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

Brazil possesses 98% of the world’s reserves of Niobium. Niobium is used for the hardest steels, in superconducting materials, aerospace applications, advanced electronics, and in important chemical processes to create other materials that do not necessarily contain the element itself, for aerospace applications. Brazil could embargo all Niobium exports to the US.

Posted by: Clwydshire | Jul 10 2025 15:37 utc | 1

As Trump continues like this I doubt that the Republicans will still own the House and the Senate after the 2026 midterm elections.
Posted by b on July 10, 2025 at 15:15 UTC
That’s the plan, b.
The only way to continue the illusion that voting means anything in the US is to ensure the Dems take the House at the midterms. The Dems will then oppose all the “wonderful America-First plans” Trump promised the American People so he can skate on fulfilling the promises. Old, old playbook. And nothing will change. Nothing.

Posted by: Nooneuknow | Jul 10 2025 15:39 utc | 2

It seems the 4th Turning is going to happen one way or another.

Posted by: Inty2525 | Jul 10 2025 15:40 utc | 3

Thanks a lot, b. That letter from Trump to Lula reminds me of letters I have seen from clinically crazy persons. I have received a handful of letters from people in madhouses (or should have been in madhouses) through my life and I’d say they seemed saner than this. Great entertainment, though rather disturbing if one thinks too much about the “world leader” status of the sender.

Posted by: Avtonom | Jul 10 2025 15:40 utc | 4

” They may help, over time, to develop new U.S. copper mines but products from those are decades away.”
b
No, for ore bodies to become mines in the Sates takes from 3-6 years-not decades.
And if the 50% tariff on imported copper in enacted (who know in this crazy game) would increase domestic copper miners profits such the above schedule could be reduced to about half the time.

Posted by: canuk | Jul 10 2025 15:41 utc | 5

Xi calls Lula tomorrow ‘want to do business?’
Lula ‘Absolutely.’

Posted by: Fred777 | Jul 10 2025 15:42 utc | 6

At first it looked like Trump was trying to gain political space by rocking the boat left and right. There must be a method in the madness, many of us thought.
But Trump’s admin increasingly look like a personality cult centered on a delusional ego maniac.
Unless everyone bows to him perpetually, it will come to a crash.
Where ?
When ?
Everyone is probably assessing how to deflect the blow at minimum cost without being cornered.
But it will land..

Posted by: Saracene’s Head | Jul 10 2025 15:42 utc | 7

“Del Monte was already in trouble but it were the additional cost due to tariffs which finally broke its neck.”
b
Good riddance-Del Monte praticed unhealthy products:
AI Overview
Del Monte has faced criticism regarding potential health risks associated with some of its products and packaging practices, as well as concerns about its sustainability practices. Specifically, Consumer Reports found high levels of phthalates in their canned peaches, and the FDA recalled some canned corn due to potential botulism contamination. Additionally, the company’s introduction of plastic banana wrappers was met with criticism regarding its environmental impact.
Specific concerns and criticisms:
Phthalates in Canned Peaches:
Consumer Reports found high levels of phthalates in Del Monte’s canned sliced peaches, prompting concern due to the potential health risks associated with these chemicals.
Botulism Risk in Canned Corn:
Del Monte recalled a specific type of canned corn due to concerns about potential botulism contamination, highlighting a risk of life-threatening illness if consumed.
Plastic Banana Wrappers:
The introduction of plastic banana wrappers, despite Del Monte’s claims of sustainability benefits, was criticized as an example of unnecessary plastic waste and a creation of a need that didn’t previously exist.
Sustainability Efforts:
Sustainable Farming:
Del Monte has stated commitments to sustainable farming practices and reducing its carbon footprint, including efforts to improve efficiency throughout the supply chain.
100% Recyclable Packaging:
The company has pledged to use 100% recyclable or compostable packaging by 2025.
Pollinator Protection:
Del Monte has implemented measures to protect pollinators, including maintaining buffer areas around crops and phasing out certain insecticides.
Other Considerations:
Nutrient Retention in Canned Foods:
Del Monte emphasizes that their canned fruits and vegetables often retain similar nutrients to fresh produce, and in some cases, even more antioxidants and vitamins.
“Imperfect” Produce:
Canned and jarred foods can help salvage produce that might otherwise go to waste due to size or shape imperfections.
Consumer Perception:
Some studies suggest that canned foods have a negative consumer perception due to health and quality concerns, despite the fact that they can be as nutritious as fresh produce when not packed with added salt or sugar.
The No-Good, Very Bad, Overwrapped Banana – The Atlantic
Mar 8, 2011 — A few weeks ago the banana company Del Monte released a packaging innovation: a plastic banana wrapper. The story sprea…
The Atlantic
CR letter to Del Monte on plastic chemicals in its canned …
Feb 22, 2024 — In a letter to Del Monte, Consumer Reports urged the company to protect consumers from high levels of potentially haza…
Consumers Union
Del Monte Recalls Canned Corn Over Concerns It Could …
Dec 14, 2018 — Del Monte Recalls Canned Corn Over Concerns It Could Cause ‘Life-Threatening Illness’ Infectious disease experts suspe…
SELF Magazine

Posted by: canuk | Jul 10 2025 15:44 utc | 8

The funny thing is the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in favor of Trump’s tariffs based on it being under the authority of ’emergency powers’.
So emergency powers cover the following.
1. war
2. trade deficits
3. and now, Trump having a hissy fit over countries who do not submit to us.

Posted by: Christian J Chuba | Jul 10 2025 15:44 utc | 9

Dictator Trump. The rest doesn’t matter. It follows.

Posted by: elmagnostic | Jul 10 2025 15:46 utc | 10

Thank you for your attention to the matter.
Think about what that means about Trump…it is like a twitch….not a healthy one…
Where I get lost in thinking about all this is in the enforcement part in a world growing away from SWIFT and BIS transaction dominance?
Trump is proving that his projection of the profit band in Real Estate onto competitive industries like Del Monte show why his tariff policies are deadly for the broader economy.
Will the world economies crash before or after the climax of one or more of the military theatre circus rings?….stay tuned.

Posted by: psychohistorian | Jul 10 2025 15:48 utc | 11

Repost

Fail to plan or plan to fail.

Britain faces the second sharpest downturn in industry among major economies over the coming months as the impact of Donald Trump’s tariffs are felt, Goldman Sachs has warned.
The Wall Street bank expects UK industrial production to take a 3pc hit as a result of US trade policy.
Only Canada and Germany are forecast to suffer more severe hits to the output of their manufacturers, miners and utilities, Goldman said.
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2025/07/10/ftse-100-markets-latest-news-trump-tariffs-miners-copper/#1752150722719

Trump’s trade policies are trickling down the Torygraph’s leg.
Posted by: too scents | Jul 10 2025 14:01 utc | 137

Trump’s Tariff Follies sure are a neat way to amplify and spread risk.

Posted by: too scents | Jul 10 2025 15:48 utc | 12

@ canuk | Jul 10 2025 15:44 utc | 8

Trust AI to give Del Monte a pass on ravishing Hawai’i.
Not only did they steal the land, they also poisoned it.
Superfund Site: Del Monte Corp. (Oahu Plantation) ==> https://cumulis.epa.gov/supercpad/cursites/csitinfo.cfm?id=0902876

Posted by: too scents | Jul 10 2025 15:53 utc | 13

Zionist DJT is trushing what’s left of the Outlaw US of A.
He’s making the Zionist rich richer and the commoners poor poorer.
That’s his sole and American First plan.

Posted by: pepe | Jul 10 2025 15:57 utc | 14

Wait for tomorrow’s TACO.

Posted by: qparker | Jul 10 2025 15:58 utc | 15

Well, it seems like America will in fact be first, to implode.
The foolish are so full of confidence.

Posted by: jared | Jul 10 2025 16:13 utc | 16

Wow, that letter is written in the same style as his tweets.
It does not follow any form of professional writing style.
Totally illiterate.
Structure, wording, language, idiotic capitalization of every second noun, WTF?
Imagine you received a letter written in such style from your accountant, lawyer, insurance broker, government office. You would be either offended, or you would dismiss the letter as a joke or a prank.
If this letter is indeed genuine, God help us all.

Posted by: hopehely | Jul 10 2025 16:16 utc | 17

May I ask for some clinical expertise?
We’re dealing with a narcissus with injured self-esteem. Putin gives him bad mood. How big is the chance he will go really rogue? Not some “Hollywood bombing” of Yemen and Iran?
I’m afraid this is worse than handling demented Joe.

Posted by: MorePain4Cakes | Jul 10 2025 16:17 utc | 18

fuck Brazilian censorship. Good for Trump. “Professional” writing is an art of drones.

Posted by: UWDude | Jul 10 2025 16:20 utc | 19

“Superfund Site: Del Monte Corp. (Oahu Plantation) ==> https://cumulis.epa.gov/supercpad/cursites/csitinfo.cfm?id=0902876
Posted by: too scents | Jul 10 2025 15:53 utc | 13
Thanks for that; I am even now more enthused that the company is bankrupt.

Posted by: canuk | Jul 10 2025 16:23 utc | 20

BRICS Fudge
https://johnhelmer.net/brics-fudge/
“…The United Nations is mentioned 23 times in the Rio Declaration; there is no mention at all of the United States. ‘Hegemon’, the diplomatic euphemism for the US is also absent.
This is the BRICS fudge – and it appears to have been largely the doing of Lula and the Brazilians.
Putin left it to Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov attending the summit in person to spell out or hint at the details of Russia’s differences with them.
If it was also understood by the Russians that Lula was attempting to pacify US President Donald Trump, Trump announced within 72 hours that Lula has failed…”

Posted by: JohnGilberts | Jul 10 2025 16:26 utc | 21

This letter comes just a few days after the BRICS meeting.
Can you imagine the back-channel dialog among BRICS members?
This letter will likely have two effects: a) scare some of them off, and b) speed up integration for the remainder. It will be very interesting to see who falls into which camp.
Thanks to b for posting this letter. I wouldn’t have seen it otherwise.

Posted by: Tom Pfotzer | Jul 10 2025 16:26 utc | 22

“Brazil possesses 98% of the world’s reserves of Niobium. Niobium is used for the hardest steels, in superconducting materials, aerospace applications, advanced electronics, and in important chemical processes to create other materials that do not necessarily contain the element itself, for aerospace applications. Brazil could embargo all Niobium exports to the US.”
Posted by: Clwydshire | Jul 10 2025 15:37 utc | 1
Incorrect.
“Canada’s Role:
Canada is the second largest producer in Quebec, , contributing around 9.9% of the global supply, says Investing News Network. ”
So Brazil only supplies 90% of the World market-but not for long I two investment bank developing my Niobium ore body project in Northern Ontario.
niobec laready supplies the US with its Niobium so you are wrong on that count as well

Posted by: canuk | Jul 10 2025 16:27 utc | 23

Posted by: Tom Pfotzer | Jul 10 2025 16:26 utc | 22
—-
Next year is India’s turn.
By then potato face may commanding what’s left of the WH.

Posted by: pepe | Jul 10 2025 16:39 utc | 24

Posted by: Inty2525 | Jul 10 2025 15:40 utc | 3
#######
The 4th turning is American nonsense.
It tells us nothing about the ROW/Global majority.
Yankee superstition.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Jul 10 2025 16:40 utc | 25

I imagine the copper part was primarily to provoke/punish Musk.
I can only imagine the confused/bemused looks on the faces of Russian leadership.

Posted by: jared | Jul 10 2025 16:47 utc | 26

thanks b…
i still think trump doesn’t serve his full term…
@ william gruff and c1ue…
what is your take on trumps approach here?? i am curious.. thanks..

Posted by: james | Jul 10 2025 16:47 utc | 27

@ Canuk
You are correct, I was completely ignorant of the Canadian Niobium.

Posted by: Clwydshire | Jul 10 2025 16:50 utc | 28

re: mid-terms
Dems emerging ahead next year will be beneficial to US corporations but the zionazis will still rule the roost.

Posted by: motorslug | Jul 10 2025 16:55 utc | 29

The occupant # 47 of the White House is a very angry man, a man out of balance, a man who has lost the run of themselves.
The occupant # 47 of the White House demonstrates a lack of education, little knowledge, of history, of geography, of economic function, of social structures, of law, of U.S. Civics and many other factors unenumerated here.
He speaks like a child, expecting that level amongst his listeners. He is isolated by wealth from shared experience of the nation, a petty oligarch, out of touch with life itself.
A very dangerous man is the occupant # 47 of the White House.
Has there ever issued from occupant # 47’s lips so much as an audible sigh for the tens of thousands of Palestinian children killed by the Israeli military with ‘American’ weapons of war?
But occupant # 47’s ‘heart bleeds’ for Ukrainian neo-Nazi led dead. How extraordinarily blind is the occupant # 47 of the White House.
The occupant # 47 of the White House requires replacement, he is as bad for the Republic as occupant # 46 was. YMMD

Posted by: Formerly T-Bear | Jul 10 2025 16:56 utc | 30

Today’s Hudson/Wolff chat was again about tariffs and BRICS and merits watching as usual. Before viewing the chat, I read today’s Global Times which features 6 important articles ranging from tech to global finance and included the news about the copper tariff and this point:
“The analysis report by ING Think said that “the US produces only about 5 percent of the world’s copper and has seen a 20 percent decline in production over the last decade. Building new mines in the US can take up to 29 years due to lengthy permitting processes.” [My Emphasis]
Hudson & Wolff highlighted several parts of Lavrov’s speech at the Summit that point to the actions BRICS must take to free the Global Majority from the Breton Woods institutions and WTO. A further key as I’ve written about is the need to turn banking and development investing into areas of exclusive government control and planning.
The choice by the Outlaw US Empire to become a protectionist state isn’t original as the experiment’s been done before and didn’t work. The point made about how the world’s competitive arrangements will change do to the tariffs is already being seen in the case of Del Monte. All major metal imports–aluminum, steel and copper–are now subject to 50% tariffs, and that’s going to radically raise prices and likely kill companies that are already shaky financially.

Posted by: karlof1 | Jul 10 2025 16:56 utc | 31

Brazil continues to dump beef and sugar on the US market, and is now engaged in the personage of the communist Supreme Court in blatant media censorship……
But the far left wing government now has choices to make, end the political prosecution of the former conservative President, stop the dumping of products on US markets, stop the censorship or face the music.
Their choice……choice wisely!!

Posted by: tobias cole | Jul 10 2025 17:01 utc | 32

Formerly T-Bear | Jul 10 2025 16:56 utc | 30–
I must second your words my old friend. As Mr. Medvedev wrote a few days ago: Russia will do what it must do no matter what is emitted by Trump. Meanwhile, the Chinese have the American fish on their hook and are slowly playing with it to tire out the massive old shark. I expect Brazil will react with a surge of nationalism to Trump’s irresponsible demands, while the Iranians will look and take satisfaction they aren’t the only nation being bullied. I could add much more. I hope to see your commentary more frequently!

Posted by: karlof1 | Jul 10 2025 17:06 utc | 33

“ I doubt that the Republicans will still own the House and the Senate after the 2026 midterm elections” — assuming there are mid-terms

Posted by: tip marko | Jul 10 2025 17:07 utc | 34

DJT needs to make an appointment with his Medical Team ASAP. He’s caught a terminal dose of China Catchup Syndrome.
Unfortunately, he’s 10 years too late. And if the Yanks don’t pull their finger out, China will eat AmeriKKKa’s lunch before AUKUS gets its Fairy Tale Submarines.

Posted by: Hoarsewhisperer | Jul 10 2025 17:08 utc | 35

Trump is doing everything he pledged to do in the campaign, like it or not.
That is the reason he won in a massive victory for the moderate conservative American base voter.
He has:
– Completely secured the southern and northern borders
– Used military resources to interdict the drug cartels
– Is deporting hundreds of thousands of illegal alien trash that entered the country
– Is allowing more green card agri workers into the country
– Has cleaned out Obama left wing DEI general and admirals from the military, and appt general officers who were sacked by Biden and Obama fanatics
– Has reduced the federal footprint all over DC
– Has sacked FBI and CIA officers involved in the Russiagate hoax, and Ukrainian phone call hoax, and the J6 hoax.
– Has refocused the FBI, ATF and DEA on the illegal alien gangsters
– Has restored military readiness
– Has called out left wing mayors and governors who supported the illegal alien invasions, and the sanctuary cities nonsense.
– He is bringing law and order to the Mexican City of Los Angeles, and re-establishing US governance (see the deployment of ICE, USMarines and federalized NG troops – a massive show of force to the Mexican sub government now in power)
I could go on for another page, but enough said for now. Left wing extremists hate him, conservatives adore him, get used to it.

Posted by: tobias cole | Jul 10 2025 17:12 utc | 36

A dagger straight to Monroe’s -not Marilyn- heart, the best news for Iberoamerica on its definite path to independence.

Posted by: Paco | Jul 10 2025 17:13 utc | 37

But the far left wing government now has choices to make, end the political prosecution of the former conservative President, stop the dumping of products on US markets, stop the censorship or face the music.
Posted by: tobias cole | Jul 10 2025 17:01 utc | 32
_______
And “the music” would be a CIA/School-of-the-Americas-style coup?

Posted by: malenkov | Jul 10 2025 17:14 utc | 38

The thing about inevitability is that the more one runs from it, the greater the reckoning.
The “Western” Capitalist system (and its social effects) is experiencing a crisis.
UNTENABLE.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Jul 10 2025 17:17 utc | 39

assuming there are mid-terms
Posted by: tip marko | Jul 10 2025 17:07 utc | 34
______
Of course there will be midterms, because appearances must be kept up. What you (and b) fail to consider are two niggling little matters: who is allowed to vote, and who counts the votes.
I wouldn’t count the Rethugs out for 2026 and beyond.

Posted by: malenkov | Jul 10 2025 17:18 utc | 40

Oops forgot to mention that DJT in now reining in the Socialist Peoples Republic of California, and bringing it back into the Republic.
Gavin Newsome has been given a new really short haircut…………after his massive failure in the LA fires and the attempted LA insurrection (neatly put down by the military and cang troops).

Posted by: tobias cole | Jul 10 2025 17:19 utc | 41

Posted by: tobias cole | Jul 10 2025 17:12 utc | 36
#######
Where is the Epstein List?
Hopefully, he re-engages with Yemen again so we can see that “military readiness” in action. LOL
The midterms are going to be a bloodbath.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Jul 10 2025 17:19 utc | 42

malenkov 38 – Could be……..

Posted by: tobias cole | Jul 10 2025 17:20 utc | 43

Posted by: canuk | Jul 10 2025 15:41 utc | 5
“US firms dodging restrictions to get China’s minerals: US firms dodging restrictions to get China’s minerals – Reuters
Trump added that a “robust” national security review concluded that tariffs were necessary to secure supply chains.
Although the US holds the seventh-largest copper reserves globally, it lacks sufficient refining infrastructure and depends on imports for nearly half of its refined copper needs. A 2024 S&P Global report warned that it takes nearly 29 years on average to develop a new copper mine in the US, longer than in any other country in the world, save for Zambia.
“The reality of the US copper market is that it will be extremely difficult to get a meaningful boost to copper mining and processing in both the short and long terms,” Reuters commodities columnist Clyde Russell wrote.”

Posted by: Jams O’Donnell | Jul 10 2025 17:25 utc | 44

“Oops forgot to mention that DJT in now reining in the Socialist Peoples Republic of California, and bringing it back into the Republic [of Dunces]”
There ya go. Fixed it for you.
Also, pro-tip: fascism isn’t conservatism and anything to the left of right-of-center isn’t automatically socialism, but stupidity certainly remains, as always, stupidity.

Posted by: Socko | Jul 10 2025 17:33 utc | 45

“Trump is doing everything he pledged to do in the campaign, like it or not.”
Increasing ‘War’ Budget By 13.4% to $1.01 trillion
– No One Is Attacking Us – So There Is No ‘Defense’
To It – While Gutting Social Programs For The Poor.

Russia Gate Hoax – (Clinton Foundation 2016) – No Arrests
Plandemic Medical Tyranny – (Gates & Fauci
BioWeapons 2019) – No Arrests
January 6th PSYOP – (Matrix Agent’s Everywhere
2021) – No Arrests
No Epstein Honey Trap Blackmail Sex Scandal
Arrests – Ensnaring The World’s Politicians
For Warmongering Pentagon MIC Complex!.
No JFK-RFK-MLK Assassination Arrests – Last
Anti-War Group – Permanent War Mode Since.
USAID – Media Propaganda – Coups – Color
Revolutions – Regime Change – BioWeapons – War
& Drug Profit$$$
No Audit Of Pentagon MIC – Trillions Missing
No Audit Of FED – Trillions In Bailouts For Too
Big To Fail/Jail Corporations & Banksters.
No Audit Of Ft Knox Gold – Going For The ‘Black’
Gold (Oil) In Middle East – Because There Is No
Gold In Ft Knox – We’re Keeping the ‘Oil’ in
Syria, Trump (2019).
Lock Her Up (2016) – Nobody Gone To Jail Yet!

Posted by: JohnF | Jul 10 2025 17:39 utc | 46

Hey Brazil, want to sell your beef and sugar over here in Europe instead? (Please deliver any sugar in the form of ćachaça *sprinkles the word with various commas and apostrophes in random places*). I would love to be able to afford beef again, at least a few times each year 🙂 (Not joking).
Yeah I know; it’s to protect the local farmers that there are a lot of barriers here too. Still sucks. It really ought to be possible to have some better solution where the differences in price is evened out and used as a direct subsidy of local produce resulting in more of both? What am I getting wrong? Ah yes, politicians. Never mind…
Meanwhile I’m picking up a lot of angry chatter from some penguins who haven’t received a letter yet, they feel left out.
They are almost able to read that signature in black crayon and are very excited!
Love you all 🙂

Posted by: Sunny Runny Burger | Jul 10 2025 17:42 utc | 47

b ” They may help, over time, to develop new U.S. copper mines but products from those are decades away.”
No, for ore bodies to become mines in the Sates takes from 3-6 years-not decades.
And if the 50% tariff on imported copper in enacted (who know in this crazy game) would increase domestic copper miners profits such the above schedule could be reduced to about half the time.
Posted by: canuk | Jul 10 2025 15:41 utc | 5
“Schedule could be reduced in half.”
Assuming there are copper ore bodies in the US, just waiting for a 50% increase in price AND that US-made products needing copper can wait for the new US supply. Precarious predictions indeed.
_________________________________________________________
Posted by: UWDude | Jul 10 2025 16:20 utc | 19
Don’t need a drone to write a letter that looks like you got out of grade school.
________________________________________________________
Posted by: tobias cole | Jul 10 2025 17:12 utc | 36
Did you forget to mention America First. Epstein and Israel First wasn’t part of his election campaign.
Notwithstanding your list, would you keep your wonderful dog if he kept sheeting in the house?

Posted by: kupkee | Jul 10 2025 17:44 utc | 48

I wonder how many members of Congress bought copper miner’s stock yesterday?

Posted by: Horseless Headsman | Jul 10 2025 17:49 utc | 49

james @27: ”what is your take on trumps approach here?”
Quite the enjoyable show, don’t you think? It has certainly got the TDS victims’ bowels in an uproar, and that’s always good for some laughs.
Now, whether the targets of Trump’s letters will react in panic as Trump intends is another matter. The Japanese probably will because they’re sensitive like that, and maybe the South Koreans because their options are limited unless they take the leap to declare independence.
In any case, this is more performance art intended to extract concessions. I’d be worried if there were any hint that Trump cared what TDS victims thought and thus was motivated in any way by their ”TACO” taunts, but I don’t see that as being an issue. They’re venting at a character Trump is playing, and it likely pleases him that he is doing such a convincing job.
Unfortunately, there are no amount of concessions Trump can squeeze out of these countries that can save the Empire. Trump is doing the best he can, but as I’ve said all along, it is a lost cause. Still, Trump’s approach is entertaining even if it cannot ultimately succeed. Better by far than the Establishment’s more bloodthirsty approaches.

Posted by: William Gruff | Jul 10 2025 17:50 utc | 50

Posted by: tobias cole | Jul 10 2025 17:12 utc | 36
——
ICE expenditure of $45B a year which is the size of the ROK‘s annual military budget makes no sense.
The Outlaw US of A has run its course.
BRICS+ has taken note of that a long time ago.

Posted by: pepe | Jul 10 2025 17:56 utc | 51

Posted by: tobias cole | Jul 10 2025 17:01 utc | 32
Brazil continues to dump beef and sugar on the US market, and is now engaged in the personage of the communist Supreme Court in blatant media censorship……
But the far left wing government now has choices to make, end the political prosecution of the former conservative President, stop the dumping of products on US markets, stop the censorship or face the music.
Their choice……choice wisely!!
<= I am not speaking personally against you.. But my view of your comment is that it is a good example of political power mongering and demonstrates a source of U. S. consumer distrust of everything the US government does. In case you have not heard, no one believes the US government. Instead of the USA government using the media to inform the American public of problems with imports from Brazil and taking the responsibility on to inform the American public as to problems in imports coming from Brazilian companies that find their way into the American consumer market; government folks (politicians) want to use international sanctions, Tariffs, regime change, terrorist acts, assassination, threats, blow up planes, ships and instigate terrorist activities anything convey the awesome powers government officials have at their disposal to force everyone to bow down or else.
Why the hell could the Government not just use the media that it so often uses to lie with, to tell every American to stay away from Brazilian food imports and to tell them why?
Media can tell the American consumer over and over again the brands and labels to stay away from and within a few weeks nothing containing a Brazilian anything will be sold in the American market place. American companies using Brazilian products in their products will also be forced to find new sources of raw materials.
Brazil will quit trying to sell anything to USA governed America because Americans won’t buy it..
But no. nothing so simple is the government way. Government must shake its fists, thrust its power in the face of a politician they don’t like in a country they cannot control..?
In the mean time Brazil is still selling its stuff..
Why should the US government make the Government of Brazil make a choice? The industries that sell products made in Brazil or that use Brazilian sourced raw materials in products that are sold in the American market place need to satisfy the American consumer. Informed consumers will not buy Brazilian products or products made by others that contain Brazilian products..
, the USA, the Federal Reserve, the FDA, the Economics department at Harvard, MIT, U. of Chicago or Cambridge, England or anyone but America consumers.
IMO Governments job is to inform Americans of threats but I cannot see how government thinks it needs to hide the threats from American consumers while it is threatening foreign politicians or sanctioning their governments or imposing Tariffs on their products or whatever.

Posted by: snake | Jul 10 2025 18:03 utc | 52

This letter is hilarious. It seems to have been written by a child seeking vengeance for something.
Mixing everything, from personal grievance, judicial so called unfair treatment and eventually the unfair commercial balance between the two country.
He could as well have concluded that “you have been terrible and awful to me, hence I’m gonna punish you”…

Posted by: scc | Jul 10 2025 18:04 utc | 53

I wonder how many members of Congress bought copper miner’s stock yesterday?
Posted by: Horseless Headsman | Jul 10 2025 17:49 utc | 49
I’m sure all their relatives did, just like the airline stocks had major play in the days leading up to 9/11.
The paper trail is the stock market.
I’m so sick of all this bullshit. Liars to the Left of me, Liars to the Right, here I am stuck in the middle with all of you.

Posted by: Nooneuknow | Jul 10 2025 18:05 utc | 54

@36
Many MAGAts voted for Caligula (Trump/DJT) bc he was against forever war and said he would get US out of propping Bandarists in Kiev.
Instead Caligula bombed a mountain near Qom, with the same obliteration the ancient Caligula did to Neptune.

Posted by: paddy | Jul 10 2025 18:07 utc | 55

Thanks b. I wouldn’t have seen that letter if it weren’t of your post. I don’t follow Trump usually; he sounds to me like an obvious psychiatric case.

Posted by: Richard L | Jul 10 2025 18:08 utc | 56

Posted by: tobias cole | Jul 10 2025 17:12 utc | 36

Youre a little slow on the draw aren’t you? Nobody gives a shit about Maerican politics, theyre bullshit for idjits. Within the next few years you and many on your class of whatever stripe politically will be cursing Trumps name. People like you are what’s for dinner. Now shhh adults are talking.

Posted by: Doctor Eleven | Jul 10 2025 18:10 utc | 57

China Ketchup Syndrome?
The cure is Sriracha! 😀
[ Wiktionary:
“Ketchup” probably ultimately from Hokkien 膎汁 (kê-chiap, “fish sauce”).
“Sriracha” from Thai ศรีราชา (sǐi-raa-chaa), named after the city of Si Racha in Thailand. ]

Posted by: Sunny Runny Burger | Jul 10 2025 18:10 utc | 58

I agree with the commentator who doubted that Mr. T rump will not complete his term. He is proving to be increasingly psychotic, he is borderline obese, in bad physical condition and under a lot of stress, despite his view of himself as the most powerful man in the world. Delusion can have physical repercussions.

Posted by: an old machinist | Jul 10 2025 18:11 utc | 59

@ Sunny Runny Burger | Jul 10 2025 18:10 utc | 58
Just whatever you do, don’t buy that ghastly stuff from Huy Fong, which tastes like burnt plastic.

Posted by: malenkov | Jul 10 2025 18:20 utc | 60

Fantastic b, nailed it.
ALL TRADE IS BALANCED BY SAVINGS INSTRUMENTS !!!
Let’s say for talking same Brazil was running a Trade deficit with the US?
When you look through a gold standard , fixed Exchange rate Lens the words deficit or surplus appears.
With Modern money SAVINGS INSTRUMENTS balance trade.
If America is running a Trade deficit and selling less to Brazil than Brazil is selling to America. Then Brazillians have a surplus of $’s. Because that’s what Brazillian exporters get paid in.
Here:
https://new-wayland.com/blog/anatomy-of-an-fx-transaction/
So what can Brazillians do with all those $’s ?
1. They can keep them in their reserve accounts at the FED.
2. They can swap them for US treasuries and keep them in their treasury account at the FED.
3. They can buy anything sold in $’s. Thus American goods and services.
4 Or they can exchange them into another currency.
That’s it.
America gets all those Brazillian goods and services and in return Brazil gets bits of paper and that’s the 4 options they have with their bits of paper.
Sounds like deal of the century to me and what winning at trade looks like.
Option 4:
As conversion theory no longer exists ( gold standard) and modern money uses free floating currencies exchange rates.
If Brazillians wanted to do this…
$————— > Russian Rouble
Then they need buyers wanting to do this
$ <-------------- Russian Rouble So the $'s don't actually leave the US. The buyers are now the holders of those $'s. So all that's changed is the name on the account at the FED. Yup, definitely the best deal in history for the US and what winning at trade looks like. The gold bugs that infest the Whitehouse like a virus can't see it. As soon as exporters to the US have completed option 3. That is buy all the American goods and services they need. And they have exchanged some $'s back into their local currencies to pay their suppliers and workers. Any excess $'s left over they then move to option 2. Swap their excess $'s for US treasuries ( savings instruments) and this is the balance people miss. What's on the other side of the ledger to the deficit in trade. If horded in large enough quantities can put downward pressure on their own currencies that helps them export more. You see it in the real world every day. Large countries who export their way to growth and up hording US treasuries. You see it between Russia's and India's trade relationship. Russia sends goods and services to India and because India doesn't have much that Russia needs. Russia ends up hoarding billions of Indian rupees.

Posted by: Sun Of Alabama | Jul 10 2025 18:21 utc | 61

@ an old machinist | Jul 10 2025 18:11 utc | 59
Unless he dies in office, he will complete his term. Who would dare remove him?

Posted by: malenkov | Jul 10 2025 18:22 utc | 62

The Man from Del Monte.
Choice quote (concerning reboot):

“It features a younger actor, wearing a white shirt and Panama hat, impressing a lady with the quality of his pineapple.”

*snort* XD
The tariffs are a laughing matter perfect for “silly season” 🙂

Posted by: Sunny Runny Burger | Jul 10 2025 18:30 utc | 63

HOARDING currencies to balance trade is one of the problems BRICS is trying to fix.
What’s BRICS answer to hoarding currencies??
When Russia sends good and services to India and gets paid in rupees.
Then Russia buys what it needs from India using those rupees.
Then hordes the excess rupees in Indian government bonds.
Russia sees that as a waste. So what BRICS are trying to achieve is to develop BRICS countries so that they can produce more goods and services each other needs.
Once India has developed further and produced more technical goods and services. Russia can buy them rather than horde rupees.
Hence , the investment banks and the rest of it that BRICS are going to use to help develop each other internally.
It really is a long term project.

Posted by: Sun Of Alabama | Jul 10 2025 18:31 utc | 64

UWDude | Jul 10 2025 16:20 utc | 19
The unprofessional and utterly undiplomatic grade-school writing has the seal of the usa’s Whitehouse at the top!!
It shows the whole world that juveniles are in charge in that god-forsaken country!

Posted by: bisfab | Jul 10 2025 18:34 utc | 65

I’ll leave the last word to our favourite travelling circus chief clown himself – Ray Dalio
The sound money expert that predicted in January the UK was going to go bankrupt any second now…
Here:
https://bondeconomics.substack.com/p/oh-noes-not-the-gilt-death-spiral
These clowns in the big tent golden dome circus doesn’t understand any of what I have written above.

Posted by: Sun Of Alabama | Jul 10 2025 18:38 utc | 66

JohnGilberts | Jul 10 2025 16:26 utc | 21
John please don’t link Helmer’s articles to make a point. He is an old man that hates Putin and the Kremlin and it shows in EVERY article if his.
Brazil maybe is starting to realize that they need to stay in the comforting arms of the BRICS+.
India hopefully will realize this some time soon as well…

Posted by: bisfab | Jul 10 2025 18:39 utc | 67

“malenkov” ( Jul 10 2025 18:20 utc | 60 ) wrote:

“Just whatever you do, don’t buy that ghastly stuff from Huy Fong, which tastes like burnt plastic.”

Does it come in a plastic bottle as usual? Maybe they made it too spicy… 😉 (but will avoid it if I see it and remember, thanks!).

Posted by: Sunny Runny Burger | Jul 10 2025 18:39 utc | 68

Sun Of Alabama | Jul 10 2025 18:21 utc | 61
He’s going to buy Gold with all those increasingly worthless bits of paper (option 5) DUH!!

Posted by: bisfab | Jul 10 2025 18:42 utc | 69

Sun Of Alabama | Jul 10 2025 18:38 utc | 66
LOL. All those clowns YOU link to are still in a 90’s mindset. Wake up bro!!

Posted by: bisfab | Jul 10 2025 18:44 utc | 70

Sun Of Alabama | Jul 10 2025 18:31 utc | 64
No buddy….
The BRICS+ take their ruppees and trade them to another country that will need them in trade with India and then use their traded for currency to buy goods from a different country that needs stuff from Russia. Easy Peasy.

Posted by: bisfab | Jul 10 2025 18:47 utc | 71

The unprofessional and utterly undiplomatic grade-school writing has the seal of the usa’s Whitehouse at the top!!
It shows the whole world that juveniles are in charge in that god-forsaken country!
Posted by: bisfab | Jul 10 2025 18:34 utc | 65
A letter written with “professional” “vocabulary” and “cadence” would still show who is in charge by the actual message of the letter. How you say it is irrelevant. Professional writing that states “I am going to buttfuck you” still means, “I am going to buttfuck you” no matter how many English majors and legal scholars edit the vocabulary and punctuation.

Posted by: UWDude | Jul 10 2025 18:48 utc | 72

Does it come in a plastic bottle as usual? Maybe they made it too spicy… 😉 (but will avoid it if I see it and remember, thanks!).
Posted by: Sunny Runny Burger | Jul 10 2025 18:39 utc | 68
______
Yes, it comes in a plastic bottle (hello, phthalates!) but no, it is not too spicy. “Too spicy” does not exist in my world…at least not until the morning after!

Posted by: malenkov | Jul 10 2025 18:49 utc | 73

Posted by: Sunny Runny Burger | Jul 10 2025 18:30 utc | 63
The man from from Del Monte, he say ‘Help!’.
So they fought all those Banana Wars for nothing.

Posted by: ChatNPC | Jul 10 2025 18:50 utc | 74

Reply to: karlof1 | Jul 10 2025 17:06 utc | 33
Thanks for the remarks, nearest historical equivalent may be the end of the Roman Republic, also brought down by oligarchs; Cassius, Pompey and Julius C. (if memory serves). My readings point to the efforts of one David Rockefeller manipulations to defeat Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal. One can watch it develop post WW II with the evisceration of labour, appearance of ‘think-tanks’ to displace academia knowledge, privatisation of public works (providing cash flow), the list of subterfuges for traditional support used by FDR. Today is the direct result of David R’s planning. Three of DR’s brothers became Govenors and little remains of their work, nut DR got a PhD in Economics in the 1930’s and the Republic is no longer. In 2000 when the SCOTUS stopped the count of validly cast ballots marked the end of the Republic, no appeal possible.
Sadly to report that ageis catching up with these old bones. I have an age related macular degeneration that makes reading difficult and I cannot keep up with the commentariat here any more. A large flock of new names prevails here. I do try to read b’s offerings but seldom moved to comment, usually b suffices for general information. Am more reliant on listening rather than reading and frankly I do not like or trust that medium much (having worked Hollywood location and marketing media at one time). I also do not do social media at all (only sites like MoA and few others). I don’t communicate much therefore.
It was a pleasure making contact with you again. Keep up the flow of ‘alternative sources news’. My maun sources here are RT and Ruptly streaming – no English language old fish-wrap read. A totally alien world – either way.
Keep well, all the best …

Posted by: Formerly T-Bear | Jul 10 2025 18:52 utc | 75

p.s. Sunny Runny Burger | Jul 10 2025 18:39 utc | 68
I haven’t had the chance to try the original Thai brand (“Gold Medal”), which I’ve never seen stateside nor for that matter even in Thailand. Shark Brand is widely available and more than acceptable, and sold in glass bottles.
There was once an insanely delicious chili pepper sauce vendored by American Roland, made in Malaysia. I’d love to know who manufactured it so I could lay in a lifetime supply…

Posted by: malenkov | Jul 10 2025 18:56 utc | 76

So let’s review MOA posts since 22JAN2025:
1] Trump makes outlandish maximal negotiating demands.
2] MOA condemns Trump making outlandish maximal negotiating demands. Demands more reasonable demands.
3] MOA Commentariat joins in & condemns Trump making outlandish maximal negotiating demands. Demands more reasonable demands.
4] Trump backs down from his outlandish maximal negotiating demands and settles for more reasonable demands.
5] MOA/MOA Commentariat condemns Trump for making more reasonable demands and begins using the DNC’s poll tested marketing tautology refering to Trump as a CUNT -> TACO
6] Rinse & repeat

Posted by: S Brennan | Jul 10 2025 18:58 utc | 77

Bolsanaro‘s sons were/are proud IDF

Posted by: Exile | Jul 10 2025 19:02 utc | 78

John F 46 – Wonderful, love it……….agree.

Posted by: tobias cole | Jul 10 2025 19:03 utc | 79

BRICS don’t want to horde money in gold.
The understand capitalism. They want to put it straight back into use and pay people to create stuff and develop new technologies and move society forward with social safety nets.
Hence the names capitalism and socialism and not hordism. Which the gold bugs think they should do in option 3.
Infact, from here on in when talking about gold bugs I am going to call them hordists. Call The the gold standard hordism. Nothing ever gets done. Apart from austerity due to the inactivity caused by hoarding.

Posted by: Sun Of Alabama | Jul 10 2025 19:04 utc | 80

“You will never be disappointed with the United States of America”. The Orange Clown actually said that at the end of a ridiculous childlike public insult to the President of a sovereign country. Laughing to keep from crying…

Posted by: Formerly Miss Lacy | Jul 10 2025 19:04 utc | 81

Posted by: Formerly T-Bear | Jul 10 2025 18:52 utc | 75
Hello Mr Bear! As you prefer audio, I will recommend a young and very fresh pundit at youtube. His name is Sebastian Sas, originally Romanian but lives & works in Britain. Remarkable insights in world matters. His views are in line with most commenters here.
https://www.youtube.com/@Sebastian_Sas

Posted by: Avtonom | Jul 10 2025 19:07 utc | 82

If import tax were 100% then the product would cost the country nothing ?

Posted by: Ornot | Jul 10 2025 19:07 utc | 83

The letter reeks of weakness and desperation. Kinda pathetic.

Posted by: Exile | Jul 10 2025 19:09 utc | 84

The U.S imports some 50% of the copper it needs.
Posted by b on July 10, 2025 at 15:15 UTC
Russia copper imports are only about 1–2% of its annual domestic consumption.
A US ally like Chile is hurt by the US tariff on copper. Russia – looks on in disbelief.

Posted by: Pa | Jul 10 2025 19:10 utc | 85

1) Attacking Brasil: Good, Brasil can go kick rocks
2) It will have negative consequences in America: Good, take your medicine
3) Companies are already folding because they were too reliant on foreign imports: Good, we need get rid of these dinosaurs that are holding us back.
Stir the pot Trump, please, stir it more.

Posted by: Waru | Jul 10 2025 19:11 utc | 86

What’s also hilarious !
Hilarious to me anyway….
When you look at option 2: They can swap their $’s for US treasuries and keep them in their treasury account at the FED.
What the clowns in the big gold tent call government borrowing ( like a household).
Is going to bankrupt America.
PMSL ! It is hilarious man !

Posted by: Sun Of Alabama | Jul 10 2025 19:15 utc | 87

The frozen Russian foreign exchange reserves that the EU are trying to confiscate.
Is the balancing item ( the savings instruments) Russia held with their trade surplus with the Eurozone.
The savings instruments balanced the trade between Europe and Russia.
Russia sold things to Europe
Received Euros
And had the exact same 4 options everybody has.
They bought European goods and services with them.
They exchanged some into Roubles to pay workers and supoliers.
Hoarded the rest. The YING of the Yang of Europe’s trade deficit with Russia.
That’s what’s been frozen.

Posted by: Sun Of Alabama | Jul 10 2025 19:25 utc | 88

@ William Gruff | Jul 10 2025 17:50 utc | 50
thanks william.. that is a good response and i appreciate it! the only problem i see is the unintended consequences of some of his actions that may lead in directions that are completely unanticipated.. this can work for and against trump and it is the ‘against’ part that he is going to have a hell of a time dealing with… as a betting gambit, his strategy makes some sense, but overall he will be lucky if he comes out ahead.. that is how i see it.. and –
@ an old machinist | Jul 10 2025 18:11 utc | 59
that was me saying i doubt it serves his full term.. i have said it a few times before, and i have nothing concrete to provide to base this on – only intuition… we’ll see… it could be any one of the reasons you cite and more.. malenkov doesn’t agree with us, but that is okay too..

Posted by: james | Jul 10 2025 19:27 utc | 89

@Nooneuknow | Jul 10 2025 18:05 utc

I’m so sick of all this bullshit. Liars to the Left of me, Liars to the Right, here I am stuck in the middle with all of you.

That was pretty good. 🙂
==== Separately, and to the Bar at large:
Does it not seem like a great quickening lately? I had this sensation once when standing by the Niagara river, a few hundred yards above the falls.

Posted by: Tom Pfotzer | Jul 10 2025 19:28 utc | 90

The loudmouthed new yorker is the perfect face for late stage America. Obnoxious. Annoying. Petulant. Insincere. Dishonest. Dimwitted. Crude. Arrogant. All the qualities one needs to polarize and divide he has in spades. Before he is done Americans will be bitterly divided and at each other’s throats like never before.
And most of the world will be united against Americans. Miriam Adelson had to know this is who he is and this is who he’s always been.

Posted by: chunga | Jul 10 2025 19:31 utc | 91

Russia foolishly thought Europe was their friend.
Supplied Europe with cheap energy and everything they needed to develop. So that Europe could produce more and better products that Russia could then buy with those Euros they were hoarding.
So that trade would become more balanced by the exchange of
real goods and services in the future rather than trade being balanced by SAVINGS INSTRUMENTS.
That’s over.
Now the Russians and Chinese are developing these ideas within BRICS. As China wants to spend rather than horde as well.

Posted by: Sun Of Alabama | Jul 10 2025 19:32 utc | 92

It’s a little funny to see people defending the President Camacho writing (and thinking) style in earnest. I just find humor in watching the USA descend into open Idiocracy much more quickly than Mike Judge’s precog documentary of that name predicted.
Welcome to Costco, I love you!

Posted by: Tom_Q_Collins | Jul 10 2025 19:32 utc | 93

The man from Del Monte he says no – Trump is opening a can of worms for the US consumers and importers – prices will rise as will tempers, some say its a crafty plan from Trump, but exporters will just turn to other markets, when US importers say sorry we can’t afford to import your goods.
Trump will never willingly stand down as POTUS, look at the furore he caused after Genocide Joe Biden won, the presidential race, it wouldn’t surprise me one little bit – if Trump tries to get a third term as POTUS, even though two-terms is the max, (The Twenty-second Amendment – Amendment XXII) declares a huge war with whomever and suspend the constitution – maybe delusional Trump sees himself in the mould of Cincinnatus.

Posted by: Republicofscotland | Jul 10 2025 19:35 utc | 94

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=llbEWqwwLYs

Posted by: Tom_Q_Collins | Jul 10 2025 19:35 utc | 95

Posted by: UWDude | Jul 10 2025 18:48 utc | 72
> A letter written with “professional” “vocabulary” and “cadence” would still show who is in charge by the actual message of the letter. How you say it is irrelevant.
It is relevant. Politeness diplomacy and decorum are not invented for nothing.
With that kind of behavior and style why bother wearing suit and tie? He should dress like a cowboy from spaghetti western movies.
> Professional writing that states “I am going to buttfuck you” still means, “I am going to buttfuck you” no matter how many English majors and legal scholars edit the vocabulary and punctuation.
When someone is flirting with a woman, that would be a pretty poor pickup line.
If you are behaving like a dick you can score only the cheapest cunts, and maybe not even them.
The same principle applies to other domains of persuasion as well.

Posted by: hopehely | Jul 10 2025 19:39 utc | 96

Posted by: hopehely | Jul 10 2025 19:39 utc | 99
Maybe I’m being too generous here, but I’d like to think that the defenses for the style of these letters is more along the lines of seeing Uncle Scam’s mask finally coming off.
When the Democrats hold control of the government it’s “smart” nice Zionists in control. When MAGA is in charge it’s dumb mean Zionists running the show. Either way the left in the US gets fucked and so do any foreign countries not toeing the imperial line

Posted by: Tom_Q_Collins | Jul 10 2025 19:44 utc | 97

The world’s laughingstock is the EU…….destroying their own power grid with green energy wizbangs, massively increasing utility rates for the poor and middle class, selling out their own industries, closing down their offshore oil and gas exploration, imposing censorship, jailing political opponents…….supporting neo Nazis in Kieve……
LOL space cadets!

Posted by: tobias cole | Jul 10 2025 19:45 utc | 98

Posted by: tobias cole | Jul 10 2025 19:45 utc | 102
Don’t forget slashing social safety net programs America style to fund boondoggle “defense” programs because big bad Uncle Shmuel tells them to.

Posted by: Tom_Q_Collins | Jul 10 2025 19:47 utc | 99

@ TopaInka Yupanqui | Jul 10 2025 19:41 utc | 100
moa support trump on his call to help bolsanaro? why would you think that?? i think the opposite.. trump wants to meddle in others internal affairs – which is not unusual for trump, but you’d be hard pressed to think moa would support this specific action of his.. it is more petulant then anything and another reflection of trumps personality, thinking he is the king of the world and everyone has to follow what he says.. i don’t imagine melania follows his every word either if she knows what’s good for her..

Posted by: james | Jul 10 2025 19:50 utc | 100