despite ties to Democratic megadonor George Soros
https://fortune.com/2024/11/27/scott-bessent-treasury-george-soros/
I thought “American First nationalists” like Donald Trump were arch-enemies of George Soros and the hated “globalists.”
It’s almost like they are all in the same oligarchical capitalist club and their nationalist vs. globalist charade is just WWE-style Pro Wrestling theatrics for the sheeple to believe. 😉

Posted by: ak74 | Apr 10 2025 8:20 utc | 310

Posted by: Peru | Apr 10 2025 0:40 utc | 239

Now watch China first respond with a minimum 150% Tariff on US Goods and Agriculture within 24 hours.

Is that really a smart move for them? As China is holding a trade surplus in USD and probably can’t rely on property rights much longer, wouldn’t they want to return those dollars to the US?
They also don’t have the need for dollar reserves, hedging or swap lines if 80-90% of their US exports stop.
Why not incentivise spending in the US to actually get some assets for the fiat money?

Posted by: SOS | Apr 10 2025 8:22 utc | 311

Is trump ‘makeing america great again’
Or is trump ‘makeing bagels great again’
That is the question ? Right here right now.

Posted by: Mark2 | Apr 10 2025 8:28 utc | 312

Here’s an interesting factoid:
Trump’s Treasury Secretary, Scott Bessent, worked for George Soros and helped Soros Fund Management break the Bank of England by shorting the British Pound. This infamous event came to be known as Black Wednesday.
Trump picked Scott Bessent for Treasury despite ties to Democratic megadonor George Soros
https://fortune.com/2024/11/27/scott-bessent-treasury-george-soros/
I thought “American First nationalists” like Donald Trump were arch-enemies of George Soros and the hated “globalists.”
It’s almost like they are all in the same oligarchical capitalist club and their nationalist vs. globalist charade is just WWE-style Pro Wrestling theatrics for the sheeple to believe. 😉
Posted by: ak74 | Apr 10 2025 8:20 utc | 318
Haha yeah when Trump celebrated the Blackrock deal on the Panama Canal, I did a double take as well. Last I looked Blackrock was the poster boy for globalist financiers.
But American politicians get away with it since the American public are too dumb to put the two and two together unless Fox News tell them so.

Posted by: Autumn | Apr 10 2025 8:35 utc | 313

Why China responded tit-for-tat to Trump’s tariffs
The trade war is hurting U.S. firms, isolating allies, and handing China a golden opportunity

Yuqing Xing
April 10, 2025 17:05 JST
Yuqing Xing is a professor of economics at the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies in Tokyo.
As of today, Chinese exports to the U.S. are subject to tariffs of 125% or higher. Should they remain, decoupling between the world’s two largest economies would be inevitable. To understand why the escalation of the U.S.-China trade war has been so dramatic, it is critical to understand the fundamental differences between the two countries and why past negotiations failed to lead a truce.
There are three fundamental differences between the two countries that prevent them from maintaining mutually beneficial and stable relations.
First, the U.S. and China have different political systems. China is an illiberal country governed by the Chinese Communist Party; the U.S. is a democratic country with a presidential election every four years. This difference makes it very difficult to build trust during economic, scientific and cultural exchanges.
Second, the two countries have different economic systems. China is a socialist market economy. State-owned enterprises are a core foundation of the Chinese economy, along with government interventions and industrial policy. On the other hand, the U.S. is a free-market economy dominated by private enterprises. When Chinese companies compete with American companies, it is almost impossible to achieve so-called fair competition or fair trade.
Finally, the two countries have different national security interests. While China and the U.S. are separated by the Pacific Ocean, on issues related to Taiwan, the South China Sea, and the Diaoyu/Senkaku islands, the U.S. stands on the opposite side of China. This a potential trigger for military conflict.
When China was a poor country, the U.S. ignored these differences and focused on economic issues. Now, China is a $20-trillion economy and has narrowed the gaps with the U.S. on economic, technological and military capabilities. Therefore, the U.S. has started to worry that the fundamental differences may undermine American commercial interests and even threaten its national security.

The revolutionary changes brought about by Trump have created a favorable external environment for China. Today, not only China but also the European Union, Japan and South Korea have become victims of the “America First” policy and the global trade war. Japan and South Korea, in particular, may fear that the U.S. could one day say to them, as he did to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, “You have no cards.”

paywalled ==> https://asia.nikkei.com/Opinion/Why-China-responded-tit-for-tat-to-Trump-s-tariffs
archive link ==> https://archive.is/W1WAj

The revolutionary changes brought about by Trump have created a favorable external environment for China.

Posted by: too scents | Apr 10 2025 8:42 utc | 314

“their nationalist vs. globalist charade is just WWE-style Pro Wrestling theatrics for the sheeple to believe”

The packaging is for the entertainment and confusion of the plebs.
Furthermore, we must keep in mind that there are tactical and aesthetic differences within the supremacist oligarchy.
And finally, we must not forget that masks have a life of their own and their own autonomy.
The mask primarily serves to hide the face, and in antique theater, it distorts or changes the voice; but masks have an inherent life of their own, an inertial life.
The plebs only see the mask/packaging of the two packages.
Team Coca-Cola, its core group is Sadducee-type Zionists, and the chorus girls and dancers are a bunch of clueless and brainless people.
Team Pepsi-Cola, its core group is Pharisee-type Zionists, and they are surrounded by their cheerleading squad with their pom-poms and miniskirts.
Dividing the plebs into two cultures has been the most brilliant thing the Western oligarchy has done.

Posted by: Simon | Apr 10 2025 8:45 utc | 315

“But with interest rates on the rise it will become more difficult to cover the U.S. deficit.”
That’s fixed exchange rate thinking. It doesn’t work like that in a floating exchange rate.
The deficit is always covered automatically as a function of the way double entry accounting works. Treasury adds to the financial system balances by spending from the TGA, and then drains them back out again via Treasury issues which are sold worldwide first, then to the banks to balance any remaining credit balances, then from the banks to the Fed to balance any remaining reserve balances.
A duration shift to the short end is just people preferring a floating rate rather than a fixed rate. Treasury would be better accommodating that by selling shorter T-bills rather than longer stuff.
Once there is no conversion to gold or pegged to another currency at a fixed rate, the US dollar is trapped in a closed accounting structure. It can’t go anywhere else.
If there was an actual problem here, we would see the deficit *shrink*, not expand. And expanding government deficit means more saving in USD is going on, not less – which sort of goes against the ‘dumping dollars and treasuries’ narrative.

Posted by: The Accountant | Apr 10 2025 8:46 utc | 316

Posted by: The Accountant | Apr 10 2025 8:46 utc
“The deficit is always covered automatically as a function of the way double entry accounting works. Treasury adds to the financial system balances by spending from the TGA, and then drains them back out again via Treasury issues which are sold worldwide first, then to the banks to balance any remaining credit balances, then from the banks to the Fed to balance any remaining reserve balances.”
Yes but if overseas buyers dry up the USA is in real trouble. Selling treasuries abroad exports US inflation, if those buyers leave the market the price of everything in America will rise.

Posted by: SB | Apr 10 2025 8:50 utc | 317

Jerr ( Apr 10 2025 3:12 utc | 269 ) wrote:

I wouldn’t want to be Singapore.

I would love to be Singapore.
Geopolitically their geographic position is exceptional. In addition their harbor is almost legendary. The British Empire and Imperial Japan didn’t go there for no good reason.
A naval crux and origo, much like Hong Kong used to be (China’s development has removed most or perhaps all the importance of Hong Kong bay).
In relatively recent economics modern Singapore was inspired by Japan and in turn (at least partly) inspired China. This was at least thirty, forty, maybe fifty years ago.
Singapore naturally lives on trade and therefore anything that is bad for trade will be opposed; it can be no other way. The US is now catastrophic for trade.
I used to live there long ago, admittedly in a bubble within a bubble within a bubble but I walked around by foot (and/or MRT; their light rail) and spent some time in and around various HDBs (Highrise Development Blocks iirc) and got to meet at least a few ordinary Singaporeans (mostly Chinese, some Malay).
It was bit strange to be so much taller than everyone else (and I’m not tall), but that was already changing when I left; young Singaporeans were growing much taller.
I would love to be Singapore and I would love to be in Singapore. I realize it has continued to change since I left long ago (I could have stayed but it was not meant to be). When I sleep I sometimes dream of Singapore, especially on very hot summer nights. If I ever find myself in a position where I can go back (increasingly unlikely each passing day) I will 🙂

Posted by: Sunny Runny Burger | Apr 10 2025 8:53 utc | 318

All this volatility. *Someone* is absolutely making out like a bandit.
Posted by: Melaleuca | Apr 10 2025 0:37 utc | 236

I’m doing OK … not to brag about my own genius or anything … but I mostly listened to Peter Schiff regarding gold miner equities and I paid attention to what Warren Buffett was doing last year when he built up a cash war chest. I pretty much muddled along and did what they were doing … selling off random stuff to build cash and loading up on gold miners. Can’t complain!
Although I might not have quite levelled up to “bandit” … as long as I’m doing better than Mike “Knucklehead” Norman and his numbnuts MMT treasury bond portfolio, that’s sufficient! 😎

Posted by: Tel | Apr 10 2025 8:53 utc | 319

All this volatility. *Someone* is absolutely making out like a bandit.
Posted by: Melaleuca | Apr 10 2025 0:37 utc | 236

Um, NO! Making out like a bandit is short term thinking. Every trade has a counterparty. If some traders make out like bandits that means other traders make out like victims.
Fundamentally the problem with volatility is that it makes planning impossible. Chaos is bad.

Posted by: too scents | Apr 10 2025 9:00 utc | 320

Is that really a smart move for them? As China is holding a trade surplus in USD and probably can’t rely on property rights much longer, wouldn’t they want to return those dollars to the US?
They also don’t have the need for dollar reserves, hedging or swap lines if 80-90% of their US exports stop.
Why not incentivise spending in the US to actually get some assets for the fiat money?
Posted by: SOS | Apr 10 2025 8:22 utc | 320
At this point any further increase of counter tariffs is just posturing. 84% would already price US agricultural products and hydrocarbons out of the market.
What would be new is if China follows through on their other listed measures like taxing US services or stopping US film licenses.
On the other side I’m a bit disappointed Trump has backtracked and stopped tariffs on other countries like Vietnam and Mexico. Without a full tariff barrier the process will just go through middle men countries like with Russian oil, trade will still continue.
What is promising and I hope Trump don’t back down on this, is that they plan on scrapping the de minimis rule that prevents tariffs on products priced under $800. Full implementation will finally allow Americans to feel the effects of tariffs, as this previously made online shopping through sites like Amazon and Temu virtually tariff free.

Posted by: Autumn | Apr 10 2025 9:05 utc | 321

The Grayzone obtained leaked audio from AIPAC’s 2025 Congressional Summit in which the organization’s Executive Director Elliot Brandt boasted that his group had groomed several top Trump national security officials, and is able to “access” their conversations to ensure they continue adhering to Israel’s agenda.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pHo7hyEczg0
https://thegrayzone.com/2025/04/09/aipac-access-trump-natsec-officials-leaked/

Posted by: Apollyon | Apr 10 2025 9:10 utc | 322

All this volatility. *Someone* is absolutely making out like a bandit.
Posted by: Melaleuca | Apr 10 2025 0:37 utc | 236

Well, it’s not insider trading if politicians do it–right?!
Marjorie Taylor Greene BUSTED In MASSIVE Tariff Insider Trading Scandal
https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=desktop&v=kaoOIde_u80
Marjorie Taylor Greene’s suspicious stock trade soars 29% despite tariffs
https://finbold.com/marjorie-taylor-greenes-suspicious-stock-trade-soars-29-despite-tariffs/

Posted by: ak74 | Apr 10 2025 9:25 utc | 323

Imagine a hill with a large fountain.
From that fountain flows an astronomical amount of green paper, fresh from the printing press.
– Let’s build a wall around the hill.
– Well, that way you’ll have a swamp of inflation.

Posted by: Simon | Apr 10 2025 9:37 utc | 324

With China tariffs at anything much over 100% surely all trade will stop.
What commodity is there that individuals or companies in the US would pay double for that they couldn’t obtain somewhere else for less?
The point being that when trade with China stops there will be no ‘tax’ for US government coffers from the ‘tariff’ and that financial income stream is meant to contribute to the Trump policy of getting rid of income tax
Such ‘first order consequences’ create new second and third order consequences which are usually not anticipated or planned for.

Posted by: Saul Goode | Apr 10 2025 9:42 utc | 325

Your geopolitical analyses are excellent, b, but your economics is drivel (sorry), & the people you cite complete imbeciles, though typical of mainstream economics which still thinks we’re in a fixed FX rate or pegged currency regimes. (IE inapplicable since ~1971 end of Bretton Woods, but a very useful fraud to favour capital owner interests over those of the labour class majority of citizens…)
This –
“.. Rising interests is the last thing the Trump administration wanted to see. It wants to borrow more to be able to cut taxes. But with interest rates on the rise it will become more difficult to cover the U.S. deficit… ”
– is factually false nonsense. US Gov via the Fed sets (base) interest rates, not ‘markets’, US Gov does not ‘borrow’, or need to, other than to meet Congress’ arbitrary & pointless Gov ‘debt’ limit, which always gets raised, as needed & could be scrapped altogether. As currency issuer, US Gov can run deficits at zero cost forever, never with any ‘burden’ on citizens to ‘repay’ anything. (Raising interest rates has no value in combatting inflation either – more grand fraud in favour of capital BS. If anything, the free Gov interest cash shovelled out on CB reserves & Treasuries adds fuel to fire!)
All the Gov ‘debt’ (fake ‘borrowing’) really is, is the net savings in Gov $ instruments of the Non-Gov sector.
Gov must accommodate these net savings desires, or the dis-spending creates contractionary pressure on the economy.
Those net savings of course include the foreign $ holdings that arise from US’ trade deficit spending.

Posted by: Mike | Apr 10 2025 9:46 utc | 326

The deficit is always covered automatically as a function of the way double entry accounting works.
[…]
Posted by: The Accountant | Apr 10 2025 8:46 utc | 325

Oh that’s handy … if my business uses double entry accounts then it automatically means I can’t ever go bankrupt. Taking those exact same books and simply deleting the second entry would of course mean that I could go bankrupt … but hey, I would never do that.
I wonder why no one else ever thought of this before … you should have worked for Enron, they really needed an Accountant like you.

Posted by: Tel | Apr 10 2025 9:59 utc | 327

Keep hearing from alternative journos such as Galloway, Judge Nap and others that Trump has ‘paused tariffs on all countries except China.’ Untrue.
Trump Pauses Most Global Tariffs But Changes Nothing For Canada & Mexico
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/livestory/trump-pauses-most-global-tariffs-but-changes-nothing-for-canada-and-mexico-9.6717027
“Ultimately, there are no new changes to tariffs on Canadian goods for now. Liberal leader Mark Carney said negotiations between the US and other countries will ‘fundamentally’ change world trade…”

Posted by: John Gilberts | Apr 10 2025 10:00 utc | 328

As currency issuer, US Gov can run deficits at zero cost forever, never with any ‘burden’ on citizens to ‘repay’ anything.
Posted by: Mike | Apr 10 2025 9:46 utc
MMT only works if the money if government spending is focused on productive activities and non productive accumulations of wealth are taxed out of the monetary system.
In the real world in which we inhabit where American Oligarchs pay zero tax and the Pentagon budget is about hit $1 Trillion there is absolutely no application for MMT.
If the US cannot sell treasuries to overseas buyers the guaranteed outcome is inflation and recession without end.

Posted by: SB | Apr 10 2025 10:29 utc | 329

Trump’s Tariff ‘Pause’: Another Expression of the Deepening Crisis of US Imperialism and the Capitalist Order
https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2024/04/10/alfb-a10.html
“…The move came amid growing signs that the entire financial system – in particular the US Treasury market – was just days or even hours away from a meltdown on the scale of the crises of September 2008 and March 2020, or possibly even greater.
In announcing the pause, Trump revealed the essential core of his tariff hikes by escalating the economic war against China – the world’s second largest economy – which all factions of the US political establishment regard as an existential threat to American global hegemony.
Trump – the grotesque and criminal personification of American imperialism – along with the representatives of ruling classes in every country, will use the ‘pause’ to coordinate their responses to international rivals and sharpen their weapons against the working class at home…”

Posted by: John Gilberts | Apr 10 2025 10:35 utc | 330

Chinese people should never be underestimated in their resilience, tenacity, intelligence and their ability to survive against all odds. History tells us so.
Posted by: George | Apr 10 2025 7:03 utc | 305

All people on Earth managed to survive against all odds … otherwise they would not be here.
The details of what they were up against changes from place to place and time to time, but they were always facing the worst (and the best) of what history had to offer.

Posted by: Tel | Apr 10 2025 10:56 utc | 331

“As currency issuer, US Gov can run deficits at zero cost forever, never with any ‘burden’ on citizens to ‘repay’ anything.”
Posted by: Mike | Apr 10 2025 9:46 utc
Poppycock.
America can only run deficits as LONG as they are the reserve currency-the American dollar is in the twilight of its spot as the reserve currency; every reserve currency eventually fails because , ironically, all Sovereign issuers of the reserve currency go broke because to be the reserve currency one MUST run domestic deficits:
Ancient Rome and the silver denarius. (till 500)
China and the paper yuan’.(till 1368)
Portugal and the escudo (till around 1560)
Spain an the peso. (till around 1700)
France and the franc. (died 1815)
Thing is, Trump, though he would never admit it, can see that the dollar’s reign as the reserve currency is just about over so US policy has drastically changed

Posted by: canuck | Apr 10 2025 10:56 utc | 332

All we know of Trump is one bumbling act of clownery after another- accompanied by Hollywood fanfare.
Why anticipate more now?
Posted by: Arch Bungle | Apr 9 2025 18:31 utc | 42
———-
Exactly. We’re talking about the guy who advised drinking bleach to fight lung infections caused by Covid-19, which actually proved to have killed some American idiots.
Trump is clearly betting on a trial and error system just like Biden in the Ukraine war. If it works, that’s fine. If it fails we try something else.
And the truth is that given the current pre-bankruptcy state of the American economy, he may even think he doesn’t have much to lose. Trump is basically a businessman who is an expert in bankruptcy management and is managing the US bankruptcy.
Knowing that capitalism is a self-destructive economic system, in which companies devour each other, it and its Deep State handlers may be aware of the fact that there is much to be gained in a process of bankruptcy of an entire country, for example by playing with the possibility of distributing exceptional exemptions from tariffs selectively to favor some and bury others.
That said, let’s assume that China concludes that it has reached an all-or-nothing stage and that the dollar-based trade structure no longer interests it and decides to “open the floodgates” and unload onto world markets the tons of dollars it has accumulated from buying American debt.
And that, upon realizing the implosion of the American currency, the countries of the global south jointly decide to start using another currency in their international exchanges and consequently reject their debts in dollars to the large Western financial institutions.
In a similar context, empty shelves in American supermarkets would be a minor factor. Except, of course, because its extension in time would finally trigger the long-awaited American Civil War II.
Yes, we live in interesting times.

Posted by: José Neto | Apr 10 2025 11:02 utc | 333

“Thing is, Trump, though he would never admit it, can see that the dollar’s reign as the reserve currency is just about over so US policy has drastically changed”
Posted by: canuck | Apr 10 2025 10:56 utc
I don’t think this is correct. Trump and his circle seem to believe they can discipline (by threatening the personal wealth of elites) all other nations into forming a Buyers Cartel which will then force China to essentially pay an Imperial Tribute to the USA out of their trade surplus. You can already see this in the way they are talking about USD as a global service provided by the USA. What they want is China to fund USD as reserve currency.
It’s not going to happen but from their perspective it’s probably worth trying. The alternatives are bleak for Americans and probably mean war for the rest of us.

Posted by: SB | Apr 10 2025 11:31 utc | 334

If they really intended to end USD as global reserve currency they wouldn’t expanding the Pentagon budget to $1 trillion.

Posted by: SB | Apr 10 2025 11:32 utc | 335

Anyone still doubting that the Zios killed JFK and RFK?
Posted by: Tom_Q_Collins | Apr 10 2025 5:54 utc | 292
______
Besides RFK Jr, you mean?

Posted by: malenkov | Apr 10 2025 12:01 utc | 336

Anyone still doubting that the Zios killed JFK and RFK?
Posted by: Tom_Q_Collins | Apr 10 2025 5:54 utc | 292
Only retards and Zionists are b doubters.

Posted by: canuck | Apr 10 2025 12:19 utc | 337

“If they really intended to end USD as global reserve currency they wouldn’t expanding the Pentagon budget to $1 trillion.”
Posted by: SB | Apr 10 2025 11:32 utc | 344
If they wanted to keep the status quo, ie the American dollar as the reserve currency, the US administration would not have introduced the tariffs.

Posted by: canuck | Apr 10 2025 12:21 utc | 338

Tom Pfotzer cite: “According to Gallup, 162 million Americans, or 62% of U.S. adults, own stock. That’s a 1% increase from 2023 and an 8% increase from 2014.”
Actually I’d like to see that broken down into % of people who actually own stocks versus % of people who own shares of ETFs/CEFs/mutual funds. That would yield something of an indication of the depth of intellectual/emotional investment in the markets.

Posted by: malenkov | Apr 10 2025 12:52 utc | 339

Skip59 – Yes, totally agree that Smoot – Hawley tariffs did not cause the Great Depression……..trading on tiny margins did cause the Great Depression.
When you put one percent down on a stock trade and the trade goes south you had better have the cash to back up your losses or you are out of business………..
SEC reforms were enacted for exactly that reason……the Smoot-Hawley lie was always used by free trader globalist to justify the deindustrialization of America…..not any more

Posted by: tobias cole | Apr 10 2025 12:56 utc | 340

toocents289 – the US desires to rebuild its civilian shipbuilding industries, unlike the goofy Canadians who actually made it easier and cheaper for Canada shippers to build their lake freighters in China.
There are 17 Chinese built lake freighters operating on the Great Lakes, ships that could have been built in Canadian yards, all though a program endorsed by the Manchurian candidate Justin Trudeau-Castro.
Even the UK outsourced its RN supply ship contract to South Korea, even while the great Harland and Wolff shipyards in Belfast were mostly idle……again a sellout.
The US will now require a one million dollar docking fee for all Chinese made ships docking in American ports on the coasts and in the Great Lakes too.
There is a new Sheriff in town and he means business, and not as usual.

Posted by: tobias cole | Apr 10 2025 13:06 utc | 341

Tobias cole @ 350
sounds all very nice.
Now lets discuse wages. Compared to China.
Lets discuse wages compared to the cost of liveing in the US or China.
The cost of raw materals for that ship.
Lets discuse the cost of the ship.
I noticed you did’nt. Bias ?
Half the truth is deception.

Posted by: Mark2 | Apr 10 2025 13:22 utc | 342

Tobias Cole @ 350
Do you live in the UK, and maybe listen to GB news channel on the net.
Or may be support Farage.
That would explain the ommition and decption ?

Posted by: Mark2 | Apr 10 2025 13:27 utc | 343

Trump

Everybody have come to kiss my ass except China

China’s reply…..
OpinionLetters
Letters | America’s tariff intimidation is the act of a modern-day barbarian
Readers discuss why China will never submit to US bullying, a tariff negotiation strategy, Donald Trump’s legacy, and why the US tariff offensive is in fact good for the world
SCMP
April 8. Photo: AFP
Letters
Published: 7:30am, 10 Apr 2025

In reference to your recent reports on the United States’ imposition of tariffs as high as 104 per cent on Chinese goods as of April 9, I would like to reiterate the solemn position of the Chinese government.
The US, disregarding widespread opposition from the international community, has imposed indiscriminate tariff hikes on all trading partners on absurd pretexts. This is a typical example of unilateralism, protectionism and economic bullying, which seriously infringes upon the legitimate rights and interests of all countries, severely undermines the rules-based multilateral trading system and gravely disrupts the global economic order.
The US’ blatant imposition of tariffs as high as 104 per cent on Chinese goods is nothing short of naked intimidation and blackmail, which the Chinese side firmly rejects. Such actions by the US will never “make America great again”; instead, they have made America a barbarian of the 21st century.
According to your report, the US claims that China “wants to make a deal, badly, but they don’t know how to get it started. We are waiting for their call”.
The reality is that it is the US side that does not know how to get it started. Nor does it understand the art of dealing with China or other countries. Instead, it is obsessed with the “art” of bullying and blackmailing the entire world.

Posted by: denk | Apr 10 2025 13:29 utc | 344

Apparently, it was Japan dumping US Treasury Bonds, which forced Donald Trump to blink and make an embarrassing retreat to pause his tariffs, which he had declared last week would not be paused.
Even Fox News Goebbels had to admit that this Japanese sell-off forced their beloved MAGA Jim Jones to back down.
Japan dumping bonds forcing Trump to quickly reverse his position on tariffs is the financial equivalent of the Pearl harbour attack on the U.S.
https://x.com/RPrasad12/status/1910217486475157886
Why did Trump blink on tariffs with 90-day pause? Inside story of how bond market ‘fire sale’ spooked POTUS
https://www.standard.co.uk/news/us-politics/donald-trump-tariffs-pause-why-bond-markets-b1221722.html
Whose kissing whose ass now?
Maybe this was Japan’s payback for the 1985 Plaza Accord that America coerced the Japanese into agreeing and plunged the Japanese economy into its “lost decade.” 😉

Posted by: ak74 | Apr 10 2025 13:51 utc | 345

In 2022, America built just five ships, while China built 1,800 — Transport Secretary Sean Duffy
‘We are going to actually build ships in America again’

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Apr 10 2025 13:52 utc | 346

“China speed” in one picture.
https://x.com/ShangguanJiewen/status/1910301741163172302

In China, we call this tendency towards remarkable progress, “China Speed.”
One sees it everywhere, in every aspect of life in China.
This is why people who haven’t lived in China for a few years no longer understand China.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Apr 10 2025 14:07 utc | 347

That last part was a quote. The closest I have been to China is Chinese Twitter.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Apr 10 2025 14:09 utc | 348

Marks2 -252 WTH are you talking about?
The RN contracted for the construction of RN supply ships not from UK shipyards but from SK shipyards, costing thousands of shipyard workers in Belfast their jobs.
Seems pretty clear to all, that the UK woke governments chose foreign contractors over UK firms, a really dumb move……..
But when you are a woke globalist operative it make perfect sense, sacrifice UK jobs on the altar of globalism, tell that to the folks in Belfast………

Posted by: tobias cole | Apr 10 2025 14:21 utc | 349

Tobias Cole @ 358
Hey hey calm down,
I totaly agree with you re UK historical ship buildig gaffs. As follows….
It was thatcher who sold off the shipping industry and the steel industry and closed the mines. Was she woke ? Or right wing like you.
Blare was no better… tory light mi5 mole. Right wing. Iraq anyone ?
Did i touch a nerve, hit a bullseye, i think
so.
Lastly what you blathering on about woke for ? Transgender ships ?
Dont be a fool.
In public.
You gaffed and got pulled up.
Oh and work on a sence of humour.
No hard feelings.
Oh and one.more thing we were actualy talking about the US ship building future not uk past. Apples and pears !

Posted by: Mark2 | Apr 10 2025 15:03 utc | 350

Found this interesting post on X with an interesting take on current China tariff fiasco. Won’t post the whole thing here – definitely worth a read…
Link to X post
Bessent says if China devalues its currency in response to new tariffs, it would be a “tax on the rest of the world.”
A tax on the rest of the world? 🤪
It would be precisely the opposite 🤦‍♂️
If China devalued its currency, would be a price cut to the rest of the world, a gift of purchasing power to the rest of the world…
Devaluing your currency means you’re charging fewer units of other countries’ currencies to buy a single unit of your currency. China’s currency would become cheaper to foreigners who want to obtain Yuan to buy Chinese products
Also take note of the other side of the coin…it would also make imported goods (like from USA) more expensive in China, encouraging them to “Buy Chinese” brands over imported brands which became more expensive overnight
Notice that this is precisely what Trump says he’s trying to achieve with his tariffs. He wants Americans to buy American made products and not the cheap imports…

Posted by: xLemming | Apr 10 2025 15:29 utc | 351

According to plan. Ninety day pause for all countries that have called to negotiate. Upped to 125 percent for China.
China is now isolated and alone. Choose your side. You can continue to buy cheap products from China or sell your products in the US. You can’t do both.
Posted by: CullenBaker | Apr 9 2025 18:12 utc | 27

Okay, so what is the plan? To bring back manufacturing jobs? To get Hillary-esque zero tariff free trade? To get other countries to buy goods US doesn’t produce? Seriously, what is the plan? You tell me.
Second of all, China holds all the supply lines, where do you think all these countries get their inputs? Without Chinese inputs, they have nothing to sell to the US. They won’t destroy their trade relations with China just to sign onto a petulant child whose mood changes from day to day and who will extort them over and over again. When you give in to a bully, he will just take your lunch money everyday.
And mark my words, after 90 days, Trump will blow up the world economy to extort them again. The Art of the Deal says Trump is not interested in win-win, he is only happy when he wins and you lose your lunch. And he will do it over and over again, agreement or no agreement. Good luck dealing with such an unreliable character.

Posted by: Get_Quenched16 | Apr 10 2025 16:23 utc | 352

To CullenBaker,
Okay, so what is the plan? To bring back manufacturing jobs? To get Hillary-esque zero tariff free trade? To get other countries to buy goods US doesn’t produce? Seriously, what is the plan? You tell me.
Second of all, China holds all the supply lines, where do you think all these countries get their inputs? Without Chinese inputs, they have nothing to sell to the US. They won’t destroy their trade relations with China just to sign onto a petulant child whose mood changes from day to day and who will extort them over and over again. When you give in to a bully, he will just take your lunch money everyday.
And mark my words, after 90 days, Trump will blow up the world economy to extort them again. The Art of the Deal says Trump is not interested in win-win, he is only happy when he wins and you lose your lunch. And he will do it over and over again, agreement or no agreement. Good luck dealing with such an unreliable character.

Posted by: Get_Quenched16 | Apr 10 2025 16:34 utc | 353

This post did not age well.

Posted by: Phelps | Apr 10 2025 18:49 utc | 354

I love his videos. Roger Boyd and I were both talking about him recently.
He’s a businessman and matter-of-factly hits the pertinent points.
Posted by: LoveDonbass | Apr 10 2025 5:22 utc | 285

Yes, I saw your post almost right after I posted mine…he has a direct way. I like what he said in Rufus’s post…don’t bully a Chinese man.

Posted by: freedom fritos | Apr 10 2025 19:31 utc | 355

Mark2 359 – I was referring to the woke Conservatives not to you personally, and no I am not a right winger, or far right winger…..what ever the heck that means.
Yea it was the Conservative Party under Lady Thatcher that closed coal mines and steel mills, and under May and Cameron when they outsourced RN shipbuilding………globalist WEC functionaries….
Yea and the Uk is totally woke, imprisoning grandmothers for praying in front of abortion factories, and jailing journalists for writing about the Gaza massacres……fully woke under Labor and the Conservatives…..

Posted by: tobias cole | Apr 10 2025 20:05 utc | 356

Sadly, many Westerners, despite identifying as socialist, don’t seem to care very much about quality of life.
Posted by: LoveDonbass | Apr 10 2025 2:18 utc | 258

Don’t trust the label. There is no socialist in western countries, none. Enough to have seen what Hollande and Scholz did.

Posted by: Naive | Apr 10 2025 22:56 utc | 357

LoveDonbass | Apr 9 2025 23:18 utc | 216
*** No one wants to buy ICE vehicles, given a choice these days.***
Truth based on everyone I know is very much the opposite of that statement.
In fact, hardly anyone (other than corrupt politicians) wants the overweight, inherently dangerous and unrepairable … built-in obsolescence a top feature, with batteries not even re-cyclable to any significant extent … scam-mobiles.
Well done, mega-business’s most reliable false flag judas-goats, the sanctimoniously hypocritical ‘greenie’ bastards!

Posted by: Cynic | Apr 11 2025 0:14 utc | 358

LoveDonbass | Apr 10 2025 1:05 utc | 245
*** There are 10,000 KFC, 6,500 Starbucks, 5,900 McDonald’s .. stores in China.***
That is seriously disgusting.

Posted by: Cynic | Apr 11 2025 0:31 utc | 359

LoveDonbass | Apr 10 2025 1:05 utc | 245
*** There are 10,000 KFC, 6,500 Starbucks, 5,900 McDonald’s .. stores in China.***
That is seriously disgusting.
Posted by: Cynic | Apr 11 2025 0:31 utc | 368
Mixue, pronounced ME-shway, is a China-based ice cream and tea chain that was about a ninth the size of McDonald’s five years ago in terms of numbers of branches, but now has more than the burger chain – 45,000 spread across Asia and Australia

Posted by: Newbie | Apr 11 2025 0:40 utc | 360

@ Cynic | Apr 11 2025 0:14 utc | 367
While we’re at it, how about the frogmarch away from incandescent lightbulbs to those compact fluorescents and halogens that usually can’t be used in recessed/covered fixtures, cost 20 times as much, and last no longer?

Posted by: malenkov | Apr 11 2025 0:42 utc | 361

Posted by: Cynic | Apr 11 2025 0:14 utc | 367
#######
How many people do you know who are shopping for cars that are not American?
I’m talking about the massive consumer market that is the ROW. It is only protectionist measures that are keeping Chinese cars out of North America. One cannot say there is a lack of demand when they are banned. ICE is the only real option. EVs and hybrids are still niche vehicles in North America. In Asia, EVs are increasingly the norm.
Even the President of Ford, IIRC, had a Chinese vehicle and was gushing about it a year ago. It’s not just that they are EV, it’s that they have better suspensions and 4 independent wheels, the software has them parallel parking as the driver walks away, the comfort features are next level. The differences are much greater than fuel source. I recommend that everyone go to YT and do a little research.
Oh, and they are relatively affordable.
I hate cars, but if I must have one, there is no doubt I would want one of the Chinese ones.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Apr 11 2025 0:43 utc | 362

*** There are 10,000 KFC, 6,500 Starbucks, 5,900 McDonald’s .. stores in China.***
That is seriously disgusting.
Posted by: Cynic | Apr 11 2025 0:31 utc | 368
______
Wishing DJT and his Zionazi buddies every success in rendering these exemplars of USraeli culture so noxious that even the youngsters of China notice.

Posted by: malenkov | Apr 11 2025 0:46 utc | 363

Shorts about Chinese vehicles. This is only a taste of the content out there.
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/6glUhcSwJ5U
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/pYWMCTlhfSM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xsQ8sv_4ErM

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Apr 11 2025 1:33 utc | 364

While we’re at it, how about the frogmarch away from incandescent lightbulbs to those compact fluorescents and halogens that usually can’t be used in recessed/covered fixtures, cost 20 times as much, and last no longer?
Posted by: malenkov | Apr 11 2025 0:42 utc | 370
And then leds!
And the problem was when china decided to make the expensive high margin that were reserved for the west.
Pesky peasants dared break the lie that they were poor because they could only do cheap obsolete stuff (and made obsolete under false pretense )
On the green energy/ EV it was a clear case of the west going for wool and getting sheared.
They set the rules and china won by a landslide.
They made something not supposed to work… a success

Posted by: Newbie | Apr 11 2025 1:45 utc | 365

“When You Make Enemies Everywhere, You Can’t Sell Anything”. The graphic at the header is also very graphic. It’s a translation of a Guancha article from yesterday that has additional material added to it.

Posted by: karlof1 | Apr 11 2025 1:48 utc | 366

“Another day and another thread where the alleged Marxists (William Gruff excluded) genuinely excited at the prospect that the attempt by Trump to bring back manufacturing jobs to the US from exploited third world countries (as they repeatedly lectured everyone) fails. That any attempt to reverse the rust belt must fail.
“Truly amusing to see their hypocrisy so exposed. They’re all against exploitation of third world peasants by rapacious US corporations until any attempt to change that affects their stock portfolios, their 401k’s, their pension funds. Exploitation, what exploitation ?????
“And no I’m not American.”
Posted by: Down South | Apr 10 2025 7:05 utc | 306
Well said, again. I’m an American and I too find it amusing.
Ackshually more than amusing, kind of sickening for decades. It is the same urban-liberal-sanctimonious demographic as the NIMBY fuckers who loudly complained in the 1980-present era about “dirty industries” and then cheered when the sources of their massive consumption were outsourced to places like China. But their massive consumption increased, it didn’t decrease. Status symbol to buy foreign cars.

Posted by: Spectator | Apr 11 2025 2:17 utc | 367

@ 375
Thanks again Karlof1 for additional information.

Posted by: Suresh | Apr 11 2025 2:28 utc | 368

Posted by b on April 9, 2025 at 17:14 UTC | Permalink
Thank you, b, for this post and the previous related ones. You never make your explanations difficult to follow, and for that I am so grateful.
Living in the US, as a senior I am worried about the strain this result may be having for Trump on top of all the self-imposed difficulties he has inflicted upon himself. He’s only human. A sign is the very coarse language he’s using – I had a friend who in the mists of undergoing a serious brain operation lost her ability to communicate insofar as while she had been a mild mannered, churchgoing person – she began swearing like a … mad person. Trump’s recent loss of balance, if I can call it that, reminds me of my dear friend (she has passed so cannot be affronted by my candor). Even the most ardent of his supporters has to know that something is terribly wrong, and that this isn’t the man they voted into office. The strain has been too much, I fear.
I have a Chinese son-in-law living in China who is as dear to me as my own sons. So, while also having an affinity with Russia that is spiritual, it would seem I am in the wrong place — but I don’t think so. Americans are good people – I should know; some of them are my own children and grandchildren.
Trump had good intentions. Thanks for noting that, b. And the Chinese leadership is wise. I hope and pray for the best for us all. Thank you again for all you do.

Posted by: juliania | Apr 11 2025 4:35 utc | 369

Posted by: Sunny Runny Burger | Apr 10 2025 8:53 utc | 325
When did you live in Singapore – I lived and grew up there from 1977 to 1989 – went back in 1996 and 2019.
As to your sentiment about Singapore, I agree wholeheartedly.

Posted by: Richard Head | Apr 11 2025 4:37 utc | 370

Americans are good people –
Posted by: juliania | Apr 11 2025 4:35 utc | 378
Germans where nice people in the Weimar Republic.
so the question is “Which faction” do you mean.
Usually you have a group of good guys, a group of bad and depraved guys and dolls and in between the usually large group of undecided/unaligned/neutral people.
Which group is at the helm?
That decides everything.
US, Europe, UK, some other nations the bad guys are at the helm these days.

Posted by: MAKK | Apr 11 2025 21:12 utc | 371

Germans where nice people in the Weimar Republic.
Posted by: MAKK | Apr 11 2025 21:12 utc | 380
################
It’s not enough to think one is a nice person, IMO.
I am sure there are many “nice” American Christians who say nothing as Americans commit (another) genocide.
Actions indicate (true) preferences.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Apr 11 2025 22:02 utc | 372

To Richard Head ( Apr 11 2025 4:37 utc | 379 ):
(Sorry for the late reply; I’m not good with keeping up with threads).
Ah I envy you.
I left over thirty years ago and have never been back in that part of the world/SEA since. So long ago it’s a bit upsetting lol.
I know that some parts like Marina Bay and the areas surrounding it looks very different now (then again almost everywhere does), lots of big changes, they even moved the Merlion 🙂

Posted by: Sunny Runny Burger | Apr 14 2025 19:44 utc | 373