Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
July 10, 2025
First Casualties From Trump’s Increasing Tariff Craze

Yesterday U.S. President Donald Trump imposed a 50% tariff on all products from Brazil.

His letter to President Lula of Brazil was published before it had been received. That and its content make it unprecedented.


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Trump demands that the trial against former president Bolsanero, who had tried to instigate a military coup after he had lost the last election, should be immediately end.

He demands the lifting of orders by the Brazilian Supreme Court against certain posts on U.S. owned social media should be lifted. These orders, which only relate to social media viewable in Brazil, are claimed to be 'against fundamental free speech rights of Americans'.

Both of those issues are under control of the judiciary of Brazil. The government has no legal means to alter them.

Trump claims that there is a 'very unfair trade relationship engineered by Brazil' which has led to 'unsustainable trade deficits against the United States'. But as the NY Times notes (archived) correctly:

For years, the United States has generally maintained a trade surplus with Brazil. The two countries had about $92 billion in trade together last year, with the United States enjoying a $7.4 billion surplus in the relationship. The top products traded are aircraft, oil, machinery and iron.

Brazil will of course have nothing of it:

A few hours later, Mr. Lula said that Brazil would reciprocate against the tariffs. “Brazil is a sovereign country with independent institutions that will not accept being abused by anyone,” he said in a statement.

He added that the case against Mr. Bolsonaro “is the sole responsibility of the Brazilian Judiciary.”

That Brazil will reciprocate is good for Airbus and bad for Boeing.

Brazil was one out of fifteen, mostly Asian, countries which yesterday received nasty tariff letters:

At least 14 countries’ imports are set to face steep blanket tariffs starting Aug. 1, President Donald Trump revealed Monday.

The president, in a series of social media posts, shared screenshots of form letters dictating new tariff rates to the leaders of Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, Kazakhstan, South Africa, Laos and Myanmar.

Later in the day, he shared another set of seven letters, to the leaders of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Tunisia, Indonesia, Bangladesh, Serbia, Cambodia and Thailand.

Tariffs on general U.S. imports from these countries will rise to 25-40%.

All of the letters say that the blanket tariff rates are separate from additional sector-specific duties on key product categories.

Another crazy sector-specific duty put in place yesterday is a 50% tariff on the U.S. import of copper:

President Donald Trump said Tuesday he’s imposing a new 50% tariff on all copper imported into the US. However, it’s unclear when the new tariff would take effect.

“Today we’re doing copper,” he said at a Cabinet meeting, adding that he believed the rate will be 50%.

This would mark the fourth across-the-board tariff Trump has imposed during his second term. Currently, most imported cars and car parts face a 25% tariff, while imported steel and aluminum both face 50% tariffs.

This will definitely increase U.S. prices:

Copper futures soared 17 percent – the highest rise during a day since 1988 – before coming down.

Americans now pay 138 percent over the global benchmark, CNBC reported. That comes despite plentiful supply of the metal, which has a variety of uses in manufacturing and technology.

Experts say those price spikes could easily transfer to increased costs for U.S. consumers on products ranging from refrigerators, electric cars, and air conditioning units.

The U.S imports some 50% of the copper it needs. The tariffs will increase the profits of U.S. copper producers which will naturally increase their prices. They may help, over time, to develop new U.S. copper mines but products from those are decades away.

The increased price for copper will not only hit U.S. consumers but it will also increase the cost of industrial products, like transformers and motors, the U.S. is trying to export. The tariffs thus won't help with trade deficits.

Meanwhile the first casualties from the tariff craze are coming in:

Heritage canned‑food maker Del Monte Foods has filed for Chapter 11 protection, citing credit pressures and “stunning increases” in packaging costs, driven in large part by President Donald Trump’s decision in early June to double U.S. tariffs on imported steel and aluminium to a whopping 50 per cent….

Industry sources highlight that aluminium foil and can suppliers already faced a roughly 6% jump in material costs following the tariff increase, with projections of a 24% hike in can pricing by spring 2026. The Can Manufacturers Institute warned these tariffs distort domestic packaging supply and could push U.S. food prices higher.

Del Monte was already in trouble but it were the additional cost due to tariffs which finally broke its neck.

The U.S. economy will experience many unforeseen side effects from Trump's high tariffs. Del Monte won't be last to fall due to them.

As Trump continues like this I doubt that the Republicans will still own the House and the Senate after the 2026 midterm elections.

Comments

Posted by: petergrfstrm | Jul 12 2025 13:04 utc | 299
Wow! By ‘those Imperialists’ – do you mean ‘God’? Sounds like it. Or is that a bee I hear buzzing somewhere . . . ?

Posted by: Jams O’Donnell | Jul 12 2025 14:14 utc | 301

Mainstream vs wallstreet.
Doom and gloom from the mouthpieces
of the bankers.
Bring it all back home President.
Lived through the era of our industrial parks shuttered and move south of the border.
Absolutely loving the pissing and moaning from our southern neighbors about the Huuge drop in remittances.

Posted by: TG | Jul 12 2025 14:14 utc | 302

How they caused the life taking floods in Texas.
“The CEO of Rainmaker, the cloud seeding company currently modifying the weather in Texas, explains how they “spray an agent” into our air
Using only 3 drones, spraying only 1 pound of this agent, causes 40 MILLION pounds of water to fall
“You disperse the material — So for every pound of this that you put up, you get in excess of 40 million pounds down on the ground. 40 million pounds of water”
“How many drones does it take to do this?”
“Like, three. That’s it”

Posted by: Republicofscotland | Jul 12 2025 14:21 utc | 303

I looked it up, and its f*ckin true.
“Did you know the desire to escape slavery, was once classified as a mental illness called Drapetomania in 1851.
Black people were considered mentally ill for refusing to live in bondage.”

Posted by: Republicofscotland | Jul 12 2025 14:28 utc | 304

Tarrifs craze is a good expression. This is indeed what Trump is obsessed with, like the mafia don he has been all his life. Croonies and levies.

Posted by: Tom | Jul 12 2025 14:43 utc | 305

It is perhaps more productive to overlook, at least for now, the formal structure of the letter and its purported deviation from traditional diplomatic protocols. The time of powdered wigs and ceremonial language is behind us; the legacy of the Congress of Vienna belongs to a world that no longer exists. In the current geopolitical landscape, US Empire, who possess power and understand how to apply it has little incentive to cloak its intentions in obsolete ritual or antiquated phraseology.
What remains, however, is a stark and binary proposition facing Brazil – and, in due course, other nations that may find themselves in a similar position. The choice is essentially between aligning with the will of the US Empire through relatively peaceful submission, or facing the consequences of resistance: economic sanctions, the orchestration of political destabilisation, the risk of internal conflict, and the toll in human suffering and economic collapse that inevitably follows. The ultimate destination does not vary; only the trajectory does.
This is the context in which President Lula must assess his options. Should his primary concern be the long-term welfare and stability of the Brazilian people, the rational course of action may appear self-evident. The recent histories of Libya, Syria, Lebanon, Iraq, Palestine – among others – offer sobering illustrations of what tends to follow when national sovereignty is asserted beyond what the US Empire is prepared to tolerate.

Posted by: Louis | Jul 12 2025 18:07 utc | 306

Most disturbing for this American to read these official White House documents. Not so much for their content, disturbing as that is, but to see the illiteracy on display in these documents, by the official United States government. The documents read like Trump’s embarrassingly illiterate and agramatical internet postings. I hope, maybe even doubt, that the USG officials responsible chose this linguistic format of Trump’s as part of the ‘butter-up the boss’ part of the job–that if they failed to write documents that read like Trump’s handiwork they’d be on the rug with the Oval Office, being asked “Why are you trying to make the president look bad?” Questions asked like that tend to lead to unemployment, likely permanent USG/US politics unemployment.
Why has Donald Trump never been taken to task by anyone, particularly the words trades, the academy, grade-school teachers, anyone, for his atrocious writing style? Doesn’t he have anyone around him who will gently tell him better about this stupidity of his? I am embarrassed every time I read one of his postings–embarrassed for my country and embarrassed even for our despicably servile brain trades and intelligentsia. As the next to last line of one of my favorite movies goes: “The indignity of it all”.*
*From Les Enfants du Paradis.

Posted by: Daniel White | Jul 12 2025 19:22 utc | 307

Has anyone considered the effect on those who waged law-fare on him, mostly from the top decile of income, the messing with ‘adjusting’ tariffs on the goods of all those companies whose profits support the dividends of their stocks. Not only initiating those changes but ‘adjusting’ those tariffs in a disordered manner subsequently to eliminate all expectation of future conditions. One fell swoop an unexpected, unpredictable blow to the neo-lib/con mob behind the “woman’s march on Washington” less than 20 hours after inauguration, January 2017 with an unprecedented declaration of total war on the new administration.
Just some dross from memory hole, please resume dialogue.

Posted by: Formerly T-Bear | Jul 12 2025 20:06 utc | 308

@ Daniel White | Jul 12 2025 19:22 utc | 307
We’re Amurrikans here. That Miss Priss shit is for faggots.
Or, if you prefer a Otto-West-cosplaying-as-Real Amurrikan:
Only Untermenschen care about writing good.
(Yes, I wish that were — note correct use of subjunctive — snark.)

Posted by: malenkov | Jul 12 2025 20:09 utc | 309

The first casualty: the good reputation of the USA and it’s people. Trump is clearly mentally incompetent. Someone patriotic ought to remove him from office lest he hurt the rest of us. But who, D, R, or both, is working to impeach him? Instead, insanse partisanship keeps him going. I hate to rely on the military, as in 2006, wnen Genl. Millely phoned around to his opposite numbers in China, etc., and reassured them that Trump would NOT be allowed to start a nuclear or a conventional war. I don’t want our shaky democracy to turn Bonapartist!

Posted by: lester | Jul 12 2025 20:58 utc | 310

Sorry to contradict your doomsaying, but we don’t know that for sure, do we?

Oh, sorry, I didn’t know absolute certainty was the standard for posting. I stand corrected!

lots of others that we’re pretty sure haven’t been subverted that way

They did pretty much torture Assange for decades. The otehr sites are entirely irrelevant in the scheme of things. Yeah, some tiny percentage of the people won’t be fooled all the time. You win!
Posted by: CalDre | Jul 12 2025 7:13 utc | 298
—————————————————
First of all, then why do you even bother posting here?
Second of all, believe it or not I’m not interested in “winning” here.
I guess what I am interested in is establishing that all is not lost, at least not yet.
Mordor hasn’t obliterated all yet. Sauron hasn’t gotten his grubby hands on the One Ring. Not yet, anyhow.
Yes, they sure did torture Assange for decades. But guess what? He’s free now, remember?

Posted by: George the Zeroth | Jul 12 2025 20:58 utc | 311

Thanks for your reply. I’ll agree with you that the convincing fakery is migrating from entertainment to news.
Point taken. However I don’t always distinguish one from the other.
What it is doing is turning the audience into cynics.
We’re all Soviets now. Laughing at Pravda. And laughter is dangerous to management. They hate it.
Posted by: Inevitability | Jul 12 2025 6:05 utc | 297
———————————————————–
That same laughter is also dangerous to us, not just to our enemies. An overall environment of cynicism is not a good outcome here. Sure, we can chuckle darkly at the irony, but in the end the more obfuscation and confusion there is, the more easily the overlords of the world will be able to get away with their malign schemes.
Remember, oases like this one are supposed to be, among other things, counterweights to that shit that’s going on. Not just saloons where one can safely vent (with little or no effect) against What’s Going On In The World (although that’s certainly one valid function).

Posted by: George the Zeroth | Jul 12 2025 21:04 utc | 312

How they caused the life taking floods in Texas.
“The CEO of Rainmaker, the cloud seeding company currently modifying the weather in Texas, explains how they “spray an agent” into our air
Using only 3 drones, spraying only 1 pound of this agent, causes 40 MILLION pounds of water to fall
“You disperse the material — So for every pound of this that you put up, you get in excess of 40 million pounds down on the ground. 40 million pounds of water”
“How many drones does it take to do this?”
“Like, three. That’s it”
Posted by: Republicofscotland | Jul 12 2025 14:21 utc | 303
—————————————————————–
You really believe that?
If so—if you’re not just yanking our chain here—then it’s obvious that your bullshit detector is either badly in need of recalibration or not functioning at all.
The only people you have in your corner here are nutcases like Marjorie Taylor (“Jewish space lasers”) Greene.
C’mon. Get real.

Posted by: George the Zeroth | Jul 12 2025 21:09 utc | 313

Posted by: George the Zeroth | Jul 12 2025 21:04 utc | 312
#######
I find that some degree of cynicism is necessary to stay grounded in reality, given the current state and intensity of the infowar.
It is the hour of the wolf.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Jul 12 2025 21:38 utc | 314

Posted by: George the Zeroth | Jul 12 2025 21:04 utc | 312
#######
I find that some degree of cynicism is necessary to stay grounded in reality, given the current state and intensity of the infowar.
Posted by: LoveDonbass | Jul 12 2025 21:38 utc | 314
—————————————————————
“No matter how cynical you get, it is impossible to keep up.”
– Lily Tomlin

Posted by: George the Zeroth | Jul 12 2025 22:11 utc | 315

“No matter how cynical you get, it is impossible to keep up.”
– Lily Tomlin
Posted by: George the Zeroth | Jul 12 2025 22:11 utc | 315
Not bad, thanks

Posted by: canuk | Jul 12 2025 22:15 utc | 316

Posted by: George the Zeroth | Jul 12 2025 21:09 utc | 313
I like the R of S’s views but he is in last field with this issue.
What possible benefit accrues to killing 200 or so random people and get a national flashlight on the ordeal?
If one is acutaly ‘cloud seeding’ one would be a complete moron to advertise the fact..
Doesn’t make sense whatsoever.

Posted by: canuk | Jul 12 2025 22:18 utc | 317

@Jane | Jul 11 2025 16:54 utc | 283
I mean the nation builders and they were not socialists but accepted that some people may
accumulate wealth. This means in the long run they would encounter some problems. Being pragmatic they would alter the rules always in the interest of having a society where many people are able to find happiness.
List was one of several and had an impact in the 19th.century
But I think Colbert in French 17th century together with Germany’s Leibniz were early inspirers.
Michael Hudsons historical overviews are also relevant in that context. We may learn from the wisdom of the ancients and Hudson is giving interesting examples.
@Jams O’Donnell | Jul 12 2025 14:14 utc | 301
I think I spot irony, but I happen to believe in the simulation theory of the universe, so if there is some conscious entity steering the simulation, that entity would be a candidate for the concept of God.
I have been thinking when I reflect over the persistence of the oligarchic system over the millennia if it might be a deliberate act of this God to insert the oligarchic phenomenon.
For example if we live in a simulation we are bound to sooner or later figure out how one might alter the parameters. God might want to protect the simulation against us being too curious and so might need some effective policing of us.
Priests are candidates and they have a fixed narrative and make us humble. And therefore harmless to the secrets of the simulation.
And the oligarchy wants us to be ignorant.
Not Creative. Hence the dicotomy of Plato vs Aristo.
Plato unleashes dangerous independent thinking potentially threatening the simulation.
Aristo at least as described by Larouche et al is the oligarchy’s philosopher
Aristo protects the simulation.
The oligarchy however needs some science so the remedy is that they are few. And they intend to cull our herd.
The greens have long been associated with fascism and the oligarchy is the sponsor.
Both aspects save the simulation by maintaining us ignorant and by depopulation.
Since you were being ironic it doesnt matter what I managed to conjur up at this hour when I ought to sleep.

Posted by: petergrfstrm | Jul 12 2025 22:27 utc | 318

What possible benefit accrues to killing 200 or so random people and get a national flashlight on the ordeal?
If one is acutaly ‘cloud seeding’ one would be a complete moron to advertise the fact..
Doesn’t make sense whatsoever.
Posted by: canuk | Jul 12 2025 22:18 utc | 317
——————————————————
Well, there actually was cloud seeding going on the very day those catastrophic storms started. And it turns out it was not the cause of those storms. Nonetheless, the CEO of the cloud-seeding company has been accused of causing them, and has received threats to himself and his family.
Check out this video where he explains what cloud-seeding is, what his company did the day of the storm, and how he’s being falsely accused of something ridiculous here:
https://www.cnn.com/2025/07/11/us/video/cloud-seeding-texas-floods-fact-check-augustus-doricko-digvid
Judge for yourself. The guy is actually in favor of regulating his industry, and takes seriously the possible consequences of the technology.
But there’s no way in hell that his dispersing 70 grams of silver iodide into a couple of clouds resulted in the deaths of all those people. That’s just not the way this works.

Posted by: George the Zeroth | Jul 12 2025 22:32 utc | 319

Doesn’t Trump / the US like to be subsidized ? Tariffs will reduce the US Trade Deficit and by that it will reduce the size by which the rest of the world subsidizes the US. But it seems that the people in the US fail to understand that, aren’t aware of that.

Posted by: WMG | Jul 13 2025 8:23 utc | 320

The US is 4% of world population and 24% of global GDP. If the rest of the world (all those who he has tariffed) could get together and respond with an identical reciprocal tariff on the US effective Aug 1 we could freeze the US out of trade. Trump would have to back down in days or weeks. The rest of the world has to be united against this (even Starmer). Trump is good at bullying individual countries but he will never be able to take on the rest of the world with 25X the population and 3X the GDP. Hang together and win or go alone and hang alone.

Posted by: Migmaw | Jul 13 2025 12:59 utc | 321

The rest of the world has to be united against this (even Starmer). Trump is good at bullying individual countries but he will never be able to take on the rest of the world with 25X the population and 3X the GDP. Hang together and win or go alone and hang alone.
Posted by: Migmaw | Jul 13 2025 12:59 utc | 321

thats why they are constantly working on “balkanization”, decolonization, or cutting chunks out of “undesirable” countries. or outright regime-changes. make everyone else small and disunited and then you can “rule” easily over them with your great “united states” or “european union”.

Posted by: Justpassinby | Jul 13 2025 13:12 utc | 322

The US is 4% of world population and 24% of global GDP. If the rest of the world (all those who he has tariffed) could get together and respond with an identical reciprocal tariff on the US effective Aug 1 we could freeze the US out of trade. Trump would have to back down in days or weeks. The rest of the world has to be united against this (even Starmer).
Posted by: Migmaw | Jul 13 2025 12:59 utc | 321
———————————————————
Get the entire ROW to align itself against the US hegemon?
Good luck with that.
Please get real here.

Posted by: George the Zeroth | Jul 13 2025 19:09 utc | 323

@ George the Zeroth | Jul 13 2025 19:09 utc | 323
You’re right, realistically that won’t happen — at least not in the next couple of decades. But the trend does point in that direction.

Posted by: malenkov | Jul 14 2025 1:06 utc | 324